Results for 'Warren Hagar'

963 found
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  1. Cognitive Awareness and the LPM.Warren A. Hagar - 1980 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 170 (3):388-388.
     
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  2.  34
    Book reviews and critical studies. [REVIEW]John Kekes, Joseph Agassi, Edward Mackinnon, Gerhard D. Wassermann & Warren Hagar - 1981 - Philosophia 10 (1-2):43-139.
  3. (1 other version)On the moral and legal status of abortion.Mary Anne Warren - 1973 - The Monist 57 (1):43-61.
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  4. (1 other version)A Logical Calculus of the Ideas Immanent in Nervous Activity.Warren S. Mcculloch & Walter Pitts - 1943 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 9 (2):49-50.
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  5. Actions, Intentions, and Consequences: The Doctrine of Double Effect.Warren S. Quinn - 1989 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 18 (4):334-351.
  6. Actions, Intentions, and Consequences: The Doctrine of Doing and Allowing.Warren S. Quinn - 1989 - Philosophical Review 98 (3):287-312.
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  7. Logic in the twenties: The nature of the quantifier.Warren D. Goldfarb - 1979 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 44 (3):351-368.
  8.  23
    Visual intensity judgments: An empirical rule and a theory.Richard M. Warren - 1969 - Psychological Review 76 (1):16-30.
  9. Epistemology versus Non-Causal Realism.Jared Warren - 2017 - Synthese 194 (5).
    This paper formulates a general epistemological argument against what I call non-causal realism, generalizing domain specific arguments by Benacerraf, Field, and others. First I lay out the background to the argument, making a number of distinctions that are sometimes missed in discussions of epistemological arguments against realism. Then I define the target of the argument—non-causal realism—and argue that any non-causal realist theory, no matter the subject matter, cannot be given a reasonable epistemology and so should be rejected. Finally I discuss (...)
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  10. (1 other version)The right to threaten and the right to punish.Warren Quinn - 1985 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 14 (4):327-373.
  11.  23
    A Theory of Perception.W. Preston Warren - 1972 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 33 (1):136-137.
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  12. “Woke” Corporations and the Stigmatization of Corporate Social Initiatives.Danielle E. Warren - 2022 - Business Ethics Quarterly 32 (1):169-198.
    Recent corporate social initiatives (CSIs) have garnered criticisms from a wide range of audiences due to perceived inconsistencies. Some critics use the label “woke” when CSIs are perceived as inconsistent with the firm’s purpose. Other critics use the label “woke washing” when CSIs are perceived as inconsistent with the firm’s practices or values. I will argue that this derogatory use of woke is stigmatizing, leads to claims of hypocrisy, and can cause stakeholder backlash. I connect this process to our own (...)
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  13.  26
    Laws of visual choice reaction time.Warren H. Teichner & Marjorie J. Krebs - 1974 - Psychological Review 81 (1):75-98.
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  14. Abortion: Identity and loss.Warren Quinn - 1984 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 13 (1):24-54.
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  15.  41
    Wormholes in virtual space: From cognitive maps to cognitive graphs.William H. Warren, Daniel B. Rothman, Benjamin H. Schnapp & Jonathan D. Ericson - 2017 - Cognition 166 (C):152-163.
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  16. A portrait of Spinoza as a maimonidean.Warren Harvey - 1981 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 19 (2):151-172.
  17. (2 other versions)Kripke on Wittgenstein on rules.Warren D. Goldfarb - 1982 - Journal of Philosophy 79 (September):471-488.
  18.  80
    The Word "Bioethics": Its Birth and the Legacies of those Who Shaped It.Warren Thomas Reich - 1994 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 4 (4):319-335.
    Extensive historical sleuthing reveals that the word "bioethics" and the field of study it names experienced, in 1970/1971, a "bilocated birth" in Madison, Wisconsin, and in Washington, D.C. Van Rensselaer Potter, at the University of Wisconsin first coined the term; and André Hellegers, at Georgetown University, at the very least, latched onto the already-existing word "bioethics" and first used it in an institutional way to designate the focused area of inquiry that became an academic field of learning and a movement (...)
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  19. Marx, the Young Hegelians, and the Origins of Radical Social Theory.Warren Breckman - 1999
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  20.  31
    Inferential Communication: Bridging the Gap Between Intentional and Ostensive Communication in Non-human Primates.Elizabeth Warren & Josep Call - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12:718251.
    Communication, when defined as an act intended to affect the psychological state of another individual, demands the use of inference. Either the signaler, the recipient, or both must make leaps of understanding which surpass the semantic information available and draw from pragmatic clues to fully imbue and interpret meaning. While research into human communication and the evolution of language has long been comfortable with mentalistic interpretations of communicative exchanges, including rich attributions of mental state, research into animal communication has balked (...)
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  21. Critical Thinking and Feminism.Karen J. Warren - 1988 - Informal Logic 10 (1).
  22. Truth and explanation in ethics.Warren S. Quinn - 1986 - Ethics 96 (3):524-544.
  23. Deductive Logic.Warren Goldfarb - 2004 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 10 (4):570-573.
     
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  24. Performance-Enhancing Drugs in Sport: The Ethical Issue.Warren P. Fraleigh - 1984 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 11 (1):23-28.
    (1984). Performance-Enhancing Drugs in Sport: The Ethical Issue. Journal of the Philosophy of Sport: Vol. 11, No. 1, pp. 23-28. doi: 10.1080/00948705.1984.9714410.
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  25. Resolving a moral conflict through discourse.Warren French & David Allbright - 1998 - Journal of Business Ethics 17 (2):177-194.
    Plato claimed that morality exits to control conflict. Business people increasingly are called upon to resolve moral conflicts between various stakeholders who maintain opposing ethical positions or principles. Attempts to resolve these moral conflicts within business discussions may be exacerbated if disputants have different communicative styles. To better understand the communication process involved in attempts to resolve a moral dilemma, we investigate the "discourse ethics" procedure of Jürgen Habermas. Habermas claims that an individual's level of moral reasoning parallels the type (...)
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  26. Direct Perception.William H. Warren - 2005 - Philosophical Topics 33 (1):335-361.
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    Challenging the Hegemony of the Symptom: Reclaiming Context in PTSD and Moral Injury.Warren Kinghorn - 2020 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 45 (6):644-662.
    Although post-traumatic stress disorder is now constituted by a set of characteristic symptoms, its roots lie in Post-Vietnam Syndrome, a label generated by a Vietnam-era advocacy movement that focused not on symptoms but on war’s traumatic context. When Post-Vietnam Syndrome was subsumed into the abstract, individualistic, symptom-centered language of DSM-III and rendered as PTSD, it not only lost this focus on context but also neglected the experiences of veterans who suffer from things done or witnessed, not primarily from what was (...)
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  28.  62
    Marx and Romanticism.Warren Breckman - 2022 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 34 (1):28-52.
    ABSTRACT While Marx threw off his attraction to Romanticism when he was still a teenager, scholars have detected various senses in which deep structures of Romantic thought persist in his work. These structures have frequently been taken as contributing factors to Marx’s alleged millenarianism, doctrinaire rigidity, and intolerance. The mature Marx does draw on Romantic ideas at crucial moments; but rather than reinforcing an image of Marx as an intolerant ideologue, the Romantic element in his thought, properly construed, suggests theoretical (...)
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  29. Semantics in Carnap.Warren Goldfarb - 1997 - Philosophical Topics 25 (2):51-66.
  30.  57
    Lefort and the Symbolic Dimension.Warren Breckman - 2012 - Constellations 19 (1):30-36.
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    Off-Duty Deviance in the Eye of the Beholder: Implications of Moral Foundations Theory in the Age of Social Media.Warren Cook & Kristine M. Kuhn - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 172 (3):605-620.
    Drawing from moral foundations theory, we show that differences in sensitivity to distinct moral norms help explain differences in the perceived fairness of punishing employees for off-duty deviance. We used an initial study to validate realistic examples of non-criminal behavior that were perceived as violating a specific moral foundation. Participants in the main study evaluated scenarios in which co-workers were fired for those behaviors, which took place outside of work but were revealed via social media. The extent to which participants (...)
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  32. (1 other version)On gödel's way in: The influence of Rudolf Carnap.Warren Goldfarb - 2005 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 11 (2):185-193.
    The philosopher Rudolf Carnap, although not himself an originator of mathematical advances in logic, was much involved in the development of the subject. He was the most important and deepest philosopher of the Vienna Circle of logical positivists, or, to use the label Carnap later preferred, logical empiricists. It was Carnap who gave the most fully developed and sophisticated form to the linguistic doctrine of logical and mathematical truth: the view that the truths of mathematics and logic do not describe (...)
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  33.  50
    Grafen, the Price equations, fitness maximization, optimisation and the fundamental theorem of natural selection.Warren J. Ewens - 2014 - Biology and Philosophy 29 (2):197-205.
    This paper is a commentary on the focal article by Grafen and on earlier papers of his on which many of the results of this focal paper depend. Thus it is in effect a commentary on the “formal Darwinian project”, the focus of this sequence of papers. Several problems with this sequence are raised and discussed. The first of these concerns fitness maximization. It is often claimed in these papers that natural selection leads to a maximization of fitness and that (...)
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  34.  19
    Protecting Life or Managing Risk? Suicide Prevention and the Lure of Medicalized Control.Warren Kinghorn - forthcoming - Christian Bioethics.
    Suicide is a leading cause of death in the United States and in many other parts of the world. As such, suicide is frequently framed as a medical and public health problem for which solutions are best recommended by medical and public health authorities. While, medicalized suicide prevention strategies often resonate with traditional Christian commitments to preserve life and to discourage suicide, there is little evidence to date that medical approaches to suicide risk-reduction decrease population rates of suicide. Further, by (...)
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  35.  21
    The philosophy and practice of medicine and bioethics: a naturalistic-humanistic approach.Warren A. Shibles - 2010 - London: Springer. Edited by Barbara Maier.
    This book completes medical care by adding the comprehensive humanistic perspectives and philosophy of medicine.
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  36.  15
    Fraud and the Norms of Science.Warren Schmaus - 1983 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 8 (4):12-22.
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  37.  71
    Reflection and the loss of moral knowledge: Williams on objectivity.Warren Quinn - 1987 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 16 (2):195-209.
  38.  46
    Renouvier and the method of hypothesis.Warren Schmaus - 2007 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 38 (1):132-148.
    Renouvier was among the first philosophers in France to break with the nineteenth-century inductivist tradition and defend the use of hypotheses in science. Earlier in the century, the humanistically-educated eclectic spiritualist philosophers who dominated French academic life had followed Reid in proscribing the use of hypotheses. Renouvier, who was educated in the sciences, took up the Comtean positivist alternative and developed it further. He began by defending hypotheses that anticipate laws governing the phenomena, but then eventually adopted a more liberal (...)
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  39.  92
    Corporate Scandals and Spoiled Identities.Danielle E. Warren - 2007 - Business Ethics Quarterly 17 (3):477-496.
    I apply stigma-management strategies to corporate scandals and expand on past research by (a) describing a particular type ofstigma management strategy that involves accepting responsibility while denying it, (b) delineating types of stigma that occur in scandals (demographic versus character), and (c) considering the moral implications of shifting stigmas that arise from scandals. By emphasizing the distinction between character and demographic stigma, I make progress in evaluating the moral implications of shifting different types of stigma.
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  40. Trapping the Metasemantic Metaphilosophical Deflationist?Jared Warren - 2016 - Metaphilosophy 47 (1):108-121.
    Some philosophers are metaphilosophical deflationists for metasemantic reasons. These theorists take standard philosophical assertions to be defective in some manner. There are various versions of metasemantic metaphilosophical deflationism, but a trap awaits any global version of it: metasemantics itself is a part of philosophy, so in deflating philosophy these theorists have thereby deflated the foundation of their deflationism. The present article discusses this issue and the prospects for an adequate response to the trap. Contrary to most historical responses, the article (...)
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  41.  26
    Association, directionality, and stimulus encoding.Robert E. Warren - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 102 (1):151.
  42. Reply to Boyle's who is entitled to double-effect?Warren Quinn - 1991 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 16 (5):511-514.
  43.  24
    Laws of the simple visual reaction time.Warren H. Teichner & Marjorie J. Krebs - 1972 - Psychological Review 79 (4):344-358.
  44. The Apocalypse of Hope.Nicolas de Warren - 2006 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 27 (1):25-59.
    “The apocalypse of hope” and other comparable flourishes in the writings of Frantz Fanon and Jean-Paul Sartre on political violence strike an alarming tone. In The Wretched of the Earth, Fanon advocates the way of revolutionary violence as the inevitable consequence of colonialism and its systematic exploitation of colonized natives. In his role of agent provocateur, Sartre’s preface to Fanon’s influential and controversial work characteristically dramatizes this redemptive promise of violence: “to gun down a European is to kill two birds (...)
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  45.  23
    Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia as a Means of Communication: Considerations for Reducing Stigma and Promoting Person-Centered Care.Alison Warren - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Dementia has rapidly become a major global health crisis. As the aging population continues to increase, the burden increases commensurately on both individual and societal levels. The behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia are a prominent clinical feature of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias. BPSD represent a myriad of manifestations that can create significant challenges for persons living with dementia and their care providers. As such, BPSD can result in detriments to social interaction with others, resulting in harm to the (...)
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  46.  34
    The time(s) of the photographed.Kate Warren - 2019 - Philosophy of Photography 10 (2):195-206.
    The relationship between the photographic and optical images and time has been the subject of great deal of debate. Despite their differences, what many of these considerations have in common is their focus on the receiver, whether mechanical (the camera), biological (the eye–brain as the optical receiver), social or the memory and imagination of the observer. My aim here is to shift the emphasis from the receiver to the object or vista that is photographed or viewed and to explore how (...)
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  47. (1 other version)Aristotle on Speusippus on Eudoxus on pleasure.James Warren - 2009 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 36:249-81.
  48. On the Legal and Moral Status of Abortion.M. A. Warren - 1997 - In Hugh LaFollette - , Ethics in Practice. Blackwell.
     
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  49.  29
    Nietzsche as Philosopher.Warren E. Steinkraus - 1966 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 27 (2):304-305.
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  50.  13
    Trump, the religious right, and the spectre of fascism.Warren S. Goldstein - 2021 - Critical Research on Religion 9 (1):3-7.
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