Results for 'Tom Albertsson'

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  1. Ethical Theory and Business.Tom L. Beauchamp, Norman E. Bowie & Denis Gordon Arnold (eds.) - 2008 - New York: Pearson/Prentice Hall.
    For forty years, successive editions of Ethical Theory and Business have helped to define the field of business ethics. The 10th edition reflects the current, multidisciplinary nature of the field by explicitly embracing a variety of perspectives on business ethics, including philosophy, management, and legal studies. Chapters integrate theoretical readings, case studies, and summaries of key legal cases to guide students to a rich understanding of business ethics, corporate responsibility, and sustainability. The 10th edition has been entirely updated, ensuring that (...)
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  2.  24
    Plurality, Engagement, Openness.Tom Greaves & Norman Dandy - 2022 - Environmental Values 31 (2):115-124.
    As incoming Editor and Deputy Editor we describe our impression of the current situation that those committed to understanding and upholding environmental values find themselves in. We consider some of the factors that make enviornmental concern difficult to maintain, including conditions that affect us as academics, publishers, global citizens and activists. We describe some of the emerging trends that have appeared in Environmental Values in recent years, in philosophy, ecological economics, critical social science and widening interdisciplinarity in the environmental humanities. (...)
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  3. On Wrongs and Crimes : Does Consent Require Only an Attempt to Communicate?Tom Dougherty - 2019 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 13 (3):409-423.
    In Wrongs and Crimes, Victor Tadros clarifies the debate about whether consent needs to be communicated by separating the question of whether consent requires expressive behaviour from the question of whether it requires “uptake” in the form of comprehension by the consent-receiver. Once this distinction is drawn, Tadros argues both that consent does not require uptake and that consent does not require expressive behaviour that provides evidence to the consent-receiver. As a result, Tadros takes the view that consent requires an (...)
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  4.  25
    Scientific Observation Is Socio-Materially Augmented Perception: Toward a Participatory Realism.Tom Froese - 2022 - Philosophies 7 (2):37.
    There is an overlooked similarity between three classic accounts of the conditions of object experience from three distinct disciplines. Sociology: the “inversion” that accompanies discovery in the natural sciences, as local causes of effects are reattributed to an observed object. Psychology: the “externalization” that accompanies mastery of a visual–tactile sensory substitution interface, as tactile sensations of the proximal interface are transformed into vision-like experience of a distal object. Biology: the “projection” that brings forth an animal’s Umwelt, as impressions on its (...)
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  5.  34
    Hobbes.Tom Sorell - 1986 - New York: Routledge.
    This book is available either individually, or as part of the specially-priced Arguments of the Philosphers Collection.
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  6.  33
    To Understand the Origin of Life We Must First Understand the Role of Normativity.Tom Froese - 2021 - Biosemiotics 14 (3):657-663.
    Deacon develops a minimal model of a nonparasitic virus to explore how nucleotide sequences came to be characterized by a code-like informational at the origin of life. The model serves to problematize the concept of biological normativity because it highlights two common yet typically implicit assumptions: that life could consist as an inert form, were it not for extrinsic sources of physical instability, and that life could have originated as a singular self-contained individual. I propose that the origin of life, (...)
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  7.  87
    Informed Consent and the Requirement to Ensure Understanding.Tom Walker - 2011 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 29 (1):50-62.
    It is generally held that doctors and researchers have an obligation to obtain informed consent. Over time there has been a move in relation to this obligation from a requirement to disclose information to a requirement to ensure that that information is understood. Whilst this change has been resisted, in this article I argue that both sides on this matter are mistaken. When investigating what information is needed for consent to be informed we might be trying to determine what information (...)
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  8.  74
    A stroll through the worlds of robots and animals: Applying Jakob von Uexkülls theory of meaning to adaptive robots and artificial life.Tom Ziemke & Noel E. Sharkey - 2001 - Semiotica 2001 (134).
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  9.  11
    Intermediate models of Magidor-Radin forcing-Part II.Tom Benhamou & Moti Gitik - 2022 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 173 (6):103107.
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  10.  46
    The Problem of Modally Bad Company.Tom Schoonen - 2020 - Res Philosophica 97 (4):639-659.
    A particular family of imagination-based epistemologies of possibility promises to provide an account that overcomes problems raised by Kripkean a posteriori impossibilities. That is, they maintain that imagination plays a significant role in the epistemology of possibility. They claim that imagination consists of both linguistic and qualitative content, where the linguistic content is independently verified not to give rise to any impossibilities in the epistemically significant uses of imagination. However, I will argue that these accounts fail to provide a satisfactory (...)
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  11.  24
    Life and Death: Philosophical Essays in Biomedical Ethics.Tom Tomlinson & Dan W. Brock - 1994 - Hastings Center Report 24 (4):43.
    Book reviewed in this article: Life and Death: Philosophical Essays in Biomedical Ethics. By Dan W. Brock.
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  12. Must We Choose between Real Nietzsche and Good Philosophy? A Streitschrift.Tom Stern - 2018 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 49 (2):277-283.
    A critical comment on methods in Nietzsche scholarship, and some suggestions about how to improve things.
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  13. Philosophical ethics: an introduction to moral philosophy.Tom L. Beauchamp - 2001 - Boston, Mass.: McGraw-Hill.
    This accessible overview of classical and modern moral theory with short readings provides comprehensive coverage of ethics and unique coverage of rights, justice, liberty and law. Real-life cases introduce each chapter. While the book's content is theoretical rather than applied ethics, Beauchamp consistently applies the theories to practical moral problems. Aristotle, Hume, Kant, and Mill are at the book;s core and they are placed in the context of moral philosophical controversies of the last 30 years. In this edition one-third of (...)
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  14.  2
    The Slave in Legal and Political Philosophy: Agamben and his Interlocutors.Tom Frost - 2025 - New York: Routledge.
    This book explores how the figure of the slave has been used to construct ideas of freedom in Western political and legal philosophy. The figure of the slave has supported philosophical and legal defences of colonialism, coloniality and the supremacy of the white subject. Yet for Giorgio Agamben, the slave stands (almost counterintuitively) as an exemplar of a potential form of future positive political existence. Developing this line of thought, the book reads key thinkers Agamben engages with in his thought (...)
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  15.  34
    Dilthey’s Inductive Method and the Nature of Philosophy.Tom Nenon - 1989 - Southwest Philosophy Review 5 (1):121-134.
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  16. Joint attention to music.Tom Cochrane - 2009 - British Journal of Aesthetics 49 (1):59-73.
    This paper contrasts individual and collective listening to music, with particular regard to the expressive qualities of music. In the first half of the paper a general model of joint attention is introduced. According to this model, perceiving together modifies the intrinsic structure of the perceptual task, and encourages a convergence of responses to a greater or lesser degree. The model is then applied to music, looking first at the silent listening situation typical to the classical concert hall, and second (...)
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  17. Nativism past and present.Tom Simpson & Peter Carruthers - 2005 - In Peter Carruthers, Stephen Laurence & Stephen P. Stich (eds.), The Innate Mind: Structure and Contents. New York, US: Oxford University Press on Demand. pp. 3.
  18.  36
    The New Ethics of Neuroethics.Tom Buller - 2018 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 27 (4):558-565.
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  19. Climatic Literary Geoinformatics: Radical Empiricism, Region, and Seasonal Phenomena in John Kinsella’s Jam Tree Gully Poems.Tom Bristow - 2013 - Environment, Space, Place 5 (1):132-170.
    John Kinsella’s twentieth volume of poetry is laden with a poetics of attention to time, water and heat. Climate inheres in simplified topographical sketches, surveys and encounters with animals; water is ambiguous: a solid presence that is also fluid, subject to evaporation and often modelled as multi-dimensional motion; universalised western seasons are used rhetorically and symbolically to bring into relief little seasons within seasons, the more spatially and temporally localised markers of change. All these speak directly to the function of (...)
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  20.  15
    Qualities, Universals, Kinds, and the New Riddle of Induction.Tom Burke - 2002 - In F. Thomas Burke, D. Micah Hester & Robert B. Talisse (eds.), Dewey's logical theory: new studies and interpretations. Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press. pp. 225-235.
    Logic for Dewey is a normative inquiry into the nature of inquiry itself. Goodman’s grue example is assessed in light of Dewey's vocabulary for logic as presented in his 1938 Logic.
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  21.  11
    The work of film analysis: Systems, fragments, alternation.Tom Gunning - 2003 - Semiotica 2003 (144):343-357.
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  22.  76
    Symbolic and nonsymbolic pathways of number processing.Tom Verguts & Wim Fias - 2008 - Philosophical Psychology 21 (4):539 – 554.
    Recent years have witnessed an enormous increase in behavioral and neuroimaging studies of numerical cognition. Particular interest has been devoted toward unraveling properties of the representational medium on which numbers are thought to be represented. We have argued that a correct inference concerning these properties requires distinguishing between different input modalities and different decision/output structures. To back up this claim, we have trained computational models with either symbolic or nonsymbolic input and with different task requirements, and showed that this allowed (...)
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  23.  8
    The concept of benevolence: aspects of eighteenth-century moral philosophy.Tom Aerwyn Roberts - 1973 - London,: Macmillan.
  24. Two Dogmas of (Modern) Aristotle Scholarship.Tom Angier - 2019 - Ancient Philosophy Today 1 (2):237-255.
    Two dogmas lie at the heart of modern work on Aristotle's ethical theory. The first is that that theory is essentially secular or non-theistic. The second is that Aristotle's ethics assumes what Gr...
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  25. Fichte, German Idealism, and the Thing in Itself.Tom Rockmore - 2010 - In Daniel Breazeale & Tom Rockmore (eds.), Fichte, German idealism, and early romanticism. Amsterdam [etc.]: Rodopi. pp. 9--20.
     
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  26. Prescriptive legal positivism: law, rights and democracy.Tom Campbell (ed.) - 2004 - Portland, Or.: Cavendish Publishing.
    Tom Campbell is well known for his distinctive contributions to legal and political philosophy over three decades. In emphasising the moral and political importance of taking a positivist approach to law and rights, he has challenged current academic orthodoxies and made a powerful case for regaining and retaining democratic control over the content and development of human rights. This collection of his essays reaches back to his pioneering work on socialist rights in the 1980s and forward from his seminal book, (...)
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  27.  64
    Studies in Tectonic Culture: The Poetics of Construction in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century ArchitectureThirteen Ways: Theoretical Investigations in ArchitectureOn the Aesthetics of Architecture: A Psychological Approach to the Structure and the Order of Perceived Architectural Space.Tom Leddy, Kenneth Frampton, Robert Harbison & Ralf Weber - 2000 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 58 (1):79.
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  28.  98
    Egoism and Class Consciousness, or: Why Marx and Engels Wrote So Much About Stirner.Tom Whyman - 2023 - Hegel Bulletin 44 (3):422-445.
    Interest inThe German Ideologyhas largely focused on the ‘chapter’ on Feuerbach—invariably the focus of the various abridgements in which the work is usually read. But this does not reflect the weighting of the text itself, which is dominated by Marx and Engels's critique of the radical egoist philosopher Max Stirner. Which begs the question: just why did they spend so much time and effort writing about Stirner? In this paper, I will provide an answer—which comes down to three related points. (...)
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  29. On von Wright's argument for backward causation.Tom L. Beauchamp & Daniel N. Robinson - 1975 - Ratio (June):99-103.
     
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  30. Understanding 'sensorimotor understanding'.Tom Roberts - 2010 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 9 (1):101-111.
    Sensorimotor theories understand perception to be a process of active, exploratory engagement with the environment, mediated by the possession and exercise of a certain body of knowledge concerning sensorimotor dependencies. This paper aims to characterise that exercise, and to show that it places constraints upon the content of sensorimotor knowledge itself. Sensorimotor mastery is exercised when it is put to use in the service of intentional action-planning and selection, and this rules out certain standard readings of sensorimotor contingency knowledge. Rather (...)
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  31.  77
    Two tibetan texts on the “neither one nor many” argument for Śūnyatā.Tom J. F. Tillemans - 1984 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 12 (4):357-388.
  32. Introduction.Tom Regan - 1980 - In Tom L. Beauchamp & Tom Regan (eds.), Matters of life and death. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
     
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  33.  55
    Common sense, right, and moral judgement: Two recent additions to the Kant literature.Tom Bailey - 2004 - Res Publica 10 (3):285-300.
  34. Deleuze’s Bacon: Art & Language.Tom Baldwin - 2004 - Radical Philosophy 123.
     
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  35.  60
    Steinbock, Bonnie , ed. The Oxford Handbook of Bioethics . Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007 . Pp. xviii+747. $150.00 (cloth).Tom L. Beauchamp - 2010 - Ethics 120 (2):409-413.
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  36.  49
    On causal irregularity: A reply to Dretske and Snyder.Tom L. Beauchamp - 1973 - Philosophy of Science 40 (2):285-287.
  37.  7
    Should Recombinant DNA Research be Regulated?Tom L. Beauchamp - 1978 - In John Richards (ed.), Recombinant DNA: science, ethics, and politics. New York: Academic Press. pp. 225.
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  38.  25
    James Joyce: The Citizen and the Artist.Tom Beebee & C. H. Peake - 1979 - Substance 8 (2/3):215.
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  39. The variety of projections of a tree Prikry forcing.Tom Benhamou, Moti Gitik & Yair Hayut - 2023 - Journal of Mathematical Logic 24 (3).
    Journal of Mathematical Logic, Volume 24, Issue 03, December 2024. We study which [math]-distributive forcing notions of size [math] can be embedded into tree Prikry forcing notions with [math]-complete ultrafilters under various large cardinal assumptions. An alternative formulation — can the filter of dense open subsets of a [math]-distributive forcing notion of size [math] be extended to a [math]-complete ultrafilter.
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  40. The Politics of Fear after 9/11.Tom Pyszczynski - 2004 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 71 (4):1136-1142.
     
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  41.  43
    Morality and Institutional Detail in the Law of Torts: Reflections on Goldberg’s and Zipursky’s Recognizing Wrongs.Tom Dougherty & Johann Frick - 2021 - Law and Philosophy (1):1-37.
    In their brilliant and thought-provoking book Recognizing Wrongs, John Goldberg and Benjamin Zipursky offer a vindicatory interpretation of the law of torts. As part of this, they offer a justification for what they call the “principle of civil recourse.” This is the principle that “a person who enjoys a certain kind of legal right, and whose right has been violated by another, is entitled to enlist the state’s aid in enforcing that right, or to make demands in response to its (...)
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  42.  38
    Spirit and Social Death: Hegel, Historical Life and Genocide.Tom Bunyard - 2021 - Ethics and Social Welfare 15 (4):410-427.
  43.  23
    Why Is There Analytic Epistemology?Tom Vinci - 1994 - Dialogue 33 (3):517-.
  44.  10
    Giorgio Agamben: Legal, Political and Philosophical Perspectives.Tom Frost (ed.) - 2013 - New York,: Routledge.
    Giorgio Agamben: Legal, Political and Philosophical Perspectives brings together contributions from scholars in a number of fields including many who have worked closely with Agamben in order to argue that Agambens thought is vital to the future directions of research in the humanities and social sciences. The book is divided into three sections, each coalescing around a different perspective. Contributions in the first section examine the potential for Agambens thought to impact upon future legal scholarship. Papers draw upon wide ranging (...)
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  45.  9
    Socioeconomic and Psychosocial Adversities Experienced by Freelancers Working in the UK Cultural Sector During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Study.Tom May, Katey Warran, Alexandra Burton & Daisy Fancourt - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    There are concerns that the socioeconomic consequences of COVID-19, including unemployment and financial insecurity, are having adverse effects on the mental wellbeing of the population. One group particularly vulnerable to socioeconomic adversity during this period are those employed freelance within the cultural industry. Many workers in the sector were already subject to income instability, erratic work schedules and a lack of economic security before the pandemic, and it is possible that COVID-19 may exacerbate pre-existing economic precarity. Through interviews with 20 (...)
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  46.  27
    Joking a Part.Tom Shakespeare - 1999 - Body and Society 5 (4):47-52.
    This article discusses the different contexts in which disabled people encounter and deploy humour, both as victims and as agents, and provides examples. It raises questions about identity and audience and interpretation and about embodiment itself.
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  47.  39
    Duties to Animals: Rawl's Dilemma.Tom Regan - unknown
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  48.  27
    Changes in XVIth Century Taste: Permutations of the "Conte", 1530-1572.Tom Conley - 1971 - Substance 1 (2):73.
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    Full of Surprises.Tom Shippey - 2013 - The Chesterton Review 39 (1/2):295-300.
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  50.  37
    Self-Defeat Is Not So Frequent.Tom Settle - 1987 - Dialogue 26 (2):357-.
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