Results for 'Virgil A. Clift'

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  1.  40
    book Reviews Section 3.Evelyn Weber, Malcolm B. Campbell, Paul R. Klohr, Virgil A. Clift, Charles M. Galloway, Donald Arstine, William C. Bailey, Maurice P. Hunt, J. Junius Johnson, Max Bailey, Eleanor Leacock, Jack Otis & Earl F. Rankin - 1972 - Educational Studies 3 (1):44-53.
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  2.  13
    Governing Homelessness through Running.Bryan C. Clift - 2019 - Body and Society 25 (2):88-118.
    In the context of social welfare austerity and non-state actors’ interventions into social life, an urban not-for-profit organization in the United States, Back on My Feet, uses the practice of running to engage those recovering from homelessness. Promoting messages of self-sufficiency, the organization centralizes the body as a site of investment and transformation. Doing so calls to the fore the social construction of ‘the homeless body’ and ‘the running body’. Within this ethnographic inquiry, participants in recovery who ran with the (...)
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  3.  17
    Actions in practice: On details in collections.Chase Wesley Raymond & Rebecca Clift - 2018 - Discourse Studies 20 (1):90-119.
    Several of the contributions to the Lynch et al. Special issue make the claim that conversation-analytic research into epistemics is ‘routinely crafted at the expense of actual, produced and constitutive detail, and what that detail may show us’. Here, we seek to address the inappositeness of this critique by tracing precisely how it is that recognizable actions emerge from distinct practices of interaction. We begin by reviewing some of the foundational tenets of conversation-analytic theory and method – including the relationship (...)
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  4.  19
    The Global Innovation Model for Antibiotics Needs Reinvention.Manica Balasegaram, Charles Clift & John-Arne Røttingen - 2015 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 43 (s3):22-26.
    The dangers presented by antibiotic resistance have now established themselves as a global health security issue. From an international policy perspective, three key pillars have been established: responsible access, conservation, and innovation. These pillars are intrinsically linked, meaning that any attempt to address one must take into account the implications for the other two.An urgent need exists to address the innovation failure in ABR. In the field of anti-bacterials, the pipeline remains anemic in terms of therapeutics with novel mechanisms of (...)
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  5.  25
    Soft X-ray emission spectra of zinc and a copper—zinc alloy.J. Clift, C. Curry & B. J. Thompson - 1963 - Philosophical Magazine 8 (88):639-642.
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  6.  7
    The Church and the Secular Establishment.Virgil Nemoianu - 2006 - Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 9 (2):16-42.
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  7.  85
    Ecological color.Virgil Whitmyer - 1999 - Philosophical Psychology 12 (2):197-214.
    In his 1995 book Colour vision (New York: Routledge), Evan Thompson proposes a new approach to the ontology of color according to which it is tied to the ecological dispositions-affordances described by J.J. Gibson and his followers. Thompson claims that a relational account of color is necessary in order to avoid the problems that go along with the dispute between subjectivists and objectivists about color, but he claims that the received view of perception does not allow a satisfactory relational account (...)
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  8.  86
    (1 other version)Epistemological relativism and the sociology of knowledge.Virgil G. Hinshaw - 1948 - Philosophy of Science 15 (1):4-10.
    Since Protagoras' classic “man is the measure of all things,” claims of relativism and counter-claims have been tendered. The nineteenth century saw Durkheim, Levy-Bruhl, Westermarck, Pareto, Marx, and others, suggesting that institutions, customs, moral codes, and the like, are “relative” both to the culture and to the time. At the crest of this wave of “relativism” surged a vicious claim: that truth and knowledge itself were merely functions of particular conditions. The “validity” of knowledge was said to be at the (...)
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  9. Schütz on Objectivity and Spontaneous Orders.Virgil Henry Storr - 2010 - Schutzian Research 2:165-181.
    Although Schütz’s relationship with the Austrian school of economics was an intimate one, Lavoie and other Austrian scholars have challenged (a) Schütz’s characterization of praxeology as an objective science of subjective phenomena and (b) the ability of Schütz’s phenomenology, which emphasizes the subjective meanings of actors, to really make sense of spontaneous social orders. It is my contention, however, that Schütz can be adequately defended against both these charges. First, for Schütz, the claim that social science is an objective science (...)
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  10.  91
    The last word on being red and blue all over.Virgil C. Aldrich - 1954 - Philosophical Studies 5 (1):5-10.
  11.  21
    The Need for Robust Critique of Arts and Health Research: Young People, Art Therapy and Mental Health.Katarzyna Grebosz-Haring, Leonhard Thun-Hohenstein, Anna Katharina Schuchter-Wiegand, Yoon Irons, Arne Bathke, Kate Phillips & Stephen Clift - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    We describe work in progress to conduct a systematic review of research on effects of arts-based programs for mental health in young people. We are at the stage of searching for relevant studies through major databases and screening extant systematic reviews for additional research which meet our inclusion criteria. At this stage, however, concerns have arisen regarding both the quality of existing primary studies and of recently published systematic reviews in this area of arts and health. As a case in (...)
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  12. Techno-Telepathy & Silent Subvocal Speech-Recognition Robotics.Virgil W. Brower - 2021 - HORIZON. Studies in Phenomenology 10 (1):232-257.
    The primary focus of this project is the silent and subvocal speech-recognition interface unveiled in 2018 as an ambulatory device wearable on the neck that detects a myoelectrical signature by electrodes worn on the surface of the face, throat, and neck. These emerge from an alleged “intending to speak” by the wearer silently-saying-something-to-oneself. This inner voice is believed to occur while one reads in silence or mentally talks to oneself. The artifice does not require spoken sounds, opening the mouth, or (...)
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  13. Machine-Believers Learning Faiths & Knowledges: The Gospel According to Chat GPT.Virgil W. Brower - 2021 - Internationales Jahrbuch Für Medienphilosophie 7 (1):97-121.
    One is occasionally reminded of Foucault's proclamation in a 1970 interview that "perhaps, one day this century will be known as Deleuzian." Less often is one compelled to update and restart with a supplementary counter-proclamation of the mathematician, David Lindley: "the twenty-first century would be a Bayesian era..." The verb tenses of both are conspicuous. // To critically attend to what is today often feared and demonized, but also revered, deployed, and commonly referred to as algorithm(s), one cannot avoid the (...)
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  14. The spinozist freedom of George Eliot's Daniel deronda.Virgil Martin Nemoianu - 2010 - Philosophy and Literature 34 (1):pp. 65-81.
    George Eliot's Daniel Deronda advances a conception of freedom with clear Spinozist affinities. The development of Eliot's characters, and of their relationships to one another, can be understood fruitfully in terms of growth toward freedom or contraction to bondage, where the notions of freedom and bondage are very much in accord with Spinoza's views in the Ethics. A close reading of specific scenes and an analysis of the title character's arc in the novel discloses a view of human freedom which (...)
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  15. Théorie et Pratique de la Phénoménologie.Virgil Ciomoş - 2004 - Studia Phaenomenologica 4 (3-4):79-89.
    In this article, the author recalls the circumstances when he first met Alexandru Dragomir, together with André Scrima and Mihai Şora, with the occasion of a conference on the phenomenology of time at the New Europe College in Bucharest. Then, the author talks about his philosophical relationship with Alexandru Dragomir during the following years, insisting upon the phenomenological debates they had and upon the specific manner of Dragomir’s thinking.
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  16. The Insufficiency of the Many Gods Objection to Pascal’s Wager.Virgil Martin Nemoianu - 2010 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 84 (3):513-530.
    Perhaps the best known criticism of Pascal’s wager is the many Gods objection. As so often with anglophone criticisms of Pascal, the many Gods objectiontypically treats the wager in isolation from the rest of Pascal’s thought. In this case, the truncated reading has issued in the view that Pascal was indifferent toor ignorant of the possibility that Gods other than the one described by Catholic theology might exist. This view is false. Even a cursory glance beyond the wagerfragment reveals that (...)
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  17. Descartes' method of doubt.Virgil C. Aldrich - 1937 - Philosophy of Science 4 (4):395-411.
    Lord Acton, in his letter to the contributors to the Cambridge Modern History, wrote: “By Universal History, I understand that which is distinct from the combined histories of all countries … and is not a burden on the memory but an illumination of the soul.” If we replace “history” by the more general term “knowledge,” we get the statement of an ideal cherished by the great men of every age—those lonely pioneers to whom book-learning is an intellectual gloom more treacherous (...)
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  18.  46
    Pouvoir et entreprise : une analyse méthodologique et conceptuelle.Virgile Chassagnon - 2019 - Revue de Philosophie Économique 19 (2):3-32.
    La science économique a toujours été réticente à l’égard du concept de pouvoir, qui ne saurait être opérationnalisé dans les modèles microéconomiques et qui justifierait des rationalisations ex post. Pourtant, le pouvoir est un vecteur d’institutionnalisation sociale que les économistes se doivent d’intégrer pour faire de la firme un objet de recherche de l’économie politique et réaliser de nouveaux progrès explicatifs. Partant, l’article ambitionne de proposer une analyse méthodologique renouvelée du pouvoir, lequel implique une structure collective tout en reposant sur (...)
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  19.  39
    Pictures and Persons—An Analogy.Virgil C. Aldrich - 1975 - Review of Metaphysics 28 (4):599 - 610.
    Now, if you were asked, "Did you see what is in the picture?" and answered "No," your companion might reasonably say that you did not see the picture after all. This he could say on the strength of the other part of the concept of a picture. To see a picture in this sense is at least to see what it pictures, and this is what is "in" it. Your dog never sees the picture, in this sense. As for you, (...)
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  20.  75
    Picturing, Seeing and the Time-Lag Argument.Virgil C. Aldrich - 1975 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 4 (3):535 - 547.
    Picture-theories of visual perception usually maintain that, when something is simply seen, then the seer “has” a picture of the thing, the thing is the primary cause of the picture, the thing in itself is not the primary object of sight, and it is the picture itself that is the primary object of visual awareness.I shall argue in this essay that there are not only proper, but required, senses in which the first three of these propositions are true, but that (...)
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  21.  62
    The Teacher’s Station and Its Duties.Virgil C. Aldrich - 1968 - The Monist 52 (1):46-59.
    F. H. Bradley’s early essay “My Station and Its Duties” might as well have been entitled “The Philosopher’s Station and Its Duties.” The philosopher takes a god’s-eye view of man as finally realizing himself only in the philosophical consciousness of the Whole. Thus it is the philosopher’s duty to remind man qua man of this Whole as the ultimate determinant of all Duty. But, said Bradley, some-where between this ultimate on the one hand and the very local thing called the (...)
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  22.  16
    Beyond markets and hierarchies : an economic analysis of vertical quasi-integration.Virgile Chassagnon - 2014 - Revue de Philosophie Économique 15 (1):135-165.
    Les dynamiques industrielles du capitalisme sont liées aux transformations des structures organisationnelles de production. Ainsi, la firme verticalement intégrée à la Chandler s’est effacée au profit de firmes modernes désintégrées. Cette profonde transformation de l’environnement industriel, qui s’est manifestée dans les années 1980 et 1990, a conduit les firmes à développer de nouvelles stratégies de coopération inter-firmes et à faire émerger des formes de quasi-intégration verticale. L’objectif de cet article est d’analyser ces changements institutionnels à l’aune de la théorie économique. (...)
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  23.  35
    The Deterritorialization of Human Rights.Virgil Ciomos - 2010 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 9 (25):17-27.
    The jurisdiction of Human Rights finds itself in a paradoxical situation for, on the one hand, these rights are affirmed as universal and, on the other, they emerged from within the boundaries of certain determinate states. That is why Western modernity is marked by a tension between the primary, determined territory proper to the emergence of human right and their universal, world calling. With regard to this tension the present study focuses on several key issues in our times: the deterritorialization (...)
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  24.  20
    Cognitive-behavioral group therapy and buprenorphine: Balancing methodological rigor and community partner ethical concerns in efficacy-effectiveness trials.Virgil L. Gregory - 2020 - Ethics and Behavior 30 (5):364-384.
    Opioid use disorder can encompass a number of behavioral, psychological, physiological, and interpersonal symptoms which collectively impair one’s functioning to different degrees. Of all the personal and societal problems associated with OUD, the most destructive and absolute is death. Given the caustic effects of OUD on quality of life and mortality, evidence-based pharmacotherapy and psychosocial interventions are necessary. It is the collective potential for buprenorphine to increase safety and concurrent cognitive-behavioral group therapy to address substance use triggers as well as (...)
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  25.  9
    Ethical efficiency: responsibility and contingency.Virgil Cristian Lenoir - 2016 - Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
    Practical and conceptual, the Responsible Research and Innovation set of books contributes to the clarification of this new requirement for all sciences and technological innovation. It covers the multiple and international responsibilities, by using various philosophical resources, mostly discussing the following topics: ethics, contingency, normative economy, freedom, corporate social responsibility (CSR), participative technological evaluation, sustainable development, geoengineering, the precautionary principle, standards, interdisciplinarity, and climate management. The ethics of efficiency must be considered with regard to the logic of action or to (...)
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  26.  29
    Hegel's Understanding: Absence, Accident, Alienated.Virgil Lualhati McCorgray - 2021 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 15 (3).
    This essay is an exegetical work, the primary intention of which is to present and interpret Hegel’s notion of the “understanding” in the first chapter of his Phenomenology of Spirit. The presentation and interpretation at hand takes as its starting point the work of Slavoj Žižek, who the author feels has begun a new and exciting era of scholarship on Hegel. The overall aim of the essay is modest: to develop the Žižekian reading of Hegel at the micro level. My (...)
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  27.  39
    Mihai Sora and the Traditions of Romanian Philosophy.Virgil Nemoianu - 1990 - Review of Metaphysics 43 (3):591 - 605.
    ROMANIAN CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY do not constitute themselves in an orderly and continuous system of their own. Nor are they indispensable to the serious student of central human reflections and searches for truth. Their real interest is a historical one and, in the light of the globalized civilization of the twentieth century, one of cultural geography. A national community placed at the margins of Western culture, pertaining to it, but not quite able to synchronize its intellectual or (...)
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  28.  20
    Postmodernism and Cultural Identities: Conflicts and Coexistence.Virgil Nemoianu - 2010 - Catholic University of America Press.
    *An examination of the survival of cultural values in a postmodern environment*.
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  29.  25
    The Heart of Reality: Essays on Beauty, Love, and Ethics .Virgil Nemoianu - 2005 - Review of Metaphysics 58 (3):694-695.
    Vladimir Soloviev should probably not be described as a philosopher or theologian of the highest rank. However his importance in the intellectual history of Russia and of Eastern Orthodoxy in general is peerless. This fact is now slowly beginning to seep into Western scholarship. He was and remains relevant and interesting as a formidable animator, a man of enormously diverse interests, and a genuine ecumenicist. Without him the Russian theological school in twentieth century France would not have been possible. Moreover, (...)
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  30.  55
    The Order of Pascal's Politics.Virgil Martin Nemoianu - 2013 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 21 (1):34-56.
    This essay rejects two common views of Pascal: (a) that he holds only temporal and contingent standards of justice to be available to human beings and (b) that he is indifferent to all but eternal standards of justice. Against these reductive misunderstandings, I provide a detailed reconstruction of Pascal's political thought, drawn from the Pensées and other texts. I show that Pascal develops an account of two distinct and hierarchized orders of justice: a temporal order and an eternal order. Pascal (...)
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  31.  20
    Tests and Proofs: 17th International Conference, TAP 2023, Leicester, UK, July 18–19, 2023, Proceedings.Virgile Prevosto & Cristina Seceleanu (eds.) - 2023 - Springer Nature Switzerland.
    This book constitutes the proceedings of the 17th International Conference, TAP 2023, as part of STAF 2023, a federation of conferences on Software Technologies, Applications and Foundations, which includes two more conferences besides TAP: ICGT (International Conference on Graph Transformations), and ECMFA (European Conference on Modelling Foundations and Applications) in Leicester, UK, in July 2023. The 8 full papers together with 2 short papers included in this volume were carefully reviewed and selected from 14 submissions. They were organized in topical (...)
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  32.  17
    Exploring Political Views on Synthetic Biology in the Netherlands.Virgil Rerimassie - 2016 - NanoEthics 10 (3):289-308.
    Synthetic biology may be an important source of progress as well as societal and political conflict. Against this backdrop, several technology assessment organizations have been seeking to contribute to timely societal and political opinion-making on synthetic biology. The Rathenau Instituut, based in the Netherlands, is one of these organizations. In 2011, the institute organized a ‘Meeting of Young Minds’: a young people’s debate between ‘future synthetic biologists’ and ‘future politicians’. The former were represented by participants in the international Genetically Engineered (...)
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  33.  30
    All We've learnt: Colonial Teachings and Caribean Underdevelopment.Virgil Henry Storr - 2002 - Journal des Economistes Et des Etudes Humaines 12 (4).
    This paper argues that in order to understand West Indian economic underdevelopment, the saliency of the informal institutions that emerged during its colonial period and the effect these institutions have had on the emergence of a local entrepreneurial class can not be discounted. British colonial occupation, I contend, gave rise to two persistent informal institutions that have affected development: a belief in the ability and responsibility of government to direct the economy and pessimism regarding the possibility of entrepreneurial success. Relying (...)
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  34.  1
    Ideology and Extreme Protests.Virgil Henry Storr, Michael R. Romero & Nona Martin Storr - 2024 - Social Philosophy and Policy 41 (1):44-61.
    Ideology can be understood as a type of cultural system, a set of interrelated meanings that are symbolically mediated through semiotic devices such as metaphors. Ideologies underlie social orders as well as help people make sense of their environment and decide on courses of action. While much has been said about ideology, little has been written on the sources of ideological change beyond pointing to ideological entrepreneurship. Even less has been written on the relationship between violent and disruptive social movements (...)
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  35.  9
    The Aeneid.Virgil . - 2008 - Oxford University Press UK.
    The supreme Roman epic and the greatest poem in Latin, the Aeneid has inspired many of the great European poets including Dante and Milton. The Trojan hero Aeneas, after surviving the sack of Troy, makes his way to the West, urged on by benevolent deities and following a destiny laid down by Jupiter, but harassed and impeded by the goddess Juno. He wins his way to Italy despite many trials, of which the greatest is the tragic outcome of his love (...)
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  36.  54
    Determinism versus continuity.Virgil Hinshaw - 1959 - Philosophy of Science 26 (4):310-324.
    Prompted by Alfred Landé's appraisal of individual indeterminacy in both ordinary and quantum games of chance, this paper suggests an alternative assessment in terms of the model-structure of physical theory. Whereas Landé explains such indeterminacy by appeal to "the Leibnitzian principle" of causal continuity, the author sees no need for such a special explanation. Instead, he indicates how the partial interpretation of the kinetic and quantum models limits us to statistical generalities--to limited "areas of relative chance." The alleged indeterminism of (...)
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  37. Kripke on Wittgenstein on Regulation.Virgil C. Aldrich - 1987 - Philosophy 62 (241):375 - 384.
    Kripke's own view of the 'inner life' as comprised of '"qualia"' that have no 'natural "external" manifestation' leads him into misinterpreting wittgenstein's denials on this count. so kripke gives wittgenstein's account a paradoxical and sceptical cast which misrepresents it, making it look as if it called for a sceptical solution and a 'warranted assertibility' theory of truth. but wittgenstein was making sport of the 'inner-outer' (subjective-objective) distinction with the rapier of his suggestion that psychological talk is not regulated by the (...)
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  38.  71
    The objectivity of history.Virgil Hinshaw - 1958 - Philosophy of Science 25 (1):51-58.
    Can history be objective? Is history a science or humanistic discipline? What is its subject-matter? These three questions are variations on a single theme—the objectivity of history—which I want to explore. Faced with the welter of claims and counter-claims regarding objectivity in history, there is need to be explicit about one's approach to these claims. My prime endeavor in this paper is to reformulate these questions from my scheme of reference. I want to consider the objectivity of historical knowledge from (...)
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  39.  82
    Mirrors, Pictures, Words, Perceptions.Virgil C. Aldrich - 1980 - Philosophy 55 (211):39 - 56.
    We already have a distinction between the intension and extension of terms. This is not simply the distinction that is operative in philosophy of mind, body, and action. There, the concern is with things, and with a physicalistic or a mentalistic account of them. The physicalist says he supports an ‘extensional’ analysis of things, the mentalist an ‘intensional’. So, the physicalist says that, in the end, only ‘the extensional language of physical science’ will do in ontology. But, associating this physical-mental (...)
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  40.  38
    Description and expression: Physicalism restricted.Virgil Aldrich - 1977 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 20 (1-4):149 – 164.
    'Material thing' is a two-level concept. In 'first-order extension' - the field of perceptual experience - it is a 'body' that may 'body forth' (show, express) a 'content', like the bodies of persons or pictures. In 'second-order extension' -the physical field or space - it is a 'physical object' whose micro-constitution is the target of the reference of theoretical terms or formulae. As such, it has no content - nothing to 'express'. In the description of a material thing in first-order (...)
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  41. Blaise Pascal on Skepticism and Order.Virgil Martin Nemoianu - 2002 - Dissertation, University of Toronto (Canada)
    This work is a study of Blaise Pascal's Pensees. It proposes to show the way in which Pascal's philosophy of mind---his conception of order and the relation of reason, the emotions, and the will to the self---which emerges from his skepticism, can be used to draw out his views on morality, despite the fragmentary state of the work. The thesis begins with a consideration of the three major philosophical precursors to Pascal's project: Augustine, Montaigne, and Descartes. It continues with an (...)
     
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  42.  48
    An Update of Public Perceptions of Synthetic Biology: Still Undecided?Mirko Ancillotti, Virgil Rerimassie, Stefanie B. Seitz & Walburg Steurer - 2016 - NanoEthics 10 (3):309-325.
    The discourse on the fundamental issues raised by synthetic biology, such as biosafety and biosecurity, intellectual property, environmental consequences and ethical and societal implications, is still open and controversial. This, coupled with the potential and risks the field holds, makes it one of the hottest topics in technology assessment today. How a new technology is perceived by the public influences the manner in which its products and applications will be received. Therefore, it is important to learn how people perceive synthetic (...)
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  43.  44
    Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: The Ascent from Ideology. [REVIEW]Virgil Nemoianu - 2002 - Review of Metaphysics 56 (2):439-440.
    To begin with the bad news. Mahoney does not write well. He moves in perplexing ways from the stylistic register of the journalistic, to that of the scholarly, to political philosophy and back again. His knowledge of Russian seems shaky or doubtful. The key work of Georges Nivat is given a handsome accolade but is never engaged seriously. It is not clear whether he is aware of the publication of the third volume of The Red Wheel, March 1917, in the (...)
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  44.  23
    Eloge de la singularite. [REVIEW]Virgil Nemoianu - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 55 (2):390-391.
    Probably the first striking feature of this book is to be found in its title. “Late modernity” is incomparably more adequate and philosophically more intelligent than “late capitalism/imperialism” which means nothing except a pointless bow in the direction of an intolerable form of totalitarianism. The second feature is the name of the author herself, one of the few true political philosophers at a time when “consultants” and pundits active in the so-called field of politology are a dime a dozen. Serious (...)
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  45.  26
    Fictional Worlds. [REVIEW]Virgil Nemoianu - 1988 - Review of Metaphysics 41 (4):845-846.
    There are several attempts to build a theory of art starting from analytical philosophy, the best of which is probably the one provided by Nelson Goodman. Pavel's work is the first attempt to write a theory of literature from the premisses of analytical philosophy. Pavel, whose earlier work was influenced among others by Eco, Greimas, Hrushovsky and Brooke-Rose, begins with an analysis of recent philosophical positions regarding fiction and distinguishes on one side the hard-line "segregationist" position of Bertrand Russell which (...)
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  46.  33
    Haney, David P. The Challenge of Coleridge: Ethics and Interpretation in Romanticism and Modern Philosophy. [REVIEW]Virgil Nemoianu - 2002 - Review of Metaphysics 55 (3):636-638.
    The body of poetry published by Coleridge during his lifetime was comparatively small. Its importance in terms of innovative merit was recognized almost immediately and so critical discussions are abundant. It took a good while even for specialists, let alone for the wider audiences, to recognize that his poetic output was just a fraction of his theoretical prose; it took even longer to get the latter completely in print; it took longest to admit that Coleridge was a quite significant thinker (...)
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  47.  34
    La bombe informatiqueAprès l’histoire. [REVIEW]Virgil Nemoianu - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 54 (2):464-466.
    One of the most adroit movements of the ideological “establishment” in the United States is to have occupied the channels of communication between national groups of intellectuals. By this arbitrary maneuver a certain impression of isolation is given to those who have the forlorn courage to oppose prevailing intellectual idola. The reader may know about philosophical oppositions inside America, but he rarely hears about similar movements outside. Yet, ironically, these are alive and very eloquent.
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  48.  23
    Limba pasarilor. [REVIEW]Virgil Nemoianu - 1996 - Review of Metaphysics 49 (4):941-942.
    Although Plesu started his career as an art historian, he soon came under the influence of Constantin Noica, a major Romanian thinker who had tried to combine Platonism with a rather idiosyncratic form of existentialism. Plesu was briefly a minister for culture in the first post-revolutionary Romanian cabinet, and thereafter worked as an editor and as an educator; he is currently the president of a small private graduate international college in Bucharest. He is the author of a number of books (...)
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  49.  37
    Modernism, Narrative and HumanismPragmatist Realism: The Cognitive Paradigm in American Realist Texts. [REVIEW]Virgil Nemoianu - 2004 - Review of Metaphysics 57 (3):654-654.
    Sheehan deals with relatively recent authors—Conrad, D. H. Lawrence, Virginia Woolf, Beckett. He is critical of humanism, by which he seems to understand a kind of anthropocentric and limitative image of human beings, imposed on the public by narrative, among other things. As against this, he is setting the animal, the mechanical, and the transcendental, but the definition of the latter is, to say the least, bizarre—“the ability to evade compromise and contingency”. Reformulating narrativity is, according to Sheehan, the best (...)
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  50.  19
    Michael Oakeshott. [REVIEW]Virgil Nemoianu - 2005 - Review of Metaphysics 59 (2):421-423.
    Franco’s book is meticulous and objective, but it does underline two points. The first is that Oakeshott cannot be portrayed simply as a “conservative”; thus T. S. Eliot was a more typical conservative than Oakeshott, the latter being rather a conservative Whig, in the tradition of Edmund Burke and Sir Robert Peel. The second is that throughout his life, Oakeshott, far from being an agnostic and religious indifferentist, interacted with religious theories and responded to them, even though this is not (...)
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