Results for 'plural duplication'

969 found
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  1.  67
    Duplication and Collapse.Amir Arturo Javier-Castellanos - 2016 - Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 5 (3):196-202.
    Kris McDaniel has argued that strong composition as identity entails a principle he calls the Plural Duplication Principle, and that is inconsistent with the possibility of strongly emergent properties. Theodore Sider has objected that this possibility is only inconsistent with a closely analogous principle he calls the Set Duplication Principle. According to Sider, however, the friend of strong composition as identity is under no pressure to accept. In this paper, I argue that she has strong reason to (...)
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  2.  87
    A characterization of the maximin rule in the context of voting.Ronan Congar & Vincent Merlin - 2012 - Theory and Decision 72 (1):131-147.
    In a voting context, when the preferences of voters are described by linear orderings over a finite set of alternatives, the Maximin rule orders the alternatives according to their minimal rank in the voters’ preferences. It is equivalent to the Fallback bargaining process described by Brams and Kilgour (Group Decision and Negotiation 10:287–316, 2001). This article proposes a characterization of the Maximin rule as a social welfare function (SWF) based upon five conditions: Neutrality, Duplication, Unanimity, Top Invariance, and Weak (...)
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  3. Indiscernibility Does Not Distinguish Particularity.Daniel Giberman - 2016 - Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 5 (4):249-256.
    According to the indiscernibility characterization of the distinction between particulars and universals, only and all the former have possible numerically distinct indiscernible intrinsic qualitative duplicates. It is argued here that both the sufficiency and the necessity directions are defective and that indiscernibility thus does not distinguish particularity. Against sufficiency: universals may lack intrinsic qualitative character and thus be trivially indiscernible from one another. Against necessity: pluralities of duplicate-less entities are at once duplicate-less and particular.
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  4.  11
    Debating the Vulnerability Zeitgeist: Introduction to an Interdisciplinary Trialogue.Frithjof Nungesser & Antonia Schirgi - forthcoming - Human Studies:1-10.
    The article serves as an introduction to the special section “Vulnerability: An Interdisciplinary Trialogue,” which brings together three researchers who have made important contributions to the field of vulnerability studies from different perspectives and in different disciplines: Elodie Boublil, Kate Brown, and Erinn Gilson. At the outset, the article discusses some characteristic features of the current discourse on vulnerability, in particular the question of why the concept of vulnerability is not only very popular but is also often used in such (...)
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  5. The Kalam Cosmological Argument in Contemporary Analytic Philosophy.Mark R. Nowacki - 2002 - Dissertation, The Catholic University of America
    Approximately 1,500 years ago John Philoponus proposed a simple argument for the existence of God. The argument runs thus: Whatever comes to be has a cause of its coming to be. The universe came to be. Therefore, the universe has a cause of its coming to be. ;Due to the influence of William Lane Craig, this argument and the family of arguments that support it have come to be known as the "kalam" cosmological argument . Craig's account of the KCA (...)
     
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  6. Digital Duplicates and Collective Scarcity.Benjamin Lange - 2025 - Philosophy and Technology 38 (1):1-5..
    Digital duplicates reduce the scarcity of individuals and thus may impact their instrumental and intrinsic value. I here expand upon this idea by introducing the notion of collective scarcity, which pertains to the limitations faced by social groups in maintaining their size, cohesion, and function.
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  7.  43
    Digital Duplicates and the Scarcity Problem: Might AI Make Us Less Scarce and Therefore Less Valuable?John Danaher & Sven Nyholm - 2024 - Philosophy and Technology 37 (3):1-20.
    Recent developments in AI and robotics enable people to create _personalised digital duplicates_ – these are artificial, at least partial, recreations or simulations of real people. The advent of such duplicates enables people to overcome their individual scarcity. But this comes at a cost. There is a common view among ethicists and value theorists suggesting that individual scarcity contributes to or heightens the value of a life or parts of a life. In this paper, we address this topic. We make (...)
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  8.  15
    Persons, compensation, and utilitarianism, Diane Jeske.A. Curious Plural - 1993 - Philosophy 68 (266).
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  9.  54
    Gene duplications, robustness and evolutionary innovations.Andreas Wagner - 2008 - Bioessays 30 (4):367-373.
    Mutational robustness facilitates evolutionary innovations. Gene duplications are unique kinds of mutations, in that they generally increase such robustness. The frequent association of gene duplications in regulatory networks with evolutionary innovation is thus a special case of a general mechanism linking innovation to robustness. The potential power of this mechanism to promote evolutionary innovations on large time scales is illustrated here with several examples. These include the role of gene duplications in the vertebrate radiation, flowering plant evolution and heart development, (...)
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  10.  26
    The duplication theorem of social relationships as tested in the general population.Walter Toman - 1971 - Psychological Review 78 (5):380-390.
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  11.  13
    Digital Duplicates, Relational Scarcity, and Value: Commentary on Danaher and Nyholm (2024).Cristina Voinea, Sebastian Porsdam Mann, Christopher Register, Julian Savulescu & Brian D. Earp - 2024 - Philosophy and Technology 37 (4):1-8.
    Danaher and Nyholm ( 2024a ) have recently proposed that digital duplicates—such as fine-tuned, “personalized” large language models that closely mimic a particular individual—might reduce that individual’s _scarcity_ and thus increase the amount of instrumental value they can bring to the world. In this commentary, we introduce the notion of _relational scarcity_ and explore how digital duplicates would affect the value of interpersonal relationships.
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  12.  83
    Maximality, duplication, and intrinsic value.Sean Drysdale Walsh - 2011 - Ratio 24 (3):311-325.
    In this paper, I develop an argument for the thesis that ‘maximality is extrinsic’, on which a whole physical object is not a whole of its kind in virtue of its intrinsic properties. Theodore Sider has a number of arguments that depend on his own simple argument that maximality is extrinsic. However, Peter van Inwagen has an argument in defence of his Duplication Principle that, I will argue, can be extended to show that Sider's simple argument fails. However, van (...)
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  13.  10
    Digital Duplicates and Collective Scarcity.Benjamin Lange - 2025 - Philosophy and Technology 38 (1):1-5.
    Digital duplicates reduce the scarcity of individuals and thus may impact their instrumental and intrinsic value. I here expand upon this idea by introducing the notion of collective scarcity, which pertains to the limitations faced by social groups in maintaining their size, cohesion and function.
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  14.  19
    Duplicates under the hammer: natural-history auctions in Berlin's early nineteenth-century collection landscape.Anne Greenwood MacKinney - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Science 55 (3):319-339.
    The nineteenth-century museum and auction house are seemingly distinct spaces with opposing functions: while the former represents a contemplative space that accumulates objects of art and science, the latter provides a forum for lively sales events that disperse wares to the highest bidders. This contribution blurs the border between museums and marketplaces by studying the Berlin Zoological Museum's duplicate specimen auctions between 1818 and the 1840s. It attends to the operations and tools involved in commodifying specimens as duplicates, particularly the (...)
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  15.  50
    Il duplice rinnovamento dei mondo nell’escatologia di S. Ireneo.Giorgio Jossa - 1978 - Augustinianum 18 (1):89-106.
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  16. Color and the duplication assumption.Erik Myin - 2001 - Synthese 129 (1):61-77.
    Susan Hurley has attacked the ''Duplication Assumption'', the assumption thatcreatures with exactly the same internal states could function exactly alike inenvironments that are systematically distorted. She argues that the dynamicalinterdependence of action and perception is highly problematic for the DuplicationAssumption when it involves spatial states and capacities, whereas no such problemsarise when it involves color states and capacities. I will try to establish that theDuplication Assumption makes even less sense for lightness than for some ofthe spatial cases. This is (...)
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  17. [Duplicate] Hume's skepticism and the problem of atheism.Paul Russell - 2021 - In Recasting Hume and Early Modern Philosophy: Selected Essays. New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press. pp. 303-339.
    [Duplicate -please remove. PR] David Hume was clearly a critic of religion. It is still debated, however, whether or not he was an atheist who denied the existence of God. According to some interpretations he was a theist of some kind….
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  18.  20
    Duplication-free tableau calculi and related cut-free sequent calculi for the interpolable propositional intermediate logics.A. Avellone, M. Ferrari & P. Miglioli - 1999 - Logic Journal of the IGPL 7 (4):447-480.
    We get cut-free sequent calculi for the interpolable propositional intermediate logics by translating suitable duplication-free tableau calculi developed within a semantical framework. From this point of view, the paper also provides semantical proofs of the admissibility of the cut-rule for appropriate cut-free sequent calculi.
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  19.  16
    Curating duplicates: operationalizing similiarity in the Smithsonian Institution with Haida rattles, 1880–1926.Catherine A. Nichols - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Science 55 (3):341-363.
    In the late nineteenth century, the anthropology curators of the Smithsonian Institution consulted their cataloguing systems and storerooms, assessing specimens in order to determine which could be designated as duplicate specimens and exchanged with museums domestically and abroad. The status of ‘duplicate’ for specimens was contingent on conceptions of similiarity impacted by disciplinary classification praxis, with particular emphasis on object nomenclature and formal attributes. Using rattles from Haida Gwaii collected between 1881 and 1885 by James Swan for the Smithsonian Institution, (...)
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  20.  18
    The Duplicity of Philosophy’s Shadow: Heidegger, Nazism, and the Jewish Other: by Elliot Wolfson, New York, Columbia University Press, 2018, xxiii + 312 pp., $30.00.Frank Schalow - 2020 - The European Legacy 25 (7-8):884-885.
    Volume 25, Issue 7-8, November - December 2020, Page 884-885.
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  21. Duplicity, corruption, and exceptionalism in the Romanian experience of modernity.Marius Ion Benta - 2020 - In Agnes Horvath, Manussos Marangudakis & Arpad Szakolczai, Duplicity, corruption, and exceptionalism in the Romanian experience of modernity. pp. 211–228.
    The problem of trickster leadership is discussed in this chapter in the context of the Romanian experience of modernity. This experience has emerged as a Post-Byzantine condition; it was strongly marked by the forty years of communist regimes and was loaded with a high amount of duplicity and ambivalence. The chapter argues that the communist type of trickster leadership in Romania was the outcome of a clash between two types of corruption: a domestic one and a global one. The idea (...)
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  22.  48
    Duplication of directed graphs and exponential blow up of proofs.A. Carbone - 1999 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 100 (1-3):1-67.
    We develop a combinatorial model to study the evolution of graphs underlying proofs during the process of cut elimination. Proofs are two-dimensional objects and differences in the behavior of their cut elimination can often be accounted for by differences in their two-dimensional structure. Our purpose is to determine geometrical conditions on the graphs of proofs to explain the expansion of the size of proofs after cut elimination. We will be concerned with exponential expansion and we give upper and lower bounds (...)
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  23. The duplication of love's reasons.Tony Milligan - 2013 - Philosophical Explorations 16 (3):315 - 323.
    If X loves Y does it follow that X has reasons to love a physiologically exact replacement for Y? Can love's reasons be duplicated? One response to the problem is to suggest that X lacks reasons for loving such a duplicate because the reason-conferring properties of Y cannot be fully duplicated. But a concern, played upon by Derek Parfit, is that this response may result from a failure to take account of the psychological pressures of an actual duplication scenario. (...)
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  24.  8
    Contested duplicates: disputed negotiations surrounding ethnographic doppelgängers in German New Guinea, 1898–1914.Rainer F. Buschmann - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Science 55 (3):297-318.
    The issue of duplicates and duplication in ethnographic collection is frequently regarded as a process that begins and ends in the museum as a fundamental act of the process of curating. In contrast, this article maintains, this practice occurred all along the chain of collecting, where indigenous artefacts operated as items of exchange in the context of the colonial encounter. Using the example of German New Guinea, the article maintains that epistemological concerns, as symbolic currency both in terms of (...)
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  25.  22
    The duplicity of philosophy's shadow: Heidegger, Nazism, and the Jewish other.Elliot R. Wolfson - 2018 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Elliot R. Wolfson intervenes in the debate over Martin Heidegger and Nazism from a unique perspective, as a scholar of Jewish mysticism and philosophy who has been profoundly influenced by Heidegger's work. He reveals crucial aspects of Heidegger's thinking that betray an affinity with dimensions of Jewish thought.
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  26.  11
    Duplicity or Discernment?Sabrina Little - 2024 - Philosophia Christi 26 (1):139-154.
    Code-switching is the adjustment of one’s speech, behaviors, or appearance across various contexts. Sometimes we code-switch to adapt to the communication norms of different groups, and sometimes we code-switch from social necessity. In many cases, code-switching is not morally blameworthy. It demonstrates an agent’s discernment or practical wisdom in navigating various situations. However, not all cases of code-switching are compatible with a good moral character. Many cases of code-switching involve a kind of impression management or doublespeak that can compromise integrity. (...)
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  27.  53
    Duplications of the neuropeptide receptor gene VIPR2 confer significant risk for schizophrenia.Vladimir Vacic, Shane McCarthy, Dheeraj Malhotra, Fiona Murray, Hsun-Hua Chou, Aine Peoples, Vladimir Makarov, Seungtai Yoon, Abhishek Bhandari, Roser Corominas, Lilia M. Iakoucheva, Olga Krastoshevsky, Verena Krause, Verónica Larach-Walters, David K. Welsh, David Craig, John R. Kelsoe, Elliot S. Gershon, Suzanne M. Leal, Marie Dell Aquila, Derek W. Morris, Michael Gill, Aiden Corvin, Paul A. Insel, Jon McClellan, Mary-Claire King, Maria Karayiorgou, Deborah L. Levy, Lynn E. DeLisi & Jonathan Sebat - unknown
    Rare copy number variants have a prominent role in the aetiology of schizophrenia and other neuropsychiatric disorders. Substantial risk for schizophrenia is conferred by large CNVs at several loci, including microdeletions at 1q21.1, 3q29, 15q13.3 and 22q11.2 and microduplication at 16p11.2. However, these CNVs collectively account for a small fraction of cases, and the relevant genes and neurobiological mechanisms are not well understood. Here we performed a large two-stage genome-wide scan of rare CNVs and report the significant association of copy (...)
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  28. Duplicity, intimacy, community.Sanjay Srivastava - 2012 - Thesis Eleven 113 (1):78-93.
    In the annals of Indian modernity, narratives of tricksters and counterfeiters have a long, popular, and cautionary history. The topographies of deception outlined by colonial and post-colonial police reports established both its history as an aspect of modern industrial life as well as the city as the ‘scene of the crime’. This article explores the meanings that attach to certain contemporary acts of deceiving and faking, and the ways in which they are both produced by being in the city as (...)
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  29.  16
    Operational duplication without behavioral replication of changeover for signaled inescapable shock.Gerald B. Biederman & John J. Furedy - 1976 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 7 (5):421-424.
  30.  15
    Duplicate networks: the Berlin botanical institutions as a ‘clearing house’ for colonial plant material, 1891–1920.Katja Kaiser - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Science 55 (3):279-296.
    For centuries, herbarium specimens were the focus of exchange in global botanical networks. The aim was the ‘complete’ registration of the flora, for which ‘complete’ collections in botanical institutions worldwide were considered to be a necessary basis, although this ardently sought-after ideal was never achieved. The study of colonial plants became a special priority of botanical research in the metropolises. With knowledge of the many treasures of the plant world considered the key to securing wealth and power, political and economic (...)
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  31.  18
    Visual duplication: specimens, works of art and photographs at the Musée d'ethnographie du Trocadéro (1928–1935).Anaïs Mauuarin - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Science 55 (3):365-388.
    The article considers how the use of duplicates and the practice of photography interacted in museums of ethnography, contributing to the ambivalent framing of ethnographic objects as items that can be both scientific specimens and works of art. It focuses on the Musée d'ethnographie du Trocadéro in Paris and on the key period of its reorganization between 1928 and 1935, which was central to the institutionalization of French ethnology. By examining the place of duplicates in this museum, as well as (...)
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  32.  62
    Ego Duplications, Body Doubles, and Dreams: a Contribution To a Phenomenology of Body Image and Memory.Stephan J. Holajter - 1995 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 26 (2):71-102.
    In this paper an "unconscious" structure common to such altered psychological states as dreaming, schizophrenic disintegration, out-of body experiences, and creative acts is described. This description is accomplished by setting psychoanalytic, clinical, and empirical studies zuithin a phenomenological framework. Phenomenological self-reflection is first made a party to discussions which focus on memories and the experience of the lived body. The configurations of "unconsciousness" then take precedence in describing relationships between the "I" of waking consciousness and a transformative body image . (...)
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  33.  43
    The Duplicity of Beginning.Christopher P. Long - 2008 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 29 (2):145-159.
  34.  35
    Detecting Duplication in Students’ Research Data: A Method and Illustration.Peter J. Allen, Amanda Lourenco & Lynne D. Roberts - 2016 - Ethics and Behavior 26 (4):300-311.
    Research integrity is core to the mission of higher education. In undergraduate student samples, self-reported rates of data fabrication have been troublingly high. Despite this, no research has investigated undergraduate data fabrication in a more systematic manner. We applied duplication screening techniques to 18 data sets submitted by psychology honors students for assessment. Although we did not identify any completely duplicated cases, there were numerous partial duplicates. Rather than indicating fabrication, however, these partial duplicates are likely a consequence of (...)
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  35.  38
    Duplication, divergence and formation of novel protein topologies.Christine Vogel & Veronica Morea - 2006 - Bioessays 28 (10):973-978.
    The rearrangement or permutation of protein substructures is an important mode of divergence. Recent work1 explored one possible underlying mechanism called permutation‐by‐duplication, which produces special forms of motif rearrangements called circular permutations. Permutation‐by‐duplication, involving gene duplication, fusion and truncation, can produce fully functional intermediate proteins1 and thus represents a feasible mechanism of protein evolution. In spite of this, circular permutations are relatively rare and we discuss possible reasons for their existence. BioEssays 28: 973–978, 2006. © 2006 Wiley (...)
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  36.  21
    Duplication and divergence in humans and chimpanzees.Stephen Wooding & Lynn B. Jorde - 2006 - Bioessays 28 (4):335-338.
    It has become a truism that we humans are genetically about 99% identical to chimpanzees. The origins of this assertion are clear: among early studies of DNA sequences, nucleotide identity between humans and chimpanzees was found to average around 98.9%.1 However, this figure is correct only with respect to regions of the genome that are shared between humans and chimpanzees. Often ignored are the many parts of their genomes that are not shared. Genomic rearrangements, including insertions, deletions, translocations and duplications, (...)
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  37. Gene Duplication and Alternative Splicing as Evolutionary Drivers of Proteome Specialization.Federica Mantica & Manuel Irimia - forthcoming - Bioessays.
    Animals comprise hundreds of cell types, each with specialized biological functions. However, many genes expressed in each cell type belong to widely conserved gene families with ancestrally ubiquitous expression. This raises a paradox: how have these genes evolved to shape cell type‐specific traits without compromising their ancestral function in all other cells? This can be achieved through gene duplication and the origin of regulated, alternatively spliced exons, which generate new related proteins in the form of paralogous genes and alternative (...)
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  38.  30
    Incidence of Data Duplications in a Randomly Selected Pool of Life Science Publications.Morten P. Oksvold - 2016 - Science and Engineering Ethics 22 (2):487-496.
    Since the solution to many public health problems depends on research, it is critical for the progress and well-being for the patients that we can trust the scientific literature. Misconduct and poor laboratory practice in science threatens the scientific progress, leads to loss of productivity and increased healthcare costs, and endangers lives of patients. Data duplication may represent one of challenges related to these problems. In order to estimate the frequency of data duplication in life science literature, a (...)
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  39. Duplicating thoughts.Kirk Ludwig - 1996 - Mind and Language 11 (1):92-102.
    Suppose that a physical duplicate of me, right down to the arrangements of subatomic particles, comes into existence at the time at which I finish this sentence. Suppose that it comes into existence by chance, or at least by a causal process entirely unconnected with me. It might be so situated that it, too, is seated in front of a computer, and finishes this paragraph and paper, or a corresponding one, just as I do. (i) Would it have the same (...)
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  40.  69
    The duplicity of Plato's third man.K. W. Rankin - 1969 - Mind 78 (310):178-197.
  41.  42
    Chromosome segment duplications in Neurospora crassa: barren crosses beget fertile science.Parmit K. Singh, Srividhya V. Iyer, Mukund Ramakrishnan & Durgadas P. Kasbekar - 2009 - Bioessays 31 (2):209-219.
    Studies on Neurospora chromosome segment duplications (Dps) performed since the publication of Perkins's comprehensive review in 1997 form the focus of this article. We present a brief summary of Perkins's seminal work on chromosome rearrangements, specifically, the identification of insertional and quasiterminal translocations that can segregate Dp progeny when crossed with normal sequence strains (i.e., T × N). We describe the genome defense process called meiotic silencing by unpaired DNA that renders Dp‐heterozygous crosses (i.e., Dp × N) barren, which provides (...)
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  42. Naturalness, intrinsicality, and duplication.Theodore R. Sider - 1993 - Dissertation, University of Massachusetts
    This dissertation explores the concepts of naturalness, intrinsicality, and duplication. An intrinsic property is had by an object purely in virtue of the way that object is considered in itself. Duplicate objects are exactly similar, considered as they are in themselves. The perfectly natural properties are the most fundamental properties of the world, upon which the nature of the world depends. In this dissertation I develop a theory of intrinsicality, naturalness, and duplication and explore their philosophical applications. Chapter (...)
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  43.  10
    Duplicities of Confucianism and Modernity.Sangik Lee - 2007 - THE JOURNAL OF KOREAN PHILOSOPHICAL HISTORY 21:7-40.
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  44.  15
    The Duplicity of Confucian Familism - The duet between factionalism and authoritarianism -. 김도일 - 2018 - Cheolhak-Korean Journal of Philosophy 135:1-22.
    유가전통(儒家傳統)과 유가정치사상(儒家政治思想)은 한국정치 후진성의 원인으로 줄곧 지목된다. 이 통념에서 주로 지적되는 폐단은 유가적 정치원리가 가족적 질서를 국가 영역으로 확대·적용함으로써 궁극적으로 공공 영역 확립을 방해한다는 것이다. 이는 소위 “유교 가족주의”의 폐단이다. 본고는 이 폐단이 나올 수밖에 없는 그 사상 내적인 요인이 무엇인지 살펴본다. 특히 그 문제점이 파벌과 권위주의의 중첩에 있음을 지적하고, 이를 “유교 가족주의의 이중성”이라고 편의상 명명한다. 본고가 주목하는 요인은 유가정치사상의 특징 중 하나인 “의제(擬制)적 확대”이다. 이 기제가 유가전통의 두 중핵인 인(仁)과 의(義)에 연관되어 어떻게 작동하는지 살펴봄으로써, 파벌과 권위주의의 유교 내적 원인에 (...)
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  45. The Duplicity of Online Behavior.Joseph Ulatowski - 2015 - In Berrin A. Beasley & Mitchell R. Haney, Social Media and Living Well. Lexington Books. pp. 31-43.
    People commonly believe that any form of deception, no matter how innocuous it is and no matter whether the deceiving person intended it otherwise, is always morally wrong. In this paper, I will argue that deceiving in real-time is morally distinguishable from deceiving on-line because online actions aren’t as fine-grained as actions occurring in real-time. Our failure to detect the fine-grained characteristics of another avatar leads us to believe that that avatar intended to do a moral harm. Openly deceiving someone (...)
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  46. Duplicity, corruption, and exceptionalism in the Romanian experience of modernity.Agnes Horvath, Manussos Marangudakis & Arpad Szakolczai (eds.) - 2020
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  47.  43
    Duplication’ in Classical Reviews.J. P. Postgate - 1910 - The Classical Review 24 (05):165-166.
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  48.  12
    Introduction: the issue of duplicates.Ina Heumann, Anne Greenwood MacKinney & Rainer Buschmann - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Science 55 (3):257-278.
    The permanent preservation of objects in global custodianship is a captivating ideal that informs countless museums’ corporate identities and governs collection guidelines as well as politics. Recent research has challenged the alleged perpetuity of collections and collected items, revealing their coherence as fragile and dependent on historically, politically and culturally specific conditions. Duplicates offer an instructive point of entry to explore the idea of collection permanence, museum politics, and the mobility of museum objects. The history of duplicates, moreover, comprises a (...)
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  49.  77
    The duplication argument defeated.Roland Puccetti - 1980 - Mind 89 (October):582-587.
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    Digital Duplicates and Personal Scarcity: Reply to Voinea et al and Lundgren.Sven Nyholm - 2024 - Philosophy and Technology 37 (4):1-6.
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