Results for 'Tyler P. Tate'

959 found
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  1.  32
    Military Metaphors in Health Care: Who Are We Actually Trying to Help?Tyler P. Tate & Robert A. Pearlman - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (10):15-17.
  2.  24
    Tyler Tate replies.Tyler Tate - 2023 - Hastings Center Report 53 (4):46-47.
    The author responds to a letter by D. Brendan Johnson in the July‐August 2023 issue of the Hastings Center Report concerning his and Joseph Clair's article “Love Your Patient as Yourself: On Reviving the Broken Heart of American Medical Ethics.”.
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  3.  5
    “Control Freaks”: Evaluating Concerns of Ableism in the Perinatal Environment.Tyler Tate - 2024 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 67 (4):619-630.
    This essay explores the relationship between the modern era’s impulse toward control and the practices of family planning and disability-selective abortion. Drawing from experiences as a pediatric palliative care physician working within a busy fetal care program, as well as the social theory of sociologist Hartmut Rosa, the author argues that there is an unresolved cultural and professional conflict within perinatal medicine between maximizing control of the future and maximizing a culture of anti-ableism.
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  4.  30
    Love Your Patient as Yourself: On Reviving the Broken Heart of American Medical Ethics.Tyler Tate & Joseph Clair - 2023 - Hastings Center Report 53 (2):12-25.
    This article presents a radical claim: American medical ethics is broken, and it needs love to be healed. Due to a unique set of cultural and economic pressures, American medical ethics has adopted a mechanistic mode of ethical reasoning epitomized by the doctrine of principlism. This mode of reasoning divorces clinicians from both their patients and themselves. This results in clinicians who can ace ethics questions on multiple‐choice tests but who fail either to recognize a patient's humanity or to navigate (...)
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  5.  25
    What we talk about when we talk about pediatric suffering.Tyler Tate - 2020 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 41 (4):143-163.
    In this paper I aim to show why pediatric suffering must be understood as a judgment or evaluation, rather than a mental state. To accomplish this task, first I analyze the various ways that the label of suffering is used in pediatric practice. Out of this analysis emerge what I call the twin poles of pediatric suffering. At one pole sits the belief that infants and children with severe cognitive impairment cannot suffer because they are nonverbal or lack subjective life (...)
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  6.  38
    What We Mean When We Talk About Suffering—and Why Eric Cassell Should Not Have the Last Word.Tyler Tate & Robert Pearlman - 2019 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 62 (1):95-110.
    Marie was 15 when her abdominal pain began. After two years of negative work-ups, countless visits to gastroenterologists, and over 70 days of high school missed, she found herself readmitted to the hospital. “Refractory abdominal pain” was her ostensible diagnosis; “troubled teen” who was “going to be difficult” was embedded in the emergency department’s sign-out. When the medical team arrived to meet Marie, she was huddled in the corner of her hospital bed, silent and withdrawn. Her intern noted the numerous (...)
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  7.  16
    Your Father's a Fighter; Your Daughter's a Vegetable: A Critical Analysis of the Use of Metaphor in Clinical Practice.Tyler Tate - 2020 - Hastings Center Report 50 (5):20-29.
    There are two widespread beliefs about the use of metaphors in clinical medicine. The first is that military metaphors are harmful to patients and should be discouraged in medical practice. The second is that the metaphors of clinical practice can be judged by and standardized in reference to neutral criteria. In this article, I evaluate both these beliefs, exposing their shared flawed logic. This logic underwrites the false empiricist assumptions that metaphorical language and literal language are fundamentally distinct, play separate (...)
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  8.  22
    Philosophical investigations into the essence of pediatric suffering.Tyler Tate - 2020 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 41 (4):137-142.
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  9.  14
    When Following the Rules Feels Wrong.Tyler Tate - 2021 - Hastings Center Report 51 (1):4-5.
    The Covid‐19 pandemic has created a clinical environment in which health care practitioners are experiencing moral distress in numerous and novel ways. In this narrative reflection, a pediatric palliative care physician explores how his hospital's strict visitation policy set the stage for moral distress when, in the early months of the pandemic, it prevented two parents from being together at the bedside of their dying child.
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  10.  30
    Empathetic Practice: The Struggle and Virtue of Empathizing with a Patient's Suffering.Georgina Campelia & Tyler Tate - 2019 - Hastings Center Report 49 (2):17-25.
    Empathy is sometimes so hard to achieve that one may wonder if it is a virtue for caregivers at all. Perhaps a caregiver cannot always know how a patient feels, and perhaps that knowledge is sometimes too painful to possess. A nuanced understanding of what empathy entails and of the conditions for attaining it can help ground its possibility.
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  11.  24
    The role of purifying selection in the origin and maintenance of complex function.Tyler D. P. Brunet, W. Ford Doolittle & Joseph P. Bielawski - 2021 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 87 (C):125-135.
  12.  18
    Desire for Parenthood in Context of Other Life Aspirations Among Lesbian, Gay, and Heterosexual Young Adults.Doyle P. Tate & Charlotte J. Patterson - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  13.  67
    A systems view on revenge and forgiveness systems.Tyler J. Wereha & Timothy P. Racine - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (1):39-39.
    Applying a non-developmental evolutionary metatheory to understanding the evolution of psychological capacities leads to the creation of models that mischaracterize developmental processes, misattribute genes as the source of developmental information, and ignore the myriad developmental and contextual factors involved in human decision-making. Using an evolutionary systems perspective, we argue that revenge and forgiveness cannot be understood apart from the development of foundational human psychological capacities and the contexts under which they develop.
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  14.  16
    The Clue.Tyler Tate - 2017 - Hastings Center Report 47 (2):3-4.
    As I stood outside of Carlos's room, I felt caught on the horns of a dilemma. It seemed impossible to truly “be there” for Carlos without sacrificing my other intern duties. This tension pervaded much of my residency training, as I often found myself spending more time completing chart notes, answering pages, and giving sign out than I did at the bedside with my patients. I knew I had a duty to “do my job”—I could not let my team down. (...)
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  15.  63
    Sola Scriptura and the Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism.Tyler Dalton McNabb & Gregory R. P. Stacey - 2024 - TheoLogica: An International Journal for Philosophy of Religion and Philosophical Theology 9 (1).
    Inspired by Plantinga’s Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism (EAAN), we develop an argument—the “Scriptural Argument Against Dogmatic Protestantism” (SAADP)—that Protestants who accept the doctrine of sola scriptura cannot reasonably hold that Catholic and Eastern churches are in doctrinal error. If sola scriptura is true and Catholic and Eastern Churches have fallen into error, it is improbable that any Protestant can reliably form true beliefs about controversial points of Christian doctrine, including sola scriptura or suggestions that Catholic and Eastern Christians are in (...)
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  16.  42
    Constitutive spectral EEG peaks in the gamma range: suppressed by sleep, reduced by mental activity and resistant to sensory stimulation.Tyler S. Grummett, Sean P. Fitzgibbon, Trent W. Lewis, Dylan DeLosAngeles, Emma M. Whitham, Kenneth J. Pope & John O. Willoughby - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  17.  23
    “A Shell of My Former Self”: Using Figurative Language to Promote Communication About Patient Suffering.Tyler Tate, Elizabeth Stein & Robert Pearlman - forthcoming - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics.
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  18.  24
    The ribosome: lifting the veil from a fascinating organelle.Warren P. Tate & Elizabeth S. Poole - 2004 - Bioessays 26 (5):582-588.
    It was first suggested that the ribosome is associated with protein synthesis in the 1950s. Initially, its components were revealed as surface‐accessible proteins and as molecules of RNA apparently providing a scaffold for subunit shape. Attributing function to the proteins proved difficult, although bacterial protein L11 proved essential for binding one of the decoding protein release factors (RFs). With the discovery that RNA could be a catalyst, interest focussed on the rRNA that, in partnership with mRNA and tRNAs, could potentially (...)
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  19.  43
    Local causation.Tyler D. P. Brunet - 2021 - Synthese 199 (3-4):10885-10908.
    The counterfactual and regularity theories are universal accounts of causation. I argue that these should be generalized to produce local accounts of causation. A hallmark of universal accounts of causation is the assumption that apparent variation in causation between locations must be explained by differences in background causal conditions, by features of the causal-nexus or causing-complex. The local account of causation presented here rejects this assumption, allowing for genuine variation in causation to be explained by differences in location. I argue (...)
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  20.  18
    An Evidence Logic Perspective on Schotch-Jennings Forcing.Tyler D. P. Brunet & Gillman Payette - 2023 - In Helle Hvid Hansen, Andre Scedrov & Ruy J. G. B. De Queiroz (eds.), Logic, Language, Information, and Computation: 29th International Workshop, WoLLIC 2023, Halifax, NS, Canada, July 11–14, 2023, Proceedings. Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 135-160.
    Traditional epistemic and doxastic logics cannot deal with inconsistent beliefs nor do they represent the evidence an agent possesses. So-called ‘evidence logics’ have been introduced to deal with both of those issues. The semantics of these logics are based on neighbourhood or hypergraph frames. The neighbourhoods of a world represent the basic evidence available to an agent. On one view, beliefs supported by evidence are propositions derived from all maximally consistent collections evidence. An alternative concept of beliefs takes them to (...)
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  21.  52
    Belief in evolved belief systems: Artifact of a limited evolutionary model?Tyler J. Wereha & Timothy P. Racine - 2009 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32 (6):537-538.
    Belief in evolved belief systems stems from using a population-genetic model of evolution that misconstrues the developmental relationship between genes and behaviour, confuses notions of “adapted” and “adaptive,” and ignores the fundamental role of language in the development of human beliefs. We suggest that theories about the evolution of belief would be better grounded in a developmental model of evolution.
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  22.  19
    Family Break-Down and Stress in Huntington's Chorea.Audrey Tyler, P. S. Harper, Kathleen Davies & R. G. Newcome - 1983 - Journal of Biosocial Science 15 (2):127-138.
    SummaryThe incidence of family breakdown and stress has been examined in an unselected group of 92 South Wales families, each containing a patient suffering from Huntington's chorea, and related to the onset and duration of the disease, age of the patient, and behavioural symptoms shown. The frequency of actual and attempted suicide is analysed and the effects of the disorder on the primary care agent for the patient discussed. Some of the effects on children and the needs of the families (...)
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  23.  38
    Are emotional clarity and emotion differentiation related?Matthew Tyler Boden, Renee J. Thompson, Mügé Dizén, Howard Berenbaum & John P. Baker - 2013 - Cognition and Emotion 27 (6):961-978.
  24.  20
    United States Normative Attitudes for Pursuing Parenthood as a Function of Gender, Sexual Orientation, and Age.Doyle P. Tate - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Decisions about whether or not to become a parent are significant parts of normative human development. Many studies have shown that married different-sex couples are expected to become parents, and that many social pressures enforce this norm. For same-sex couples, however, much less is known about social norms surrounding parenthood within marriage. This study examined injunctive norms and descriptive norms for the pursuit of parenthood as a function of age, gender, and sexual orientation. Participants in an internet survey included 1020 (...)
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  25.  31
    Categorial modal realism.Tyler D. P. Brunet - 2023 - Synthese 201 (2):1-29.
    The current conception of the plurality of worlds is founded on a set theoretic understanding of possibilia. This paper provides an alternative category theoretic conception and argues that it is at least as serviceable for our understanding of possibilia. In addition to or instead of the notion of possibilia conceived as possible objects or possible individuals, this alternative to set theoretic modal realism requires the notion of possible morphisms, conceived as possible changes, processes or transformations. To support this alternative conception (...)
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  26.  39
    Syntactic Computations in the Language Network: Characterizing Dynamic Network Properties Using Representational Similarity Analysis.Lorraine K. Tyler, Teresa P. L. Cheung, Barry J. Devereux & Alex Clarke - 2013 - Frontiers in Psychology 4.
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  27.  68
    Evolution, Development, and Human Social Cognition.Tyler J. Wereha & Timothy P. Racine - 2012 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 3 (4):559-579.
    Explaining the causal origins of what are taken to be uniquely human capacities for understanding the mind in the first years of life is a primary goal of social cognitive development research, which concerns so called “theory of mind” or “mindreading” skills. We review and discuss particular examples of this research in the context of its underlying evolutionary conceptual framework known as the neo-Darwinian modern synthesis. It is increasingly recognized that the modern synthesis is limited in its neglect of developmental (...)
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  28.  23
    Local ontology: reconciling processualism and new mechanism.Tyler D. P. Brunet - 2024 - European Journal for Philosophy of Science 14 (3):1-25.
    What should we do when two conflicting ontologies are both fruitful, though their fruitfulness varies by context or location? To achieve reconciliation, it is not enough to advocate pluralism. There are many varieties of pluralism and not all pluralisms will serve equally well; some may be inconsistent, others unhelpful. This essay considers another option: local ontology. For a pair of ontologies, a local ontology consists of two claims: (1) each location enjoys a unique ontology, and (2) neither ontology is most (...)
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  29. What is Interpretability?Adrian Erasmus, Tyler D. P. Brunet & Eyal Fisher - 2021 - Philosophy and Technology 34:833–862.
    We argue that artificial networks are explainable and offer a novel theory of interpretability. Two sets of conceptual questions are prominent in theoretical engagements with artificial neural networks, especially in the context of medical artificial intelligence: Are networks explainable, and if so, what does it mean to explain the output of a network? And what does it mean for a network to be interpretable? We argue that accounts of “explanation” tailored specifically to neural networks have ineffectively reinvented the wheel. In (...)
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  30. Interpretability and Unification.Adrian Erasmus & Tyler D. P. Brunet - 2022 - Philosophy and Technology 35 (2):1-6.
    In a recent reply to our article, “What is Interpretability?,” Prasetya argues against our position that artificial neural networks are explainable. It is claimed that our indefeasibility thesis—that adding complexity to an explanation of a phenomenon does not make the phenomenon any less explainable—is false. More precisely, Prasetya argues that unificationist explanations are defeasible to increasing complexity, and thus, we may not be able to provide such explanations of highly complex AI models. The reply highlights an important lacuna in our (...)
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  31. Salvation through Implicit Faith: A New Defence.Gregory R. P. Stacey & Tyler Dalton McNabb - forthcoming - New Blackfriars.
    The once popular thesis that non-Christians who are inculpably ignorant of the gospel can be saved through ‘implicit faith’ in Christ has fallen on hard times. In this paper, we consider objections raised against this position by a range of Catholic critics including Thomas Crean, Augustine DiNoia, Gavin D’Costa, and Stephen Bullivant. In our judgment, criticisms of ‘implicit faith’ often suffer from a lack of clarity about the nature of such faith, although admittedly this ambiguity was present even in original (...)
     
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  32.  44
    The Church, the State, and Vaccine Policy.Saad B. Omer, Douglas J. Opel, Tyler Tate & Robert A. Bednarczyk - 2017 - American Journal of Bioethics 17 (4):50-52.
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  33.  22
    Gods and Talking Animals: the Pan-Cultural Recall Advantage of Supernatural Agent Concepts.Justin P. Gregory, Tyler S. Greenway & Christina Keys - 2019 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 19 (1-2):97-130.
    Supernatural agent concepts are regarded as a defining trait of religion. The interaction of the minimally counterintuitive mnemonic effect and the hypersensitive agency detection device may be employed to explain the universal presence of concepts of gods and deities. Using the measure of free-recall, a broad model of cultural transmission investigated this pan-cultural transmission bias with a large age-representative sample in UK and China. Results were analyzed by four-way mixed ANOVA considering counterintuitiveness, familiarity, ontological category, and delay, and with age (...)
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  34.  37
    (1 other version)Θήσεμς ςτεø. Τζαννέταατος : Σύμμικτα Pp. 40. Athens1949. Paper, δp. 7000.J. Tate - 1951 - The Classical Review 1 (01):52-53.
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  35.  68
    Solar radiation modification is risky, but so is rejecting it: a call for balanced research.Claudia Wieners, Benjamin P. Hofbauer, Iris de Vries, Matthias Honegger, Daniele Visioni, Hermann Russchenberg & Tyler Felgenhauer - 2023 - Oxford Open Climate Change 3 (1).
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  36.  14
    Automaticity of lexical access in deaf and hearing bilinguals: Cross-linguistic evidence from the color Stroop task across five languages.Rain G. Bosworth, Eli M. Binder, Sarah C. Tyler & Jill P. Morford - 2021 - Cognition 212 (C):104659.
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  37. Can Primitive Laws Explain?Tyler Hildebrand - 2013 - Philosophers' Imprint 13:1-15.
    One reason to posit governing laws is to explain the uniformity of nature. Explanatory power can be purchased by accepting new primitives, and scientists invoke laws in their explanations without providing any supporting metaphysics. For these reasons, one might suspect that we can treat laws as wholly unanalyzable primitives. (John Carroll’s *Laws of Nature* (1994) and Tim Maudlin’s *The Metaphysics Within Physics* (2007) offer recent defenses of primitivism about laws.) Whatever defects primitive laws might have, explanatory weakness should not be (...)
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  38.  32
    P. Merlan: Plaions Form der philosophischen Mitteilung. (Hermaion, fasc. 10.) Pp. 25. Lwów: University, 1939. Paper, 2 fr. (Swiss). [REVIEW]J. Tate - 1940 - The Classical Review 54 (01):53-.
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  39.  18
    The Influence of a Competitive Field Hockey Match on Cognitive Function.Rachel Malcolm, Simon Cooper, Jonathan P. Folland, Christopher J. Tyler & Caroline Sunderland - 2022 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 16.
    Despite the known positive effects of acute exercise on cognition, the effects of a competitive team sport match are unknown. In a randomized crossover design, 20 female and 17 male field hockey players completed a battery of cognitive tests prior to, at half-time, and immediately following a competitive match ; with effect sizes presented as raw ES from mixed effect models. Blood samples were collected prior to and following the match and control trial, and analyzed for adrenaline, noradrenaline, brain derived (...)
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  40. Perceptual objectivity.Tyler Burge - 2009 - Philosophical Review 118 (3):285-324.
    A central preoccupation of philosophy in the twentieth century was to determine constitutive conditions under which accurate (objective) empirical representation of the macrophysical environment is possible. A view that dominated attitudes on this project maintained that an individual cannot empirically represent a physical subject matter as having specific physical characteristics unless the individual can represent some constitutive conditions under which such representation is possible. The version of this view that dominated the century's second half maintained that objective empirical representation of (...)
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  41.  31
    Ethnography in caesar's Gallic War and its Implications for Composition.Tyler Creer - 2019 - Classical Quarterly 69 (1):246-263.
    After long neglect, in English-language scholarship at least, the question of how Julius Caesar wrote and disseminated hisGallic War—as a single work? in multi-year chunks? year by year?—was revived by T.P. Wiseman in 1998, who argued anew for serial composition. This paper endeavours to provide further evidence for that conclusion by examining how Caesar depicts the non-Roman peoples he fights. Caesar's ethnographic passages, and their authorship, have been a point of contention among German scholars for over a century, but reading (...)
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  42.  16
    Analytic computable structure theory and $$L^p$$Lp -spaces part 2.Tyler Brown & Timothy H. McNicholl - 2020 - Archive for Mathematical Logic 59 (3-4):427-443.
    Suppose \ is a computable real. We extend previous work of Clanin, Stull, and McNicholl by determining the degrees of categoricity of the separable \ spaces whose underlying measure spaces are atomic but not purely atomic. In addition, we ascertain the complexity of associated projection maps.
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  43. Mary and Fátima: A Modest C-Inductive Argument for Catholicism.Tyler Dalton Mcnabb & Joseph E. Blado - 2020 - Perichoresis 18 (5):55-65.
    C-Inductive arguments are arguments that increase the probability of a hypothesis. This can be contrasted with what is called a P-Inductive argument. A P-inductive argument is an argument that shows the overall probability of a hypothesis to be more probable than not. In this paper, we put forth a C-inductive argument for the truth of the Catholic hypothesis (CH). Roughly, we take CH to be the hypothesis that the core creedal beliefs found within the Catholic Tradition are true. Specifically, we (...)
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  44.  51
    ΕΙΔΟΣ and IΔΕΑ - P. Brommer: ΕΙΔΟΣ et ΙΔΕΑ. Étude sémantique et chronologique des ceuvres de Platon. Philosophia Critica, Deel I. Pp. 277. Assen: van Gorcum, 1940. Paper, fl. 4.90. [REVIEW]J. Tate - 1940 - The Classical Review 54 (04):192-193.
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  45. Schwartz Stephen P.. Preface. Naming, necessity, and natural kinds, edited by Schwartz Stephen P., Cornell University Press, Ithaca and London 1977, pp. 9–10.Schwartz Stephen P.. Introduction. Naming, necessity, and natural kinds, edited by Schwartz Stephen P., Cornell University Press, Ithaca and London 1977, pp. 13–41.Donnellan Keith S.. Reference and definite descriptions. A reprint of XL 276 . Naming, necessity, and natural kinds, edited by Schwartz Stephen P., Cornell University Press, Ithaca and London 1977, pp. 42–65.Kripke Saul. Identity and necessity. Naming, necessity, and natural kinds, edited by Schwartz Stephen P., Cornell University Press, Ithaca and London 1977, pp. 66–101. Putnam Hilary. IS semantics possible? Naming, necessity, and natural kinds, edited by Schwartz Stephen P., Cornell University Press, Ithaca and London 1977, pp. 102–118. Putnam Hilary. Meaning and reference. Naming, necessity, and natural kinds, edited by Schwartz Stephen P., Cornell University Press,. [REVIEW]Tyler Burge - 1982 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 47 (4):911-915.
  46. A road map to middle eastern peace? - A public choice perspective.Tyler Cowen - unknown
    1 Since commentary on the M ideas t is s o fraugh t with controversy, let me state s ome of my s tarting p oints up front. I am a strong believer in a market economy, and in W estern civilization. My foreign p olicy instincts tend to be dovish, in recognition of the imperfections in governments, but I am not, like some libertarians , in principle oppo sed to A merican intervention abroad. I am not religious , and (...)
     
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  47.  44
    On Plato: Laws X 889CD.J. Tate - 1936 - Classical Quarterly 30 (2):48-54.
    The problem suggested by this passage cannot be properly appreciated unless it is shown first of all that the treatment of poetry and art in the Laws fundamentally agrees with, though of course in some respects it provides a welcome supplement to, the attitude set forth in the Republic and elsewhere by Plato. The demand that music and poetry should ‘imitate’ the good; and that this ‘imitation’ should have meaning and accuracy, and be free from mere emotionalism directly recalls the (...)
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  48. Validity, Legal.John O. Tyler Jr - 2014 - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Legal Validity Legal validity governs the enforceability of law, and the standard of legal validity enhances or restricts the ability of the political ruler to enforce his will through legal coercion. Western law adopts three competing standards of legal validity. Each standard emphasizes a different dimension of law (Berman 1988, p. 779), and each has […].
     
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  49.  67
    Lauri Karttunen and Stanley Peters. Conventional implicature. Syntax and semantics, Volume 11, Presupposition, edited by Choon-Kyu Oh and David A. Dinneen, Academic Press, New York, San Francisco, and London, 1979, pp. 1–56. - Gerald Gazdar. A solution to the projection problem. Syntax and semantics, Volume 11, Presupposition, edited by Choon-Kyu Oh and David A. Dinneen, Academic Press, New York, San Francisco, and London, 1979, pp. 57–89. - Janet Dean Fodor. In defense of the truth value gap. Syntax and semantics, Volume 11, Presupposition, edited by Choon-Kyu Oh and David A. Dinneen, Academic Press, New York, San Francisco, and London, 1979, pp. 199–224. - Ruth M. Kempson. Presupposition, opacity, and ambiguity. Syntax and semantics, Volume 11, Presupposition, edited by Choon-Kyu Oh and David A. Dinneen, Academic Press, New York, San Francisco, and London, 1979, pp. 283–297. - S. K. Thomason. Truth-value gaps, many truth values, and possible worlds. Syntax and semantics, Volume 11, P. [REVIEW]Tyler Burge - 1981 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 46 (2):412-415.
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  50.  64
    Xenophon, Anabasis, door P. K. Huibregtse, met illustraties van A.A.Tadema. Pp. 260. Groningen: J. B. Wolters, 1951. Cloth, f. 5.90. [REVIEW]J. Tate - 1953 - The Classical Review 3 (02):117-.
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