Results for 'Timothy J. Burland'

962 found
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  1.  32
    Gene technology and cell biology. Recombinant DNA and cell proliferation. Edited by G. S. STEIN and J. L. STEIN, Academic Press, 1984. Pp. 360. $49.50. [REVIEW]Timothy J. Burland - 1985 - Bioessays 3 (2):87-88.
  2. What is the unity of consciousness?Timothy J. Bayne & David J. Chalmers - 2003 - In Axel Cleeremans, The Unity of Consciousness: Binding, Integration, and Dissociation. Oxford University Press.
    At any given time, a subject has a multiplicity of conscious experiences. A subject might simultaneously have visual experiences of a red book and a green tree, auditory experiences of birds singing, bodily sensations of a faint hunger and a sharp pain in the shoulder, the emotional experience of a certain melancholy, while having a stream of conscious thoughts about the nature of reality. These experiences are distinct from each other: a subject could experience the red book without the singing (...)
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  3. In defence of the doxastic conception of delusions.Timothy J. Bayne & Elisabeth Pacherie - 2005 - Mind and Language 20 (2):163-88.
    In this paper we defend the doxastic conception of delusions against the metacognitive account developed by Greg Currie and collaborators. According to the metacognitive model, delusions are imaginings that are misidentified by their subjects as beliefs: the Capgras patient, for instance, does not believe that his wife has been replaced by a robot, instead, he merely imagines that she has, and mistakes this imagining for a belief. We argue that the metacognitive account is untenable, and that the traditional conception of (...)
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  4.  18
    What is the unity of consciousness.Timothy J. Bayne & David J. Chalmers - 2003 - In Axel Cleeremans, The Unity of Consciousness: Binding, Integration, and Dissociation. Oxford University Press. pp. 497-539.
    At any given time, a subject has a multiplicity of conscious experiences. A subject might simultaneously have visual experiences of a red book and a green tree, auditory experiences of birds singing, bodily sensations of a faint hunger and a sharp pain in the shoulder, the emotional experience of a certain melancholy, while having a stream of conscious thoughts about the nature of reality. These experiences are distinct from each other: a subject could experience the red book without the singing (...)
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  5.  77
    Two-stage dynamic signal detection: A theory of choice, decision time, and confidence.Timothy J. Pleskac & Jerome R. Busemeyer - 2010 - Psychological Review 117 (3):864-901.
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  6.  33
    Plastic Bodies: Rebuilding Sensation after Phenomenology, written by Tom Sparrow.Timothy J. Beck - 2016 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 47 (1):90-95.
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  7. The feeling of doing: Deconstructing the phenomenology of agnecy.Timothy J. Bayne & Neil Levy - 2009 - In Natalie Sebanz & Wolfgang Prinz, Disorders of Volition. Bradford Books.
    Disorders of volition are often accompanied by, and may even be caused by, disruptions in the phenomenology of agency. Yet the phenomenology of agency is at present little explored. In this paper we attempt to describe the experience of normal agency, in order to uncover its representational content.
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  8.  25
    Merit Badgering: Dissecting a Slippery Concept in the Affirmative Action Debate.Timothy J. Lukes & Bonnie G. Campodonico - 1996 - Public Affairs Quarterly 10 (3):219-227.
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  9. John O'Neill, Essaying Montaigne: A Study of the Renaissance Institution of Writing and Reading Reviewed by.Timothy J. Reiss - 1983 - Philosophy in Review 3 (2):87-91.
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  10.  34
    The etymology of kami.Timothy J. Vance - 1983 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 10 (4):277-288.
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  11.  24
    On Building an Ark: The Global Emergency and the Limits of Moral Exhortation.Timothy J. Gorringe - 2011 - Studies in Christian Ethics 24 (1):23-33.
    The paper argues, first, that the range of problems confronting humanity constitutes a global emergency; next, that this cannot be addressed by moral exhortation but by the building of ‘arks’; finally, that community, cultivation of the virtues, and place may be considered key aspects of such ark building.
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  12.  41
    Reading Between the Lines: Apophatic Knowledge and Naming the Divine in Bonaventure's Book of Creation.Timothy J. Johnson - 2002 - Franciscan Studies 60 (1):139-158.
  13. What is a syllogism?Timothy J. Smiley - 1973 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 2 (1):136 - 154.
  14. Human obligation to nonhuman animals in Proverbs.Timothy J. Sandoval - 2024 - In Arthur Walker-Jones & Suzanna R. Millar, Ask the animals: developing a biblical animal hermeneutic. Atlanta, GA: SBL Press.
     
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  15. The action of climbing fibers on Purkinje cell responsiveness to mossy fiber inputs.Timothy J. Ebner & James R. Bloedel - 1981 - In G. Adam, I. Meszaros & E.I. Banyai, Advances in Physiological Science. pp. 198--1.
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  16.  29
    Can Bankers Be Saved?Timothy J. Gorringe - 2001 - Studies in Christian Ethics 14 (1):17-33.
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  17.  40
    Music Travels: The Transnational Circulation of Italian Progressive Rock at Small-Scale Music Festivals, 1994-2012.Timothy J. Dowd - 2013 - Polis: Research and studies on Italian society and politics 27 (1):125-158.
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  18.  59
    Monumental changes: The civic harm argument for the removal of Confederate monuments.Timothy J. Barczak & Winston C. Thompson - 2021 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 55 (3):439-452.
    Journal of Philosophy of Education, EarlyView.
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  19.  78
    The Foundations of Knowledge.Timothy J. McGrew - 1995 - Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Contemporary epistemology has been moving away from classical foundationalism—the thesis that our empirical knowledge is grounded in perceptual beliefs we know with certainty. McGrew reexamines classical foundationalism and offers a compelling reconstruction and defense of empirical knowledge grounded in perceptual certainty. He articulates and defends a new version of foundationalism and demonstrates how it meets all the standard criticisms. The book offers substantial rebuttals of the arguments of Kuhn and Rorty and demonstrates the value of the classical analytic approach to (...)
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  20. On Isomorphisms between Canonical Frames.Timothy J. Surendonk - 1998 - In Marcus Kracht, Maarten de Rijke, Heinrich Wansing & Michael Zakharyaschev, Advances in Modal Logic. CSLI Publications. pp. 249-268.
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  21. Pursuing Love with the Proper Map.Timothy J. Madigan - 1995 - In David Goicoechea, The nature and pursuit of love: the philosophy of Irving Singer. Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books. pp. 312.
  22.  12
    Politics and beauty in America: the liberal aesthetics of P.T. Barnum, John Muir, and Harley Earl.Timothy J. Lukes - 2016 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    This book holds classical liberalism responsible for an American concept of beauty that centers upon women, wilderness, and machines. For each of the three beauty components, a cultural entrepreneur supremely sensitive to liberalism’s survival agenda is introduced. P.T. Barnum’s exhibition of Jenny Lind is a masterful combination of female elegance and female potency in the subsistence realm. John Muir’s Yosemite Valley is surely exquisite, but only after a rigorous liberal education prepares for its experience. And Harley Earl’s 1955 Chevrolet Bel (...)
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  23. Prologue as Pilgrimage: Bonaventure as Spiritual Cartographer.Timothy J. Johnson - 2006 - Miscellanea Francescana 106 (3-4):445-464.
  24.  58
    Affective Dynamics in Psychopathology.Timothy J. Trull, Sean P. Lane, Peter Koval & Ulrich W. Ebner-Priemer - 2015 - Emotion Review 7 (4):355-361.
    We discuss three varieties of affective dynamics ( affective instability, emotional inertia, and emotional differentiation). In each case, we suggest how these affective dynamics should be operationalized and measured in daily life using time-intensive methods, like ecological momentary assessment or ambulatory assessment, and recommend time-sensitive analyses that take into account not only the variability but also the temporal dependency of reports. Studies that explore how these affective dynamics are associated with psychological disorders and symptoms are reviewed, and we emphasize that (...)
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  25.  39
    The Culture of Diplomacy: Britain in Europe, c. 1750–1830.Timothy J. White - 2013 - The European Legacy 18 (6):808-809.
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  26.  27
    Principlism, Uncodifiability, and the Problem of Specification.Timothy J. Furlan - forthcoming - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics:1-22.
    In this paper I critically examine the implications of the uncodifiability thesis for principlism as a pluralistic and non-absolute generalist ethical theory. In this regard, I begin with a brief overview of W.D. Ross’s ethical theory and his focus on general but defeasible prima facie principles before turning to 2) the revival of principlism in contemporary bioethics through the influential work of Tom Beauchamp and James Childress; 3) the widespread adoption of specification as a response to the indeterminacy of abstract (...)
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  27.  40
    The ecology of competition: A theory of risk–reward environments in adaptive decision making.Timothy J. Pleskac, Larissa Conradt, Christina Leuker & Ralph Hertwig - 2021 - Psychological Review 128 (2):315-335.
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  28. (1 other version)On the Use of Stoicheion in the Sense of 'Element'.Timothy J. Crowley - 2005 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 29:367-394.
  29.  88
    Moral Imagination, Collective Action, and the Achievement of Moral Outcomes.Timothy J. Hargrave - 2009 - Business Ethics Quarterly 19 (1):87-104.
    ABSTRACT:Drawing upon the collective action model of institutional change, I reconceptualize moral imagination as both a social process and a cognitive one. I argue that moral outcomes are not produced by individual actors alone; rather, they emerge from collective action processes that are influenced by political conditions and involve behaviors that include issue framing and resource mobilization. I also contend that individual moral imagination involves the integration of moral sensitivity with consideration of collective action dynamics. I illustrate my arguments with (...)
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  30.  51
    Objective being in Descartes and in Suarez.Timothy J. Cronin - 1966 - New York: Garland.
  31.  24
    The discourse of modernism.Timothy J. Reiss - 1982 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    On method, discursive logics, and epistemology -- Questions of medieval discursive practice -- From the middle ages to the (w)hole of Utopia -- Kepler, his Dream, and the analysis and pattern of thought -- Campanella and Bacon: concerning structures of mind -- The masculine birth of time -- Cyrano and the experimental discourse -- The myth of sun and moon -- The difficulty of writing -- Crusoe rights his story -- Gulliver's critique of Euclid -- Emergence, consolidation, and dominance of (...)
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  32.  51
    Denying the Body? Memory and the Dilemmas of History in Descartes.Timothy J. Reiss - 1996 - Journal of the History of Ideas 57 (4):587-607.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Denying the Body? Memory and the Dilemmas of History in DescartesTimothy J. ReissIn an essay first published in The New York Review of Books in January 1983, touching her apprenticeship as writer, the Barbadian /American novelist Paule Marshall described the long afternoon conversations with which her mother and friends used to relax in the family kitchen. She recalled how they saw things as composed of opposites; not torn, but (...)
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  33.  49
    Heidegger’s Relative Essentialism.Timothy J. Nulty - 2022 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 53 (1):40-60.
    There is relatively little comprehensive treatment of Heidegger’s theory of essences despite his ubiquitous use of essences. It is commonplace in contemporary analytic philosophy to view essences as the ground for true de re modal claims. I argue that Heidegger offers an account of essences that can best be understood as a type of relative essentialism. Relative essentialism is the view that more than one being can occupy the same space at the same time and those beings have distinct sets (...)
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  34.  61
    Primitive disclosive alethism: Davidson, Heidegger, and the nature of truth.Timothy J. Nulty - 2006 - New York: Peter Lang.
    Davidson, truth, and triangulation -- Davidson applied -- Half truths -- Heidegger's analytic of Dasein -- Dasein and truth -- Truthful intersections -- Primitive disclosive alethism.
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  35.  56
    The Psychology of Habit Formation and Christian Moral Wisdom on Virtue Formation.Timothy J. Pawl - 2022 - TheoLogica: An International Journal for Philosophy of Religion and Philosophical Theology 7 (1).
    In this paper, I provide an overview of the Christian moral wisdom with respect to virtue formation and character cultivation. I focus in particular on some warnings issued by the great teachers on these topics with respect to the motivations one ought to have in the Christian life. I then discuss some findings of contemporary psychology on habit formation which seem to be at odds with the warnings in Christian moral wisdom. I argue that while there is surface discord between (...)
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  36.  34
    The influence of bilingualism on statistical word learning.Timothy J. Poepsel & Daniel J. Weiss - 2016 - Cognition 152 (C):9-19.
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  37.  31
    Apprehending Care in the Flesh: Reading Cavarero with Spillers.Timothy J. Huzar - 2021 - Diacritics 49 (3):6-27.
    Abstract:In this article I stage an encounter between Adriana Cavarero's account of uniqueness and Hortense Spillers's account of the flesh. Doing so is valuable for two reasons: First, it forces Cavarero's thought to consider not only the exclusion of women from the Western tradition, but also the anti-Blackness foundational to this tradition. This both expands and contorts Cavarero's thought, affirming her key claims while also altering them in the process. Second, reading Cavarero and Spillers together allows me to explore the (...)
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  38. Violence, vulnerability, ontology: insurrectionary humanism in Cavarero and Butler.Timothy J. Huzar - 2021 - In Adriana Cavarero, Toward a feminist ethics of nonviolence. New York: Fordham University Press.
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  39.  83
    Thomas Reid's theory of sensation.Timothy J. Duggan - 1960 - Philosophical Review 69 (1):90-100.
  40.  25
    Secondary Education in COVID Lockdown: More Anxious and Less Creative—Maybe Not?Timothy J. Patston, JohnPaul Kennedy, Wayne Jaeschke, Hansika Kapoor, Simon N. Leonard, David H. Cropley & James C. Kaufman - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Secondary education around the world has been significantly disrupted by covid-19. Students have been forced into new ways of independent learning, often using remote technologies, but without the social nuances and direct teacher interactions of a normal classroom environment. Using data from the School Attitudes Survey—which surveys students regarding the perceived level of difficulty, anxiety level, self-efficacy, enjoyability, subject relevance, and opportunities for creativity with regards to each of their school subjects—this study examines students' responses to this disruption from two (...)
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  41. A Methodological Assessment of Multiple Utility Frameworks.Timothy J. Brennan - 1989 - Economics and Philosophy 5 (2):189-208.
    One of the fundamental components of the concept of economic rationality is that preference orderings are “complete,” i.e., that all alternative actions an economic agent can take are comparable. The idea that all actions can be ranked may be called the single utility assumption. The attractiveness of this assumption is considerable. It would be hard to fathom what choice among alternatives means if the available alternatives cannot be ranked by the chooser in some way. In addition, the efficiency criterion makes (...)
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  42. The Discourse of Modernism.Timothy J. Reiss - 1988 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 21 (1):69-72.
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  43. The two-envelope paradox resolved.Timothy J. McGrew, David Shier & Harry S. Silverstein - 1997 - Analysis 57 (1):28–33.
  44.  75
    The Incarnation.Timothy J. Pawl - 2020 - Cambridge University Press.
    The doctrine of the Incarnation, that Jesus Christ was both truly God and truly human, is the foundation and cornerstone of traditional Christian theism. And yet this traditional teaching appears to verge on incoherence. How can one person be both God, having all the perfections of divinity, and human, having all the limitations of humanity? This is the fundamental philosophical problem of the Incarnation. Perhaps a solution is found in an analysis of what the traditional teaching meant by person, divinity, (...)
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  45.  89
    On the Rational Reconstruction of the Fine-Tuning Argument.Timothy J. McGrew - 2005 - Philosophia Christi 7 (2):425 - 443.
  46.  52
    Changes in waist circumference and body mass index in the us cardia cohort: Fixed-effects associations with self-reported experiences of racial/ethnic discrimination.Timothy J. Cunningham, Lisa F. Berkman, Ichiro Kawachi, David R. Jacobs, Teresa E. Seeman, Catarina I. Kiefe & Steven L. Gortmaker - 2013 - Journal of Biosocial Science 45 (2):267-278.
  47.  48
    Cognitive Architecture, Holistic Inference and Bayesian Networks.Timothy J. Fuller - 2019 - Minds and Machines 29 (3):373-395.
    Two long-standing arguments in cognitive science invoke the assumption that holistic inference is computationally infeasible. The first is Fodor’s skeptical argument toward computational modeling of ordinary inductive reasoning. The second advocates modular computational mechanisms of the kind posited by Cosmides, Tooby and Sperber. Based on advances in machine learning related to Bayes nets, as well as investigations into the structure of scientific and ordinary information, I maintain neither argument establishes its architectural conclusion. Similar considerations also undermine Fodor’s decades-long diagnosis of (...)
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  48.  32
    James Rachels and the morality of euthanasia.Timothy J. Furlan - 2024 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 45 (2):69-97.
    My fundamental thesis is that Rachels dismisses the traditional Western account of the morality of killing without offering a viable replacement. In this regard, I will argue that the substitute account he offers is deficient in at least eight regards: (1) he fails to justify the foundational principle of utilitarianism, (2) he exposes preference utilitarianism to the same criticisms he lodges against classical utilitarianism, (3) he neglects to explain how precisely one performs the maximization procedure which preference utilitarianism requires, (4) (...)
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  49.  19
    Making sense of changing ethical expectations: The role of moral imagination.Timothy J. Hargrave, Mukesh Sud, Craig V. VanSandt & Patricia M. Werhane - 2020 - Business and Society Review 125 (2):183-201.
    We propose that firms that engage in morally imaginative sensemaking will manage society's changing ethical expectations more effectively than those engaging in habituated sensemaking. Specifically, we argue that managers engaging in habituated sensemaking will tend to view changes in expectations as threats and respond to them defensively. In contrast, morally imaginative managers will tend to see these same changes as opportunities and address them by proactively or interactively engaging stakeholders in learning processes. We contribute to the literature on moral imagination (...)
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  50.  61
    Scene perception in posterior cortical atrophy: categorization, description and fixation patterns.Timothy J. Shakespeare, Keir X. X. Yong, Chris Frost, Lois G. Kim, Elizabeth K. Warrington & Sebastian J. Crutch - 2013 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
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