Results for 'creature'

986 found
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  1.  48
    Creature forcing and large continuum: the joy of halving.Jakob Kellner & Saharon Shelah - 2012 - Archive for Mathematical Logic 51 (1-2):49-70.
    For \documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$${f,g\in\omega^\omega}$$\end{document} let \documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$${c^\forall_{f,g}}$$\end{document} be the minimal number of uniform g-splitting trees needed to cover the uniform f-splitting tree, i.e., for every branch ν of the f-tree, one of the g-trees contains ν. Let \documentclass[12pt]{minimal} \usepackage{amsmath} \usepackage{wasysym} \usepackage{amsfonts} \usepackage{amssymb} \usepackage{amsbsy} \usepackage{mathrsfs} \usepackage{upgreek} \setlength{\oddsidemargin}{-69pt} \begin{document}$${c^\exists_{f,g}}$$\end{document} be the dual notion: For every branch ν, one of the g-trees guesses ν(m) infinitely often. We show that (...)
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  2.  20
    Creatures Bound for Glory: Biotechnological Enhancement and Visions of Human Flourishing.Michael Burdett & Victoria Lorrimar - 2019 - Studies in Christian Ethics 32 (2):241-253.
    The human enhancement debate is fundamentally based on divergent ideals of human flourishing. Using the complementary, though often contrasting, foci of creaturehood and deification as fundamental to the good life, we examine these visions of human flourishing inherent in transhumanist, secular humanist and critical posthumanist positions on human enhancement. We argue that the theological anthropologies that respond to human enhancement and these other ideologies tend to emphasise either creaturehood or deification to the neglect or detriment of the other. We propose (...)
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  3.  72
    No Creaturely Intrinsic Value.Mark C. Murphy - 2018 - Philosophia Christi 20 (2):347-355.
    In Robust Ethics, Erik Wielenberg criticizes all theistic ethical theories that explain creaturely value in terms of God on the basis that all such formulations of theistic ethics are committed to the denial of the existence of creaturely intrinsic value. Granting Wielenberg’s claim that such theistic theories are committed to the denial of creaturely intrinsic value, this article considers whether theists should take such a denial to be an objectionable commitment of their views. I argue that theists should deny the (...)
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  4.  21
    Biocultural Creatures: Toward a New Theory of the Human.Samantha Frost - 2016 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    In _Biocultural Creatures_, Samantha Frost brings feminist and political theory together with findings in the life sciences to recuperate the category of the human for politics. Challenging the idea of human exceptionalism as well as other theories of subjectivity that rest on a distinction between biology and culture, Frost proposes that humans are biocultural creatures who quite literally are cultured within the material, social, and symbolic worlds they inhabit. Through discussions about carbon, the functions of cell membranes, the activity of (...)
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  5.  26
    Creature forcing and five cardinal characteristics in Cichoń’s diagram.Arthur Fischer, Martin Goldstern, Jakob Kellner & Saharon Shelah - 2017 - Archive for Mathematical Logic 56 (7-8):1045-1103.
    We use a creature construction to show that consistently $$\begin{aligned} \mathfrak d=\aleph _1= {{\mathrm{cov}}}< {{\mathrm{non}}}< {{\mathrm{non}}}< {{\mathrm{cof}}} < 2^{\aleph _0}. \end{aligned}$$The same method shows the consistency of $$\begin{aligned} \mathfrak d=\aleph _1= {{\mathrm{cov}}}< {{\mathrm{non}}}< {{\mathrm{non}}}< {{\mathrm{cof}}} < 2^{\aleph _0}. \end{aligned}$$.
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  6.  28
    Creatures of habit : a multi-level learning perspective on the modulation of congruency effects.Tobias Egner - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  7. Creaturely Theology: On God, Humans, and Other Animals.Celia Deane-Drummond & David Clough - 2010 - Ars Disputandi 10.
  8.  23
    Mimesis, Critique, Redemption: Creaturely life in and beyond Dialectic of Enlightenment.J. F. Dorahy - 2014 - Colloquy 27.
    The idea of creaturely life has, in recent years, emerged as an important and illuminating category of literary and philosophical critique. In this paper I seek to contribute to this contemporary discourse by examining the references to the creaturely found in the writings of T.W. Adorno. Whilst much attention has been paid to Walter Benjamin’s reflections on creatureliness, Adorno, a thinker with whom Benjamin is often associated, has received comparatively little in this regard. I begin to redress this lacuna by (...)
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  9. On Creaturely Life: Rilke, Benjamin, Sebald.Eric L. Santner - 2007 - Ars Disputandi 7:1566-5399.
    In his _Duino Elegies,_ Rainer Maria Rilke suggests that animals enjoy direct access to a realm of being—the open—concealed from humans by the workings of consciousness and self-consciousness. In his own reading of Rilke, Martin Heidegger reclaims the open as the proper domain of human existence but suggests that human life remains haunted by vestiges of an animal-like relation to its surroundings. Walter Benjamin, in turn, was to show that such vestiges—what Eric Santner calls the _creaturely_—have a biopolitical aspect: they (...)
     
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  10.  24
    Capricious creatures: Animal behaviour as a model for robotic art.Treva Michelle Pullen - 2017 - Technoetic Arts 15 (1):53-60.
    The lure of animal instinct appears to be an important consideration for the development of intelligent (or simulated intelligent) robotic creatures. Studying the behaviours and playful engagements of animals (like humans) provides robotic artists with a plethora of engagements from which to draw and mimic in their development of whimsical-behaving robot bodies. Animals, as the human other, present us with a counterpoint from which we can study robots as lively entities.
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  11.  13
    On Creaturely Life: Rilke, Benjamin, Sebald.Eric L. Santner - 2006 - University of Chicago Press.
    In his _Duino Elegies,_ Rainer Maria Rilke suggests that animals enjoy direct access to a realm of being—the open—concealed from humans by the workings of consciousness and self-consciousness. In his own reading of Rilke, Martin Heidegger reclaims the open as the proper domain of human existence but suggests that human life remains haunted by vestiges of an animal-like relation to its surroundings. Walter Benjamin, in turn, was to show that such vestiges—what Eric Santner calls the _creaturely_—have a biopolitical aspect: they (...)
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  12. Functions, creatures, learning, emotion.Stephen Petersen - 2004 - Hudlicka and Canamero.
    I propose a conceptual framework for emotions according to which they are best understood as the feedback mechanism a creature possesses in virtue of its function to learn. More specifically, emotions can be neatly modeled as a measure of harmony in a certain kind of constraint satisfaction problem. This measure can be used as error for weight adjustment (learning) in an unsupervised connectionist network.
     
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  13.  19
    Loving Creatures.Ty Kieser - 2022 - Philosophia Christi 24 (1):39-46.
    Wessling’s treatment of divine love raises several questions for systematic consideration. My goal here is to articulate some of these questions and their rationale insofar as they relate to the Creator-creature distinction. I begin with the nature of “creaturely love,” with its material content and methodological contours in Wessling’s account. Then I move to questions about the Creator’s love with regard to divine aseity. Finally, I ask about the Creator’s relationship to creatures in the hypostatic union of the Son (...)
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  14. Creatures of Fiction.Peter van Inwagen - 1977 - American Philosophical Quarterly 14 (4):299 - 308.
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  15.  35
    Contingent Creatures: Reward Event Theory of Motivation.Carolyn R. Morillo - 1995 - Rowman & Littlefield.
    What motivates behavior? What are the qualities of experience which make life worth living? Taking a new interdisciplinary approach, Morillo advances the theory that pleasure—interpreted as a distinct, separable, noncognitive quality of experience—is essential for all positive motivation and is the only intrinsic, nonmoral good in the lives of human beings and many other sentient creatures. Morillo supports her arguments with recent neuropsychological evidence concerning the role of reward centers in the brain and philosophical arguments for a naturalistic theory of (...)
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  16.  13
    Stranger, creature, thing, other: monstrous reflections on our ecostential crisis.Clint Wesley Jones - 2019 - Stevens Point, Wisconsin: Cornerstone Press.
    1. Marx's monstrous ecostential imagination -- 2. Stranger: consuming the nature of monstrosity -- 3. Creature: the nature of domination on the margins -- 4. Thing: hauntology as a study of inheritance -- 5. Other: disconnection and a critique of the natural self -- 6. Enchantment and the madness of science -- Final thoughts.
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  17.  15
    Remarkable creatures: epic adventures in the search for the origins of species.Sean B. Carroll - 2009 - Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
    An award-wining biologist takes us on the dramatic expeditions that unearthed the history of life on our planet. Just 150 years ago,most of our world was an unexplored wilderness.Our sense of how old it was? Vague and vastly off the mark. And our sense of our own species’ history? A set of fantastic myths and fairy tales. Fossils had been known for millennia, but they were seen as the bones of dragons and other imagined creatures. In the tradition of The (...)
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  18.  21
    Causation, Creaturely and Divine.Angus J. L. Menuge - 2023 - Philosophia Christi 25 (2):221-229.
    A biblical approach to reconciling God’s sovereignty with creaturely responsibility should avoid the extremes of global occasionalism and completely autonomous creatures. This paper evaluates the standard intermediary solutions offered by conservationists and concurrentists. It argues that while each contributes insights which a satisfactory account should retain, none is fully adequate. Even Leibniz’s sophisticated response, which accounts for providence, miracles, and moral responsibility, unacceptably abridges creaturely power to implement decisions. My alternative proposal seeks to explain how creatures can retain full responsibility (...)
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  19.  9
    The Creature, the First Question: An Essay.Galili Shahar - 2019 - Naharaim 13 (1-2):3-14.
    The article deals with the notion of the “Creature” as being displayed in Joseph Wittig’s essay titled Der Weg zur Kreatur. This piece by Wittig (1879–1949), one of the co-founders of the journal Die Kreatur, himself a banished Catholic thinker, an excommunicated theologian, was published in the third volume of the journal in 1929/1930. The major argument to be presented here, following Wittig’s essay, concerns the path (but also the method) into the world of the creature, namely, the (...)
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  20.  8
    Creaturely love: how desire makes us more and less than human.Dominic Pettman - 2017 - Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
    On the stupidity of oysters -- Divining creaturely love -- Horsing around: the marriage blanc of Nietzsche, Andreas-Salomø, and Røe -- Groping for an opening: Rilke between animal and angel -- Electric caresses:Rilke, Balthus, and Mitsou -- Between perfection and temptation: Musil, Claudine, and Veronica -- The biological travesty -- "The creature whom we love": Proust and jealousy -- The love tone: capture and captivation -- "The soft word that comes deceiving": Fournival's bestiary of love -- The cuckold and (...)
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  21.  11
    Walter Benjamin: Images, the Creaturely, and the Holy.Chadwick Smith (ed.) - 2013 - Stanford University Press.
    Arguing that the importance of painting and other visual art for Benjamin's epistemology has yet to be appreciated, Weigel undertakes the first systematic analysis of their significance to his thought. She does so by exploring Benjamin's dialectics of secularization, an approach that allows Benjamin to explore the simultaneous distance from and orientation towards revelation and to deal with the difference and tensions between religious and profane ideas. In the process, Weigel identifies the double reference of 'life' to both nature and (...)
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  22.  31
    A Creature Like A Chorus.George Abbe - 1988 - Between the Species 4 (1):9.
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  23. Creature motion.J. J. Freyd & G. F. Miller - 1992 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 30 (6):470-470.
     
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  24. Functions, Creatures, Learning, Emotion.Angell Hall - unknown
    I propose a conceptual framework for emotions according to which they are best understood as the feedback mechanism a creature possesses in virtue of its function to learn. More specifically, emotions can be neatly modeled as a measure of harmony in a certain kind of constraint satisfaction problem. This measure can be used as error for weight adjustment (learning) in an unsupervised connectionist network.
     
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  25.  19
    Creatures on ω 1 and weak diamonds.Heike Mildenberger - 2009 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 74 (1):1-16.
    We specialise Aronszajn trees by an $\omega ^\omega $ -bounding forcing that adds reals. We work with creature forcings on uncountable spaces. As an application of these notions of forcing, we answer a question of Moore, Hrušák and Džamonja whether ◇(b) implies the existence of a Souslin tree in a negative way by showing that "◇∂ and every Aronszajn tree is special" is consistent relative to ZFC.
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  26.  55
    Creator/Creatures Relation.David B. Burrell - 2008 - Faith and Philosophy 25 (2):177-189.
    Can philosophical inquiry into divinity be authentic to its subject, God, without adapting its categories to the challenges of its scriptural inspiration, be that biblical or Quranic? This essay argues that it cannot, and that the adaptation, while it can be articulated in semantic terms, must rather amount to a transformation of standard philosophical strategies. Indeed, without such a radical transformation, “philosophy of religion” will inevitably mislead us into speaking of a “god” rather than our intended object.
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  27.  42
    Transformative Creatures: Theology, Gender Diversity, and Human Identity.Susannah Cornwall - 2022 - Zygon 57 (3):599-615.
    Gender transition may be figured as part of a broader creaturely process of being partners in our own becoming. Gender transition is explored through the lenses of transformation (including comparisons with theosis and with religious conversion) and neurodiversity. Humans are transformative creatures; trans and gender-variant people, like others, have the power to curate their own identities and are on a journey toward perfection. Our nature as humans, including our sexed and gendered nature, is not over-and-done-with. In this sense, our active (...)
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  28.  15
    Creature di sabbia. Corpi mutati nello scenario tecnologico.Maria Luisa Boccia - 2000 - Iride: Filosofia e Discussione Pubblica 13 (3):539-548.
  29.  11
    Creature di un sol giorno: i Greci e il mistero dell'esistenza.Mauro Bonazzi - 2020 - Torino: Einaudi.
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  30.  18
    Creaturely Virtues in Jonathan Edwards.Elizabeth Agnew Cochran - 2007 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 27 (2):73-95.
    JONATHAN EDWARDS NAMES HIS CHRISTOLOGICAL ACCOUNT OF THE VIRtue of humility as an "excellency proper to creatures" rather than of God's divine nature, which differentiates it from "true virtue" or benevolence. He presents the incarnate Christ as the moral archetype for humility. This has two implications for contemporary ethics. First, it suggests that we would have needed God's revelation in Christ to understand and pursue the virtues, even if the Fall had not occurred. Second, it indicates that there is a (...)
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  31. Creatures of fiction, objects of myth.Jeffrey Goodman - 2014 - Analysis 74 (1):ant090.
    Many who think that some abstracta are artefacts are fictional creationists, asserting that fictional characters are brought about by our activities. Kripke (1973), Salmon (1998, 2002), and Braun (2005) further embrace mythical creationism, claiming that certain entities that figure in false theories, such as phlogiston or Vulcan, are likewise abstracta produced by our intentional activities. I here argue that one may not reasonably take the metaphysical route travelled by the mythical creationist. Even if one holds that fictional characters are artefact (...)
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  32.  43
    Decisive creatures and large continuum.Jakob Kellner & Saharon Shelah - 2009 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 74 (1):73-104.
    For f, g $ \in \omega ^\omega $ let $c_{f,g}^\forall $ be the minimal number of uniform g-splitting trees (or: Slaloms) to cover the uniform f-splitting tree, i.e., for every branch v of the f-tree, one of the g-trees contains v. $c_{f,g}^\exists $ is the dual notion: For every branch v, one of the g-trees guesses v(m) infinitely often. It is consistent that $c_{f \in ,g \in }^\exists = c_{f \in ,g \in }^\forall = k_ \in $ for N₁ many (...)
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  33. Fellow Creatures. Our Obligations to the Other Animals.Christine M. Korsgaard - 2018 - Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 73 (1):165-168.
  34.  48
    ‘Creatures of a Day’: Contingency, Mortality, and Human Limits.Havi Carel - 2021 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 90:193-214.
    This paper offers a nexus of terms – mortality, limits, contingency and vulnerability – painting a picture of human life as marked by limitation and finitude. I suggest that limitations of possibility, capacity, and resource are deep features of human life, but not only restrict it. Limits are also the conditions of possibility for human life and as such have productive, normative, and creative powers that not only delimit life but also scaffold growth and transformation within it. The paper takes (...)
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  35.  15
    All Creatures that on Earth Do Make a Dwelling.Andrew Davison - 2020 - Philosophy, Theology and the Sciences 7 (2):181.
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  36.  15
    Creatures and Cardinals.Lukas Daniel Klausner - 2019 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 25 (2):218-219.
  37. Creatures of Darkness.Sam Cumming - 2013 - Analytic Philosophy 54 (4):379-400.
    In this paper, I present and defend an explication of content in terms of the mathematical notion of information. In its most general formulation, the theory says that two states have the same content just in case they carry the same information, relative to a communication network. My account reifies content (it is the discrete counterpart to continuous information) and supports the idea that agents have internal means of comparing the contents of two thoughts. Further, it makes sense to say (...)
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  38.  12
    Divine Creatures: Animal Mummies in Ancient Egypt. Edited by Salima Ikram.Stephanie Atherton-Woolham - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 139 (3).
    Divine Creatures: Animal Mummies in Ancient Egypt. Edited by Salima Ikram. Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2015. Pp. xxi + 274, illus. $24.95.
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  39.  12
    Touching creatures, touching spirit: living in a sentient world: stories & essays.Judy Grahn - 2021 - Pasadena, CA: Red Hen Press.
    Touching Creatures, Touching Spirit illustrates with true stories that we live in an interactive, aware world in which the creatures around us in our neighborhoods know us and sometimes reach across to us, empathically and helpfully. Implications are that all beings live in a possible "common mind" from which our mass culture has disconnected, but which is only a heartbeat and some concentrated attention away. This mind encompasses microbial life and insects as well as creatures and extends to nonmaterial intelligence (...)
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  40. Creatures of Imagination and Belief.Olav Asheim - 1996 - Nordic Journal of Philosophical Logic 1 (1):61-78.
     
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  41.  44
    Creatures as Creative: Callicott and Whitehead on Creaturely Value.Francisco Benzoni - 2006 - Environmental Ethics 28 (1):37-56.
    Alfred North Whitehead’s metaphysics provides a means for overcoming the dualism embedded in J. Baird Callicott’s “postmodern” axiology. Indeed, the lessons Callicott draws from the new physics and ecology imply Whitehead’s position. While Callicott holds that subjectivity and valuing require consciousness, Whitehead argues that subjectivity and valuing characterize all metaphysically basic entities, conscious and non-conscious. Removing the constraint that valuing requires consciousness is a slight shift, but it makes all the difference. By jettisoning this constraint, we can develop a robust (...)
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  42.  25
    Creaturely Solidarity.Grace Y. Kao - 2014 - Journal of Religious Ethics 42 (4):743-768.
    This essay examines several recent contributions to the growing literature on animal ethics from Christian perspectives. I categorize the four books under review in one of three ways depending on the scholars' methodological points of departure: a reconstruction of the place of other animals in Christian history through a selective retrieval of texts and practices; an identification of a key Christian ethical principle; and a reconsideration of foundational doctrines of systematic theology. On the premise that social ethicists are interested in (...)
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  43.  62
    Creaturely rhetorics.Diane Davis - 2011 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 44 (1):88-94.
    In a 1917 essay entitled “A Difficulty in the Path of Psychoanalysis,” Freud suggests that modern science has dealt three devastating blows to human pride: the Copernican revelation that the earth revolves around the sun, decentering man’s presumed cosmological place in the universe as “lord of the world”; the Darwinian revelation that man shares a common ancestor with apes, which indicates that he is not inherently “a being different from animals or superior to them”; and the Freudian revelation that consciousness (...)
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  44.  42
    Creatures of the world: Richard Menary : The extended mind. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2010, 424pp, $40 HB. [REVIEW]Karola Stotz - 2011 - Metascience 21 (2):445-448.
    Creatures of the world Content Type Journal Article Pages 1-4 DOI 10.1007/s11016-011-9539-z Authors Karola Stotz, Department of Philosophy, University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia Journal Metascience Online ISSN 1467-9981 Print ISSN 0815-0796.
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  45.  28
    Thought Creatures.Eugene Thacker - 2007 - Theory, Culture and Society 24 (7-8):314-316.
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  46. Creatures like Us?Lynne Sharpe, Raymond Corbey & Peter Singer - 2006 - Philosophical Quarterly 56 (224):468-471.
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  47.  84
    Normatively demanding creatures: Hobbes, the fall and individual responsibility.Garrath Williams - 2000 - Res Publica 6 (3):301-319.
    This paper explores an internal relation between wrong-doing and the ability to think in moral terms, through Hobbes ’ thought. I use his neglected retelling of our ‘original sin’ as a springboard, seeing how we then discover a need to vindicate our own projects in terms shared by others. We become normatively demanding creatures: greedy for normative vindication, eager to judge others amid the difficulties of our world. However there is, of course, no choice for us but to choose our (...)
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  48.  31
    Creature Construction and the Morality of Shared Agency: Response to Bratman.Margaret Gilbert - 2022 - Journal of the American Philosophical Association 8 (3):412-415.
    I start by emphasizing two aspects of Michael Bratman's approach to shared agency and contrast it with my own in those respects. I conclude with some related remarks on the relation of morality and joint commitment.
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  49.  18
    Creature and Creator.Paul A. Cantor - 1984 - Cambridge University Press.
    This vocabulary text helps beginning students gain knowledge of basic North American English vocabulary. This North American English edition of the popular English Vocabulary in Use series is appropriate for classroom use and for self-study reference and practice. An easy-to-use format presents a content or grammar-based area of vocabulary on the left-hand page and innovative practice activities on the right-hand page. Sixty units cover approximately 1,200 new vocabulary items. Firmly based on current vocabulary acquisition theory, Vocabulary in Use promotes good (...)
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  50. Creatures of Habit: Self Reflexive Practices as an Ethical Pathway to Digital Literacy.Andrea L. Zellner & Leigh Graves Wolf - 2019 - In Kristen Hawley Turner (ed.), The ethics of digital literacy: developing knowledge and skills across grade levels. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield.
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