Results for 'Adam Sedgwick'

971 found
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  1. Shame in the Cybernetic Fold: Reading Silvan Tomkins.Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick & Adam Frank - 1995 - Critical Inquiry 21 (2):496-522.
  2.  26
    A Discourse on the Studies of the University.G. H. Bantock & Adam Sedgwick - 1971 - British Journal of Educational Studies 19 (3):351.
  3.  38
    One of the last letters of Adam Sedgwick, geologist.Nicholas Edwards - 1972 - Annals of Science 28 (2):109-112.
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  4.  22
    Life and Earth Sciences Colin Speakman, Adam Sedgwick: geologist and dalesman. Heathfield, East Sussex: The Broad Oak Press, 1982. Pp. 145. £5.75 . ISBN 0 906716 01 2. [REVIEW]J. Secord - 1983 - British Journal for the History of Science 16 (3):286-287.
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  5.  39
    The cosmic priority of value.Stephen R. L. Clark - 2000 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 62 (4):681 - 700.
    Adam Sedgwick's complaint that Darwin's rejection of final causes indicated a "demoralized understanding" cannot easily be dismissed: if nothing happens because it should, our opinions about what is morally beautiful are no more than projections. Darwin was carrying out an Enlightenment project — to exclude final causes or God's purposes from science because we could not expect to know what they were. That abandonment of final causes was an episode in religious history, a reaction against complacent idolatry, an (...)
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  6.  26
    Richard Owen, William Whewell, and the Vestiges.John Hedley Brooke - 1977 - British Journal for the History of Science 10 (2):132-145.
    In The life of Richard Owen by his grandson there is an inference to the effect that Owen had objected to his name being used to authorize various statements that Whewell was drafting in opposition to the Vestiges. The inference is drawn from letters that Whewell wrote to Owen on 13 and 15 February 1845. Corroboration of this would corne from a letter of Owen to Whewell, dated 14 February 1845, if extant. Among the Whewell papers at Trinity College, Cambridge, (...)
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  7.  69
    But is It Science?: The Philosophical Question in the Creation/Evolution Controversy.Robert T. Pennock & Michael Ruse (eds.) - 2008 - Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books.
    Preface 9 PART I: RELIGIOUS, SCIENTIFIC, AND PHILOSOPHICAL BACKGROUND Introduction to Part I 19 1. The Bible 27 2. Natural Theology 33 William Paley 3. On the Origin of Species 38 Charles Darwin 4. Objections to Mr. Darwin’s Theory of the Origin of Species 65 Adam Sedgwick 5. The Origin of Species 73 Thomas H. Huxley 6. What Is Darwinism? 82 Charles Hodge 7. Darwinism as a Metaphysical Research Program 105 Karl Popper 8. Karl Popper’s Philosophy of Biology (...)
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  8.  28
    Darwin at Llanymynech: the evolution of a geologist.Michael B. Roberts - 1996 - British Journal for the History of Science 29 (4):469-478.
    1831 was a momentous year for Charles Darwin. He passed his BA examination on 22 January, stayed up in Cambridge for two further terms and returned to The Mount, his home in Shrewsbury, in mid-June. On 6 August he left Shrewsbury with Adam Sedgwick for a geological field trip to North Wales, and after his lone traverse over the Harlech Dome returned to The Mount on Monday 29 August to find letters from John Stevens Henslow and George Peacock (...)
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  9.  42
    Darwin.Philip Appleman - 1970 - New York,: Norton. Edited by Philip Appleman.
    Overview * Part I: Introduction * Philip Appleman, Darwin: On Changing the Mind * Part II: Darwin’s Life * Ernst Mayr, Who Is Darwin? * Part III: Scientific Thought: Just before Darwin * Sir Gavin de Beer, Biology before the Beagle * Thomas Robert Malthus, An Essay on the Principle of Population * William Paley, Natural Theology * Jean Baptiste Pierre Antoine de Monet Lamarck, Zoological Philisophy * Charles Lyell, Principles of Geology * John Herschell, The Study of Natural Philosophy (...)
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  10.  30
    Early Ideas About Glaciation in the English Lake District: The Problem of Making Sense of Glaciation in a Glaciated Region.David Oldroyd - 1999 - Annals of Science 56 (2):175-203.
    An account is given of the work on glacial phenomena in the English Lake District from the time of Adam Sedgwick until the mid-twentieth century, with emphasis on the nineteenth century. In the early years, the following theories were envisaged: 'diluvialism'; the theory of 'waves of translation'; the theory of 'ice rafting'; the 'glacial-submergence' hypothesis ; and the 'land-ice' theory. While it was quite easy to recognize ice action and the former existence of glaciers, it was difficult to (...)
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  11.  91
    Intentions and instability: a defence of causal decision theory.Adam Bales - 2020 - Philosophical Studies 177 (3):793-804.
    Andy Egan has recently presented a prominent objection to causal decision theory. However, in this paper, I argue that this objection fails if CDT’s proponent accepts the plausible view that decision-theoretic options are intentions. This result both provides a defence of CDT against a prominent objection and highlights the importance of resolving the nature of decision-theoretic options.
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  12.  34
    Reconciling intuitive physics and Newtonian mechanics for colliding objects.Adam N. Sanborn, Vikash K. Mansinghka & Thomas L. Griffiths - 2013 - Psychological Review 120 (2):411-437.
  13.  36
    Attention gating in short-term visual memory.Adam Reeves & George Sperling - 1986 - Psychological Review 93 (2):180-206.
  14. The dynamics of proactivity at work.Adam Grant & Susan Ashford - 2008 - Research in Organizational Behavior 28:3–34.
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  15.  36
    How knowledge deficit interventions fail to resolve beginning farmer challenges.Adam Calo - 2018 - Agriculture and Human Values 35 (2):367-381.
    Beginning farmer initiatives like the USDA’s Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program, farm incubators, and small-scale marketing innovations offer new entrant farmers agricultural training, marketing and business assistance, and farmland loans. These programs align with alternative food movement goals to revitalize the anemic U.S. small farm sector and repopulate landscapes with socially and environmentally diversified farms. Yet even as these initiatives seek to support prospective farmers with tools for success through a knowledge dissemination model, they remain mostly individualistic and entrepreneurial (...)
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  16.  22
    United by Action: Neurath in England.Adam Tuboly - 2019 - In Adam Tuboly & Jordi Cat (eds.), Neurath Reconsidered: New Sources and Perspectives. Cham: Springer Verlag. pp. 89-113.
    The aim of this paper is to give a biographical, historical, and philosophical reconstruction of Neurath’s final years in England. Besides reconstructing Neurath’s arrival to England, in the context of his life and philosophical introduction at Oxford, I will argue that since the 1930s, Neurath was eager to develop a brand for logical empiricism. This brand was based not on theoretical commitments, but on practical considerations and decisions. Using a detailed case study on Neurath’s relation to the Hungarian sociologist of (...)
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  17. Science Fiction.Adam Roberts - 2001 - Utopian Studies 12 (1):241-243.
  18.  21
    The New Technopolitics of Development and the Global South as a Laboratory of Technological Experimentation.Adam Moe Fejerskov - 2017 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 42 (5):947-968.
    Science and technology have been integral issues of development cooperation for more than sixty years. Contrary to early efforts’ transfer of established technologies from the West to developing countries, contemporary technology aspirations increasingly articulate and practice the Global South as a live laboratory for technological experimentation. This approach is especially furthered by a group of private foundations and philanthrocapitalists whose endeavors in developing countries are, like their companies, shaped by logics of the individual, the market, and of societal progress through (...)
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  19.  23
    Mind the Gap?Adam Wood - 2015 - Oxford Studies in Medieval Philosophy 3 (1).
    Most contemporary interpreters of Aquinas have assumed that Thomas subscribed to a “non-repeatability principle” such that created entities, once destroyed entirely, cannot be “brought back" into existence, even by God's power. Souls persisting in the interim between death and resurrection thus play an essential identity-preserving role between our death and rising again. No separated souls, no resurrection. Two of Aquinas’s best medieval interpreters, however, reject this interpretation. Leaning largely on one of Aquinas’s late quodlibetal questions, they deny that Thomas held (...)
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  20.  19
    Politics and Recognition: Towards a New Political Aesthetics.Adam Chmielewski - 2020 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This book outlines a new conception of political aesthetics based on the notion of order as an aesthetic category pertaining to human perception. Engaging with the thought of a range of figures, including Veblen, Honneth, Foucault, Popper, and MacIntyre, it explores the nature of political aesthetics as an enquiry into the ways in which politics and our perceptions shape one another and our moral choices. Moving beyond the consideration of politics as a matter of perception, the author employs the concept (...)
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  21.  55
    Affective ethologies: Monk parakeets and non-human inflections in affect theory.Ada Smailbegović - 2015 - Angelaki 20 (3):21-42.
    :Recent attempts to engage and develop modes of ethological practice that avoid deterministic and mechanistic accounts of animal action have often relied on affect as a way of articulating how animal bodies affect and are in turn affected by the animate and inanimate bodies around them. In this context affect has often functioned as an instigating site of change that opens up the experience of a particular animal to new possibilities for action and relation. This paper seeks to bring the (...)
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  22.  17
    Quantifying and Modeling Coordination and Coherence in Pedestrian Groups.Adam W. Kiefer, Kevin Rio, Stéphane Bonneaud, Ashley Walton & William H. Warren - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  23.  53
    On plants and principles: Invited commentary on Birch, Ginsburg and Jablonka’s target article Unlimited Associative Learning and the Origins of Consciousness: A Primer and Some Predictions.Adam Linson, Aditya Ponkshe & Paco Calvo - 2021 - Biology and Philosophy 36 (2):1-4.
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  24.  24
    Cultivating a New Normal: Mood Disorders in the DSM-III to -5 Era.Adam Dylan Hefty - 2014 - PhaenEx 9 (2):1-23.
    Contemporary diagnostic categories and various modes of treatment of mood disorders contribute to the development of a managed form of selfhood in contemporary society, particularly as articulated with management in the workplace. This produces a new iteration of the normal in relation to psychopathology; instead of the normal as an absence of disorder or distress, normalcy becomes the private management, often stemming from an external or internalized social injunction, of symptoms through various available techniques of self-care. I support this claim (...)
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  25.  20
    Asian Philosophies. 7th ed. Edited by John M. Koller.Adam Neikirk - 2018 - Teaching Philosophy 41 (3):329-331.
  26.  14
    Marxism and Rational Choice.Adam Przeworski - 1985 - Politics and Society 14 (4):379-409.
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  27.  62
    Pessimism About Motivating Modal Personism.Adam James Roberts - 2018 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 35 (3):630-633.
    In ‘What's Wrong with Speciesism?’, Shelly Kagan sketches an account on which both actually being a person and possibly being a person are relevant to one's moral status, labelling this view ‘modal personism’ and supporting its conclusions with appeals to intuitions about a range of marginal cases. I tender a pessimistic response to Kagan's concern about motivating modal personism: that is, of being able to ‘go beyond the mere appeal to brute intuition, eventually offering an account of why modal personhood (...)
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  28.  37
    On extendability to $$F_\sigma $$ ideals.Adam Kwela - 2022 - Archive for Mathematical Logic 61 (7):881-890.
    Answering in negative a question of M. Hrušák, we construct a Borel ideal not extendable to any \(F_\sigma \) ideal and such that it is not Katětov above the ideal \(\mathrm {conv}\).
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  29. Is Fallibility an Epistemological Shortcoming&quest.Adam Leite - 2004 - Philosophical Quarterly 54 (215):232-251.
    A familiar form of scepticism supposes that knowledge requires infallibility. Although that requirement plays no role in our ordinary epistemic practices, Barry Stroud has argued that this is not a good reason for rejecting a sceptical argument: our ordinary practices do not correctly reflect the requirements for knowledge because the appropriateness-conditions for knowledge attribution are pragmatic. Recent fashion in contextualist semantics for 'knowledge' agrees with this view of our practice, but incorrectly. Ordinary epistemic evaluations are guided by our conception of (...)
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  30.  23
    A philosophy of man; [essays].Adam Schaff - 1963 - New York,: Monthly Review Press.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity has a copyright on the body of the work. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and (...)
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  31.  39
    Senses of ‘argument’ in instantiated argumentation frameworks.Adam Wyner, Trevor Bench-Capon, Paul Dunne & Federico Cerutti - 2015 - Argument and Computation 6 (1):50-72.
    Argumentation Frameworks provide a fruitful basis for exploring issues of defeasible reasoning. Their power largely derives from the abstract nature of the arguments within the framework, where arguments are atomic nodes in an undifferentiated relation of attack. This abstraction conceals different senses of argument, namely a single-step reason to a claim, a series of reasoning steps to a single claim, and reasoning steps for and against a claim. Concrete instantiations encounter difficulties and complexities as a result of conflating these senses. (...)
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  32.  20
    A Dialectical Taxonomy of Resistance.Adam Burgos - 2021 - The Harvard Review of Philosophy 28:23-52.
    Working from Adorno’s notion of negative dialectics, this essay charts a dialectical course of resistance toward a horizon of universal freedom. Rather than propose relations between ideal types of resistance, it emphasizes the ineliminable historical dimensions of not only real-world resistance movements but also the philosophical and political theorizing that attempts to make sense of them. In doing so it brings out certain conceptual relations that emerge or recede as the context of resistance shifts. The first moment considers the dichotomy (...)
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  33. Mistrzyni analizy i prostoty.Adam Nowaczyk - 1997 - Przeglad Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria 24 (4):9-10.
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  34. Perspektywy teorii prawdy i znaczenia.Adam Nowaczyk - 1998 - Studia Semiotyczne 21:199-208.
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  35. Wszystko ujdzie.Adam Nowaczyk - 2009 - Ruch Filozoficzny 66 (2).
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  36. Temporal poetics of planetary transformations : Alexander von Humboldt and the geo-anthropological history of the Americas.Adam Wickberg - 2022 - In Anders Ekström & Staffan Bergwik (eds.), Times of history, times of nature: temporalization and the limits of modern knowledge. New York: Berghahn.
     
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  37.  69
    Knowledge Second.Adam Bjorndahl - 2020 - Res Philosophica 97 (4):471-487.
    Classical philosophical analyses seek to explain knowledge as deriving from more basic notions. The influential “knowledge first” program in epistemology reverses this tradition, taking knowledge as its starting point. From the perspective of epistemic logic, however, this is not so much a reversal as it is the default—the field arguably begins with the specialization of “necessity” to “epistemic necessity”—that is, it begins with knowledge. In this context, putting knowledge second would be the reversal. This article motivates, develops, and explores such (...)
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  38. Wstęp do semantyki.Adam Schaff - 1960 - Warszawa,: Państwowe Wydawn. Naukowe.
     
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  39.  37
    Games with finitely generated structures.Adam Krawczyk & Wiesław Kubiś - 2021 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 172 (10):103016.
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  40.  15
    Age-related changes in ongoing thought relate to external context and individual cognition.Adam Turnbull, Giulia L. Poerio, Nerissa S. P. Ho, Léa M. Martinon, Leigh M. Riby, Feng V. Lin, Elizabeth Jefferies & Jonathan Smallwood - 2021 - Consciousness and Cognition 96 (C):103226.
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  41.  27
    Passive Noise.Adam Potts - 2018 - Angelaki 23 (3):42-57.
    This paper aims to establish a distinction and relationship between two types of noise – active noise and passive noise – while giving emphasis to the latter. Active noise is the discourse of negativity and violence that some theorists associate with noise’s materiality, an association particularly pronounced in engagements with Japanoise. The problem with this discourse is that it relies on a culturally normative understanding of noise as well as novelty. This narrative inevitably leads to a dead end. Noise, and (...)
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  42.  11
    Jan Szkot Eriugena w kontekście narodowościowym, historycznym i filozoficznym.Adam Grzegorzyca - 2016 - Studia Z Historii Filozofii 7 (1):141-155.
    In 2009 XVI Benedict during the general audience suggested the short deliberation concerning the thought of Eriugeny – of philosopher, of which views fourfold were condemned. The thinker living in the 9th century went regarded as the Englishman or the Irishman, of representative of periods in the history of philosophy which before his times managed to end or of which in his times not yet was. He is ranked among the Middle Ages and classified as the Neo-Platonist, the representative of (...)
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  43. Christian Hate: Death, Dying, and Reason in Pascal and Kierkegaard.Adam Buben - 2011 - In Patrick Stokes & Adam Buben (eds.), Kierkegaard and Death. Indiana University Press.
     
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  44.  18
    When Enhancements need Therapy: disenhancements, Iatrogenesis, and the responsibility of Military Institutions.Adam Henschke - 2022 - Monash Bioethics Review 41 (1):6-21.
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  45.  5
    Political ecologies: essays in ecological science and policy.Adam D. C. Cherson - 2010 - New York: Greencore Books.
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  46. Trzy postacie transcendentalizmu.Adam Chmielewski - 2013 - Studia Philosophica Wratislaviensia 8 (1).
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  47.  7
    The Presence of Myth.Adam Czerniawski (ed.) - 1989 - University of Chicago Press.
    "[An] important essay by a philosopher who more convincingly than any other I can think of demonstrates the continuing significance of his vocation in the life of our culture."—Karsten Harries, _The New York Times Book Review_ With _The Presence of Myth_, Kolakowski demonstrates that no matter how hard man strives for purely rational thought, there has always been-and always will be-a reservoir of mythical images that lend "being" and "consciousness" a specifically human meaning. "Kolakowski undertakes a philosophy of culture which (...)
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  48.  3
    Charles Taliaferro. A Narnian Vision of the Atonement: A Defense of the Ransom Theory.Adam J. Johnson - 2024 - Journal of Analytic Theology 12:748-750.
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  49. A medievalist's journey through science and faith.Adam D. Jones - 2021 - In Mark J. Boone, Rose M. Cothren, Kevin C. Neece & Jaclyn S. Parrish (eds.), The Good, the True, the Beautiful: A Multidisciplinary Tribute to Dr. David K. Naugle. Eugene, OR: Pickwick.
     
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  50.  4
    (1 other version)Early American philosophers.Adam Leroy Jones - 1898 - New York: Macmillan co..
    This Is A New Release Of The Original 1898 Edition.
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