Results for 'Andrew German'

954 found
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  1.  9
    Platonic Productions: Theme and Variations: The Gilson Lectures.Andrew German (ed.) - 2014 - South Bend, Indiana: St. Augustine's Press.
    Platonic Production presents Prof. Stanley Rosen's Etienne Gilson Lectures, delivered at the Institut Catholique de Paris and now available in English for first time. His lectures bring Heidegger and Plato into a conversation around a basic philosophical question: Does the acquisition of truth resemble discovery or production? While Rosen undertakes a close examination of Heidegger's engagement with Plato, exposing some ways in which that engagement constitutes a misreading, the goals of his study are not exclusively critical. In arguing against the (...)
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  2.  47
    Παλιν Ἐξ Ἀρχησ.Andrew German - 2019 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 23 (2):305-321.
    I argue that Plato’s deployment of the resumptive phrase πάλιν ἐξ ἀρχῆς illuminates the philosophical significance of his art of transition in Socratic dialogues. These explicit calls for a new beginning often appear when a conversation fails to account for two particular elements of ordinary experience: assumptions about whole-part relations and about the interlocutor’s self-conception as a being responsive to basic rational and normative distinctions. Returning to the archē is a form of ἀνάμνησις, reminding us that these assumptions constitute true, (...)
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  3.  44
    German philosophy: a very short introduction.Andrew Bowie - 2010 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    The book also highlights the ideas of early German Romantic philosophy, including the works of Friedrich Schlegel, Novalis, Schleirmacher, and Schelling, ...
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  4.  61
    Looking beyond history: the optics of German anthropology and the critique of humanism.Andrew Zimmerman - 2001 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 32 (3):385-411.
    Late nineteenth-century German anthropology had to compete for intellectual legitimacy with the established academic humanities (Geisteswissenschaften), above all history. Whereas humanists interpreted literary documents to create narratives about great civilizations, anthropologists represented and viewed objects, such as skulls or artifacts, to create what they regarded as natural scientific knowledge about so-called 'natural peoples'-colonized societies of Africa, the Pacific, and the Americas. Anthropologists thus invoked a venerable tradition that presented looking at objects as a more certain source of knowledge than (...)
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  5.  98
    Schelling and Modern European Philosophy: An Introduction.Andrew Bowie - 1993 - New York: Routledge.
    Andrew Bowie's book is the first introduction in English to present F W J Schelling as a major European philospher in his own right. _Schelling and Modern European Philosophy_, surveys the whole of Schelling's philosophical career, lucidly reconstructing his key arguments, particularly those against Hegel, and relating them to contemporary philosophical discussion. Dr Bowie traces how central ideas and conceptual strategies in the work of philosophers as diverse as Nietzsche, Heidegger, Derrida and Davidson relate closely to Schelling's often misunderstood (...)
  6.  21
    German Idealism and the arts.Andrew Bowie - 2000 - In Karl Ameriks (ed.), The Cambridge companion to German idealism. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 239--257.
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  7. Ethical research in the German social sciences: Exploring the significance and challenges of institutionalized research ethics practices.Andrew Crawford, Laura Fichtner, Laura Gianna Guntrum, Stephanie Jänsch, Niklas Krösche, Eloïse Soulier & Clara-Auguste Süß - forthcoming - Research Ethics.
    This article explores two key facets of institutionalized ethical review processes in Germany: (1) their importance in shaping ethical research and (2) their associated challenges, with a specific focus on their implications within the social sciences. Ethical considerations play a pivotal role in (social science) research, safeguarding, amongst others, the rights and well-being of participants and ensuring research integrity. Despite notable progress in promoting research ethics, German research institutions still need to significantly improve their ethics review processes. To address (...)
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  8. Siegfried's Curse the German Journey Form Nietzsche to Hesse. --.Wayne Andrews - 1972 - Atheneum.
     
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  9. Kant's theory of causation and its eighteenth-century German background.Andrew Chignell & Derk Pereboom - 2010 - Philosophical Review 119 (4):565-591.
    This critical notice highlights the important contributions that Eric Watkins's writings have made to our understanding of theories about causation developed in eighteenth-century German philosophy and by Kant in particular. Watkins provides a convincing argument that central to Kant's theory of causation is the notion of a real ground or causal power that is non-Humean (since it doesn't reduce to regularities or counterfactual dependencies among events or states) and non-Leibnizean because it doesn't reduce to logical or conceptual relations. However, (...)
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  10. (1 other version)Scottish philosophy, a comparison of the Scottish and German answers to Hume.Andrew Seth - 1886 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 22:195-200.
  11. German Interest in John Locke's "Essay", 1688-1800.F. Andrew Brown - 1951 - Journal of English and Germanic Philology 50 (4):466-482.
  12.  68
    From Romanticism to Critical Theory: The Philosophy of German Literary Theory.Andrew Bowie - 1996 - New York: Routledge.
    _From Romanticism to Critical Theory_ explores the philosophical origins of literary theory via the tradition of German philosophy that began with the Romantic reaction to Kant. It traces the continuation of the Romantic tradition of Novalis, Friedrich Schlegel and Schleiermacher, in Heidegger's approaches to art and thruth, and in the Critical Theory of Benjamin and Adorno. Andrew Bowie argues, against many current assumptions, that the key aspect of literary theory is not the demonstration of how meaning can be (...)
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  13.  13
    Following Snowden, German uncertainty about monitoring.Andrew A. Adams, Sarah Hosell & Kiyoshi Murata - 2017 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 15 (3):232-246.
    PurposeAs part of an international study of knowledge of and attitudes to Snowden’s revelations about the activities of the National Security Agency/Government Communications Headquarters, this paper aims to deal with Germany, taking its socio-cultural and political environment surrounding privacy and state surveillance into account.Design/methodology/approachA questionnaire was answered by 76 German University students. The quantitative responses to the survey were statistically analysed as well as qualitative considerations of free text answers.FindingsSnowden’s revelations have had an important influence over German students’ (...)
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  14.  33
    Some recent German critics of phenomenology.Andrew D. Osborn - 1934 - Journal of Philosophy 31 (14):377-382.
  15. Raymond Geuss, Morality, Culture, and History: Essays in German Philosophy Reviewed by.Andrew Edgar - 1999 - Philosophy in Review 19 (6):416-418.
  16.  30
    Kant and His German Contemporaries ed. by Corey W. Dyck, Falk Wunderlich.Andrew Werner - 2019 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 57 (1):173-174.
    The primary aim of this volume is to contribute to the growing body of scholarship on Kant’s relation to his German contemporaries. Each of the essays explores one or two of Kant’s views in relation to one or two of his German contemporaries. With three exceptions, every essay contends that we can gain a deeper understanding of Kant’s views by considering their relation to the contemporaries in question.The book is quite successful at accomplishing this aim. In almost every (...)
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  17.  79
    German Philosophy Today: Between Idealism, Romanticism, and Pragmatism.Andrew Bowie - 1999 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 44:357-398.
    In his essayOn the History of Religion and Philosophy in Germany, of 1834, Heinrich Heine suggested to his French audience that the German propensity for ‘metaphysical abstractions’ had led many people to condemn philosophy for its failure to have a practical effect, Germany having only had its revolution in thought, while France had its in reality. Heine, albeit somewhat ironically, refuses to join those who condemn philosophy: ‘German philosophy is an important matter, which concerns the whole of humanity, (...)
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  18.  31
    German philosophy and British public policy: Richard Burdon Haldane in theory and practice.Andrew Vincent - 2007 - Journal of the History of Ideas 68 (1):157-179.
    The paper is premised on the well-recorded fact that R.B. Haldane, throughout his working life, remained fascinated with German idealist philosophy. The paper unravels Haldane’s own perception of the relation between his philosophical interests and his diverse policy-orientated work at the beginning of the twentieth century. Many commentators have noted this relation but often pass over it as a curious detail of his biography. The most basic tool his philosophy gave him was a way of analysing problems. This philosophical (...)
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  19.  95
    Introduction to German Philosophy: From Kant to Habermas.Andrew Bowie - 2003 - Malden, MA: Polity.
    _Introduction to German Philosophy_ is the only book in English to provide a comprehensive account of the key ideas and arguments of modern German philosophy from Kant to the present. the first book in English to provide a comprehensive account of the key ideas and arguments of modern German philosophy from Kant to the present. offers an accessible introduction to the work, among others, of Kant, Fichte, the Romantics, Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, Wittgenstein, the Vienna Circle, Husserl, Heidegger, (...)
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  20.  49
    Europe and German Philosophy.Martin Heidegger & Andrew Haas - 2006 - New Yearbook for Phenomenology and Phenomenological Philosophy 6 (1):331-340.
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  21.  15
    (1 other version)English poetry and German philosophy in the age of Wordsworth.Andrew Cecil Bradley - 1909 - Philadelphia: R. West.
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  22.  37
    Bremen and Freiburg Lectures: Insight Into That Which is and Basic Principles of Thinking.Andrew J. Mitchell (ed.) - 2012 - Indiana University Press.
    This volume consists of two lecture series given by Heidegger in the 1940s and 1950s. The lectures given in Bremen constitute the first public lectures Heidegger delivered after World War II, when he was officially banned from teaching. Here, Heidegger openly resumes thinking that deeply engaged him with Hölderlin's poetry and themes developed in his earlier works. In the Freiburg lectures Heidegger ponders thought itself and freely engages with the German idealists and Greek thinkers who had provoked him in (...)
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  23.  32
    German Stoicisms: From Hegel to Sloterdijk.Kurt Lampe & Andrew Benjamin (eds.) - 2020 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Stoicism has had a diverse reception in German philosophy. This is the first interpretive study of shared themes and dialogues between late nineteenth-century and twentieth-century experts on classical antiquity and philosophers. Assessing how modern philosophers have incorporated ancient resources with the context of German philosophy, chapters in this volume are devoted to philosophical giants such as Friedrich Nietzsche, Wilhelm Dilthey, Walter Benjamin, Martin Heidegger, Hannah Arendt, Hans Jonas, Hans Blumenberg, and Peter Sloterdijk. Among the ancient Stoics, the focus (...)
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  24.  30
    X‐rays as Evidence in German Orthopedic Surgery, 1895–1900.Andrew Warwick - 2005 - Isis 96 (1):1-24.
    Historians have found it difficult to give a general account of the early medical use of X‐rays in medicine. While the rays were hailed by some as a miracle technology, their early medical application was patchy, often remaining subsidiary to traditional methods of diagnosis and treatment, and was of disputed value. In this essay, I argue that the selective appropriation of the new technology needs to be understood within the wider medical practice of the period. The argument is developed around (...)
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  25. Beyond culture-contact and colonial discourse:" Germanism" in colonial bengalfnr rid=" fn1"> fn id=" fn1"> this paper was originally presented at (and indeed emerged as a response to the basic themes motivating) a conference organized by Kris manjapra on the exchange of ideas and culture between south asia and central europe, held at Harvard university, 28-9 october 2005. [REVIEW]Andrew Sartori - 2007 - Modern Intellectual History 1:77.
     
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  26.  26
    The Contemporary Significance of Early German Romantic Philosophy.Andrew Bowie - 2023 - Human Affairs 33 (4):382-390.
    Recent interest in early German Romantic philosophy can be linked to other approaches, such as that of John Dewey, which are critical of the dominant direction of modern philosophy. The Romantics rethink the relationship between philosophy and art as a way of questioning modern philosophy’s focus on epistemology and scepticism that leads to a lack of attention to the diverse other ways in which human beings make sense of things.
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  27.  53
    Kant’s influence on the development of biology: A critical consideration from historical and contemporary perspectives.Andrew Jones - 2018 - Dissertation, Cardiff University
    Previous discussions of Kant’s influence on German biology have resulted in contradictory accounts. Zammito argues both that Kant could not have influenced German biology because his account is fundamentally incompatible with the presuppositions of biological naturalism, and biology only emerged because biologists misunderstood Kant’s philosophy. I argue that his account exposes an important difficulty when considering Kant’s influence on the development of biology, since it correctly identifies a fundamental incompatibility between biological naturalism and Kant. However, this does not (...)
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  28.  36
    Echoes of the Marseillaise in German Social Democracy.Andrew G. Bonnell - 2017 - Historical Materialism 25 (1):207-219.
    Jean-Numa Ducange’s recent work, La Révolution française et la social-démocratie. Transmissions et usages politiques de l’histoire en Allemagne et Autriche 1889–1934, provides an ambitious and theoretically-sophisticated analysis of the ways in which German and Austrian socialists interpreted the French Revolution from 1889 to the 1930s. Ducange shows how the different strands of Second International socialism interpreted the revolution in their own ways, and shows the impact of the Russian revolutions of 1905 and 1917 on this. His work does not (...)
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  29.  2
    (1 other version)Aesthetics and subjectivity from Kant to Nietzsche.Andrew Bowie - 1990 - Manchester [England] ;: Manchester University Press ;.
    This new, completely revised and re-written edition of aesthetics and subjectivity brings up to date the original book's account of the path of German philosophy from Kant, via Fichte and Holderlin, the early Romantis, Schelling, Hegel, Schleimacher, to Nietzsche, in view of recent historical research and contemporary arguments in philosophy and theory in the humanities. The original book helped make subjectivity, aesthetics, music and language a significant part of debate in the humanity. Bowie develops the approaches to these areas (...)
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  30.  60
    Nietzsche on the Decadence and Flourishing of Culture.Andrew Huddleston - 2019 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    In 1872 Nietzsche shocked the European philological community with the publication of the Birth of Tragedy. In this fervid first book Nietzsche looked to ancient Greek culture in the hope of finding the path to a revitalization of modern German culture. Cultural health was at this point unquestionably his paramount concern. Yet postwar Nietzsche scholarship has typically held that after his Untimely Meditations which followed soon after, Nietzsche’s philosophy took a sharply individualist turn—an interpretation largely due to Walter Kaufmann’s (...)
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  31.  22
    Four Seminars.Andrew J. Mitchell & François Raffoul (eds.) - 2012 - Indiana University Press.
    In Four Seminars, Heidegger reviews the entire trajectory of his thought and offers unique perspectives on fundamental aspects of his work. First published in French in 1976, these seminars were translated into German with Heidegger’s approval and reissued in 1986 as part of his Gesamtausgabe, volume 15. Topics considered include the Greek understanding of presence, the ontological difference, the notion of system in German Idealism, the power of naming, the problem of technology, danger, and the event. Heidegger’s engagements (...)
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  32. What is History? Five Lectures on the Modern Science of History. Tr. from the German.Karl Gotthart Lamprecht & E. A. Andrews - 1905
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  33.  53
    Critical notice of T.W. Adorno et aI., The Positivist Dispute in German Sociology.Andrew Lugg - 1979 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 9 (4):739-756.
    Critical notice of T.W. Adorno et aI., The Positivist Dispute in German Sociology. (Paper has many typographical errors but it is readable.).
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  34. Oldest system programme of German idealism.Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel & Andrew Bowie - 1990 - Aesthetics and Subjectivity : From Kant to Nietzsche.
     
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  35.  27
    “Most Unusual” Beauty Contests: Nordic Photographic Competitions and the Construction of a Public for German Race Science, 1926–1935.Andrew D. Evans - 2020 - Isis 111 (2):284-309.
  36.  37
    Introduction: Stoicism in Modern German Philosophy.Kurt W. Lampe & Andrew Benjamin - 2020 - In Kurt Lampe & Andrew Benjamin (eds.), German Stoicisms: From Hegel to Sloterdijk. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Though this chapter is co-authored, I was responsible for eight of its nine sections. Rather than foreshadowing the chapters to come in this edited volume, I have attempted to synthesize and supplement them in order to present an initial picture of the significance of Stoicism for German philosophy roughly since the late 19th century. With the exception of Friedrich Nietzsche, this vast field of Stoic reception has received almost no attention before. Particularly noteworthy elements in this chapter include sections (...)
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  37. Music, philosophy, and modernity.Andrew Bowie - 2007 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Modern philosophers generally assume that music is a problem to which philosophy ought to offer an answer. Andrew Bowie’s Music, Philosophy, and Modernity suggests, in contrast, that music might offer ways of responding to some central questions in modern philosophy. Bowie looks at key philosophical approaches to music ranging from Kant, through the German Romantics and Wagner, to Wittgenstein, Heidegger and Adorno. He uses music to re-examine many current ideas about language, subjectivity, metaphysics, truth, and ethics, and he (...)
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  38.  54
    Norbert Elias, the civilizing process: Sociogenetic and psychogenetic investigations—an overview and assessment.Andrew Linklater & Stephen Mennell - 2010 - History and Theory 49 (3):384-411.
    Norbert Elias's The Civilizing Process, which was published in German in 1939 and first translated into English in two volumes in 1978 and 1982, is now widely regarded as one of the great works of twentieth-century sociology. This work attempted to explain how Europeans came to think of themselves as more “civilized” than their forebears and neighboring societies. By analyzing books about manners that had been published between the thirteenth and eighteenth centuries, Elias observed changing conceptions of shame and (...)
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  39.  36
    A History of Clinical Psychiatry: The Origin and History of Psychiatric Disorders. German E. Berrios, Roy Porter.Andrew Scull - 1998 - Isis 89 (3):532-532.
  40.  40
    Romanticism and the Sciences.Andrew Cunningham & Nicholas Jardine - 1990 - Cambridge University Press. Edited by Andrew Cunningham & Nicholas Jardine.
    Introduction: the age of reflexion Part I. Romanticism: 1. Romanticism and the sciences David Knight 2. Schelling and the origins of his Naturphilosophie S. R. Morgan 3. Romantic philosophy and the organization of the disciplines: the founding of the Humboldt University of Berlin Elinor S. Shaffer 4. Historical consciousness in the German Romantic Naturforschung Dietrich Von Engelhardt 5. Theology and the sciences in the German Romantic period Frederick Gregory 6. Genius in Romantic natural philosophy Simon Shaffer Part II. (...)
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  41.  54
    Working with Walter Benjamin: recovering a political philosophy.Andrew E. Benjamin - 2013 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    This book provides a highly original approach to the writings of the twentieth-century German philosopher Walter Benjamin by one of his most distinguished readers. It develops the idea of "working with" Benjamin, seeking both to read his corpus and to put it to work - to show how a reading ofBenjamin can open up issues that may not themselves be immediately at stake in his texts.The defining elements in Benjamin's writings that Andrew Benjamin isolates - history, experience, translation, (...)
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  42.  10
    (1 other version)Scottish philosophy: a comparison of the Scottish and German answers to Hume.Andrew Seth Pringle-Pattison - 1890 - New York: Garland.
  43.  34
    Hegel: A Biography. [REVIEW]Andrew Bove - 2001 - Review of Metaphysics 54 (4):938-938.
    As much comprehensive introduction to Hegel’s thought as biography, this major work is the fruit of serious study of the relation between Hegel’s philosophy and his life in a revolutionary age. Pinkard, author of two previous philosophic books on Hegel, combines careful analysis of letters and other contemporary documents, concise discussion of Hegel’s major works and many of his smaller essays, and a thorough knowledge of German political and social history into a detailed, exciting narrative that links, but does (...)
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  44.  19
    Paracelsus: Speculative Theory and the Crisis of the Early Reformation.Andrew Weeks - 1996 - State University of New York Press.
    Paracelsus is commonly regarded as one of the great figures of sixteenth-century Europe and of German intellectual history. This book examines the content of his writings in order to clarify it and its historical context.
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  45.  19
    Paracelsus (Theophrastus Bombast von Hohenheim, 1493–1541), Cosmological and Meteorological Writings.Andrew Weeks & Didier Kahn (eds.) - 2024 - BRILL.
    The cosmological-meteorological writings of Paracelsus (1493-1541), presented here for the first time in the most reliable German versions with facing-page translations and thorough text-based and historical commentary, are essential documents of the transition from the medieval to the modern era.
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  46.  46
    The Botany of Romanticism: Plants and the Exposition of Life.Andrew J. Mitchell - 2016 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 8 (3):315-328.
    German Romanticism is a thinking of life as exposed. Philosophical conceptions of botanical life are paradigmatic of this. Goethe, Schelling, and Hegel each address the plant in their respective philosophies of nature. This article traces the connections and divergences in their thinking of plants, focusing on the role of love, lack, and exposure in order to present the plant as a peculiarly apt figure for considerations of life as exposed.
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  47.  30
    Following Snowden around the World.Andrew A. Adams, Kiyoshi Murata, Yasunori Fukuta, Yohko Orito & Ana María Lara Palma - 2017 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 15 (3):311-327.
    Purpose A survey of the attitudes of students in eight countries towards the revelations of mass surveillance by the US’ NSA and the UK’s GCHQ has been described in an introductory paper and seven country-specific papers. This paper aims to present a comparison of the results from these countries and draws conclusions about the similarities and differences noted. Design/methodology/approach A questionnaire was deployed in Germany, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand, The People’s Republic of China, Spain, Sweden and Taiwan. The original survey (...)
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  48. On going back to Kant.Andrew Chignell - 2008 - Philosophical Forum 39 (2):109-124.
    A broad overview of the NeoKantian movement in Germany, written as an introduction to a series of essays about that movement. -/- .
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  49.  38
    Why do ethicists eat their greens?Andrew Sneddon - 2020 - Philosophical Psychology 33 (7):902-923.
    Eric Schwitzgebel, Fiery Cushman, and Joshua Rust have conducted a series of studies of the thought and behavior of professional ethicists. They have found no evidence that ethical reflection yields distinctive improvements in behavior. This work has been done on English-speaking ethicists. Philipp Schönegger and Johannes Wagner replicated one study with German-speaking professors. Their results are almost the same, except for finding that German-speaking ethicists were more likely to be vegetarian than non-ethicists. The present paper devises and evaluates (...)
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  50. Solomon Maimon.Andrew Kelley - 2005 - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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