Results for 'Bruce Halsted'

977 found
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  1.  18
    Notes and discussions.George Bruce Halsted - 1878 - Mind (9):134-137.
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  2.  8
    De Morgan as logician.George Bruce Halsted - 1884 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 18 (1):1 - 9.
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  3.  42
    Prof. Jevons's criticism of Boole's logical system.George Bruce Halsted - 1878 - Mind 3 (9):134-137.
  4.  51
    Subconscious Pangeometry.George Bruce Halsted - 1896 - The Monist 7 (1):100-106.
  5.  81
    Easy Non-Euclid.George Bruce Halsted - 1909 - The Monist 19 (3):399-402.
  6.  10
    The modern logic.George Bruce Halsted - 1883 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 17 (2):210 - 213.
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  7.  65
    The Non-Euclidean Geometry Inevitable.George Bruce Halsted - 1894 - The Monist 4 (4):483-493.
  8.  10
    Algorithmic division in logic.George Bruce Halsted - 1879 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 13 (1):107 - 112.
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  9.  58
    De Morgan to Sylvester.George Bruce Halsted - 1900 - The Monist 10 (2):188-197.
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  10.  11
    Statement and reduction of syllogism.George Bruce Halsted - 1878 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 12 (4):418 - 426.
  11.  51
    The Unverifiable Hypotheses of Science.George Bruce Halsted - 1910 - The Monist 20 (4):563-573.
  12. Questionable benefits and unavoidable personal beliefs: defending conscientious objection for abortion.Bruce Philip Blackshaw & Daniel Rodger - 2020 - Journal of Medical Ethics 3 (46):178-182.
    Conscientious objection in healthcare has come under heavy criticism on two grounds recently, particularly regarding abortion provision. First, critics claim conscientious objection involves a refusal to provide a legal and beneficial procedure requested by a patient, denying them access to healthcare. Second, they argue the exercise of conscientious objection is based on unverifiable personal beliefs. These characteristics, it is claimed, disqualify conscientious objection in healthcare. Here, we defend conscientious objection in the context of abortion provision. We show that abortion has (...)
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  13.  34
    Ethics in the City RoomReporters' Ethics.Howard M. Ziff & Bruce M. Swain - 1979 - Hastings Center Report 9 (5):44.
  14. Frozen Embryos and The Obligation to Adopt.Bruce P. Blackshaw & Nicholas Colgrove - 2020 - Bioethics (8):1-5.
    Rob Lovering has developed an interesting new critique of views that regard embryos as equally valuable as other human beings: the moral argument for frozen human embryo adoption. The argument is aimed at those who believe that the death of a frozen embryo is a very bad thing, and Lovering concludes that some who hold this view ought to prevent one of these deaths by adopting and gestating a frozen embryo. Contra Lovering, we show that there are far more effective (...)
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  15.  84
    The impairment argument for the immorality of abortion revisited.Bruce P. Blackshaw - 2019 - Bioethics (Online):211-213.
    Perry Hendricks has recently presented the impairment argument for the immorality of abortion, to which I responded and he has now replied. The argument is based on the premise that impairing a fetus with fetal alcohol syndrome is immoral, and on the principle that if impairing an organism is immoral, impairing it to a higher degree is also—the impairment principle. If abortion impairs a fetus to a higher degree, then this principle entails abortion is immoral. In my reply, I argued (...)
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  16.  32
    Developing, Administering, and Scoring the Healthcare Ethics Consultant Certification Examination.Courtenay R. Bruce, Chris Feudtner, Daniel Davis & Mary Beth Benner - 2019 - Hastings Center Report 49 (5):15-22.
    In November 2018, the practice of health care ethics consultation crossed a major threshold when 138 candidates took the inaugural Healthcare Ethics Consultant Certification Examination. This accomplishment, long in the making, has had and continues to have both advocates and critics. The Healthcare Ethics Consultant Certification Commission, a functionally autonomous body created and funded by the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities, was charged with overseeing creation of the certification process, developing the exam, and formulating certification standards and policies to (...)
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  17.  26
    A Pot Ignored Boils On: Sustained Calls for Explicit Consent of Intimate Medical Exams.Lori Bruce - 2020 - HEC Forum 32 (2):125-145.
    Unconsented intimate exams on men and women are known to occur for training purposes and diagnostic reasons, mostly during gynecological surgeries but also during prostate examinations and abdominal surgeries. UIEs most often occur on anesthetized patients but have also been reported on conscious patients. Over the last 30 years, several parties—both within and external to medicine—have increasingly voiced opposition to these exams. Arguments from medical associations, legal scholars, ethicists, nurses, and some physicians have not compelled meaningful institutional change. Opposition is (...)
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  18.  87
    The Ethics of Killing: Strengthening the Substance View with Time-relative Interests.Bruce P. Blackshaw - 2019 - The New Bioethics (Online):1-17.
    The substance view is an account of personhood that regards all human beings as possessing instrinsic value and moral status equivalent to that of an adult human being. Consequently, substance view proponents typically regard abortion as impermissible in most circumstances. The substance view, however, has difficulty accounting for certain intuitions regarding the badness of death for embryos and fetuses, and the wrongness of killing them. Jeff McMahan’s time-relative interest account is designed to cater for such intuitions, and so I present (...)
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  19.  39
    (1 other version)Inconsistency arguments still do not matter.Bruce P. Blackshaw, Nicholas Colgrove & Daniel Rodger - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 1:1-4.
    William Simkulet has recently criticised Colgrove et al’s defence against what they have called inconsistency arguments—arguments that claim opponents of abortion (OAs) act in ways inconsistent with their underlying beliefs about human fetuses (eg, that human fetuses are persons at conception). Colgrove et al presented three objections to inconsistency arguments, which Simkulet argues are unconvincing. Further, he maintains that OAs who hold that the fetus is a person at conception fail to act on important issues such as the plight of (...)
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  20.  14
    Newton's Argument for Proposition 1 of the Principia.Bruce Pourciau - 2003 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 57 (4):267-311.
    The first proposition of the Principia records two fundamental properties of an orbital motion: the Fixed Plane Property (that the orbit lies in a fixed plane) and the Area Property (that the radius sweeps out equal areas in equal times). Taking at the start the traditional view, that by an orbital motion Newton means a centripetal motion – this is a motion ``continually deflected from the tangent toward a fixed center'' – we describe two serious flaws in the Principia's argument (...)
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  21.  39
    Dendral and meta-dendral: Their applications dimension.Bruce G. Buchanan & Edward A. Feigenbaum - 1978 - Artificial Intelligence 11 (1-2):5-24.
  22.  73
    Defining life from death: problems with the somatic integration definition of life.Bruce P. Blackshaw & Daniel Rodger - 2020 - Bioethics (5):1-5.
    To determine when the life of a human organism begins, Mark T. Brown has developed the somatic integration definition of life. Derived from diagnostic criteria for human death, Brown’s account requires the presence of a life‐regulation internal control system for an entity to be considered a living organism. According to Brown, the earliest point at which a developing human could satisfy this requirement is at the beginning of the fetal stage, and so the embryo is not regarded as a living (...)
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  23.  26
    Newton's Interpretation of Newton's Second Law.Bruce Pourciau - 2006 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 60 (2):157-207.
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  24.  31
    The Principia’s second law (as Newton understood it) from Galileo to Laplace.Bruce Pourciau - 2020 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 74 (3):183-242.
    Newton certainly regarded his second law of motion in the Principia as a fundamental axiom of mechanics. Yet the works that came after the Principia, the major treatises on the foundations of mechanics in the eighteenth century—by Varignon, Hermann, Euler, Maclaurin, d’Alembert, Euler (again), Lagrange, and Laplace—do not record, cite, discuss, or even mention the Principia’s statement of the second law. Nevertheless, the present study shows that all of these scientists do in fact assume the principle that the Principia’s second (...)
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  25.  37
    Knowing savagery: Australia and the anatomy of race.Bruce Buchan & Linda Andersson Burnett - 2019 - History of the Human Sciences 32 (4):115-134.
    When Australia was circumnavigated by Europeans in 1801–02, French and British natural historians were unsure how to describe the Indigenous peoples who inhabited the land they charted and catalogued. Ideas of race and of savagery were freely deployed by both British and French, but a discursive shift was underway. While the concept of savagery had long been understood to apply to categories of human populations deemed to be in want of more historically advanced ‘civilisation’, the application of this term in (...)
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  26. Why a right to life rules out infanticide: A final reply to Räsänen.Bruce P. Blackshaw & Daniel Rodger - 2019 - Bioethics 33 (8):965-967.
    Joona Räsänen has argued that pro‐life arguments against the permissibility of infanticide are not persuasive, and fail to show it to be immoral. We responded to Räsänen’s arguments, concluding that his critique of pro‐life arguments was misplaced. Räsänen has recently replied in ‘Why pro‐life arguments still are not convincing: A reply to my critics’, providing some additional arguments as to why he does not find pro‐life arguments against infanticide convincing. Here, we respond briefly to Räsänen’s critique of the substance view, (...)
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  27.  15
    The Importance of Being Equivalent: Newton’s Two Models of One-Body Motion.Bruce Pourciau - 2004 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 58 (4):283-321.
    Abstract.As an undergraduate at Cambridge, Newton entered into his ‘Waste Book’ an assumption that we have named the Equivalence Assumption (The Younger): ‘‘ If a body move progressively in some crooked line [about a center of motion]..., [then this] crooked line may bee conceived to consist of an infinite number of streight lines. Or else in any point of the croked line the motion may bee conceived to be on in the tangent.’’ In this assumption, Newton somewhat imprecisely describes two (...)
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  28.  13
    The Preliminary Mathematical Lemmas of Newtons Principia.Bruce Pourcia - 1998 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 52 (3):279-295.
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  29. Does the Identity Objection to the future‐like‐ours argument succeed?Bruce P. Blackshaw - 2019 - Bioethics 34 (2):203-206.
    Eric Vogelstein has defended Don Marquis’ ‘future-like-ours’ argument for the immorality of abortion against what is known as the Identity Objection, which contends that for a fetus to have a future like ours, it must be numerically identical to an entity like us that possesses valuable experiences some time in the future. On psychological accounts of personal identity, there is no identity relationship between the fetus and the entity with valuable experiences that it will become. Vogelstein maintains that a non‐sentient (...)
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  30. Genetic Selective Abortion: Still a Matter of Choice.Bruce P. Blackshaw - 2020 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 23 (2):445-455.
    Jeremy Williams has argued that if we are committed to a liberal pro-choice stance with regard to selective abortion for disability, we will be unable to justify the prohibition of sex selective abortion. Here, I apply his reasoning to selective abortion based on other traits pregnant women may decide are undesirable. These include susceptibility to disease, level of intelligence, physical appearance, sexual orientation, religious belief and criminality—in fact any traits attributable to some degree to a genetic component. Firstly, I review (...)
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  31.  28
    Knowing savagery: Humanity in the circuits of colonial knowledge.Bruce Buchan & Linda Andersson Burnett - 2019 - History of the Human Sciences 32 (4):3-7.
    How was ‘savagery’ constituted as a field of colonial knowledge? As Europe’s empires expanded, their reach was marked not only by the colonisation of new territories but by the colonisation of knowledge. Path-breaking scholarship since the 1990s has shown how European knowledge of colonised territories and peoples developed from diverse travel writings, missionary texts, and exploration narratives from the 16th century onwards (Abulafia, 2008; Armitage, 2000; De Campos Françozo, 2017; Pratt, 1992). Of prime importance in this work has been the (...)
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  32. Schrödinger’s fetus examined.Bruce P. Blackshaw - 2019 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy:1-3.
    Joona Räsänen has proposed a concept he calls Schrödinger’s Fetus as a solution to reconciling what he believes are two widely held but contradictory intuitions. I show that Elizabeth Harman’s Actual Future Principle, upon which Schrödinger’s Fetus is based, uses a more convincing account of personhood. I also argue that both Räsänen and Harman, by embracing animalism, weaken their arguments by allowing Don Marquis’ ‘future like ours’ argument for the immorality of abortion into the frame.
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  33. Reciprocal exchange as the basis for recognition of law: Examples from American history.Bruce L. Benson - 1991 - Journal of Libertarian Studies 10 (3):53-82.
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  34.  22
    Grammar, Philosophy, and Logic.Bruce Silver - 2017 - Cham: Springer Verlag.
    This book argues that a basic grasp of philosophy and logic can produce written and spoken material that is both grammatically correct and powerful. The author analyses errors in grammar, word choice, phrasing and sentences that even the finest writers can fail to notice; concentrating on subtle missteps and errors that can make the difference between good and excellent prose. Each chapter addresses how common words and long-established grammatical rules are often misused or ignored altogether – including such common words (...)
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  35.  77
    Freedom, Fatalism, and the Other in Being and Nothingness and The Imaginary.Bruce Baugh - 2009 - Southwest Philosophy Review 25 (1):63-69.
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  36.  60
    (2 other versions)Let's Get Lost.Bruce Baugh - 2006 - Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy/Revue canadienne de philosophie continentale 10 (1):223-232.
  37.  56
    Subjectivity and the Begriff in Modern French Philosophy.Bruce Baugh - 1991 - The Owl of Minerva 23 (1):63-75.
    Hegel’s philosophy won acceptance in France only through a narrowing down of the scope of the dialectic to the domain of historical action, and indeed, of human history, rather than that of a Spirit beyond humanity.
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  38. Sartre, fondane, and Kierkegaard.Bruce Baugh - 2010 - In Adrian Mirvish & Adrian Van den Hoven, New perspectives on Sartre. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press. pp. 296.
  39. The art of good encounters : Spinoza, Deleuze and Macherey on moving from passive to active joy.Bruce Baugh - 2022 - In Christine Daigle & Terrance H. McDonald, From Deleuze and Guattari to posthumanism: philosophies of immanence. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
  40. The art of good encounters : Spinoza, Deleuze and Macherey on moving from passive to active joy.Bruce Baugh - 2022 - In Christine Daigle & Terrance H. McDonald, From Deleuze and Guattari to posthumanism: philosophies of immanence. New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
  41.  15
    Daily l-Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol and pressing for hypothalamic stimulation.Bruce M. Becker & Larry D. Reid - 1977 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 10 (4):325-327.
  42. The Reasoning of Those Times: Scott's Waverley and the Problem of Punishment.Bruce Beiderwell - 1985 - Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 15 (1).
     
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  43.  44
    Jazz: l'Autre exotique.Bruce Ellis Benson - 2005 - Horizons Philosophiques 16 (1):86-100.
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  44.  58
    The Fundamental Heteronomy of Jazz Improvisation.Bruce Ellis Benson - 2006 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 4 (4):453-467.
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  45.  12
    Proposition II (Book I) of Newton’s Principia.Bruce Pourciau - 2009 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 63 (2):129-167.
    After preparing the way with comments on evanescent quantities and then Newton’s interpretation of his second law, this study of Proposition II (Book I)— Proposition II Every body that moves in some curved line described in a plane and, by a radius drawn to a point, either unmoving or moving uniformly forward with a rectilinear motion, describes areas around that point proportional to the times, is urged by a centripetal force tending toward that same point. —asks and answers the following (...)
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  46.  14
    The Integrability of Ovals: Newton's Lemma 28 and Its Counterexamples.Bruce Pourciau - 2001 - Archive for History of Exact Sciences 55 (5):479-499.
    Principia (Book 1, Sect. 6), Newton's Lemma 28 on the algebraic nonintegrability of ovals has had an unusually mixed reception. Beginning in 1691 with Jakob Bernoulli (who accepted the lemma) and Huygens and Leibniz (who rejected it and offered counterexamples), Lemma 28 has a history of eliciting seemingly contradictory reactions. In more recent times, D.T. Whiteside in 1974 gave an “unchallengeable counterexample,” while the mathematician V.I. Arnol'd in 1987 sided with Bernoulli and called Newton's argument an “astonishingly modern topological proof.” (...)
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  47.  85
    History, Causation, and the Many-Worlds Interpretation of Quantum Mechanics.Bruce S. Bennett & Moletlanyi Tshipa - forthcoming - Journal of the Philosophy of History:1-22.
    The Many-Worlds Interpretation is a theory in physics which proposes that, rather than quantum-level events being resolved randomly as according to the Copenhagen Interpretation, the universe constantly divides into different versions or worlds. All physically possible worlds occur, though some outcomes are more likely than others, and therefore all possible histories exist. This paper explores some implications of this for history, especially concerning causation. Unlike counterfactuals, which concern different starting conditions, MWI concerns different outcomes of the same starting conditions. It (...)
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  48.  11
    Chisholm on Empirical Knowledge.Bruce Aune - 1979 - Grazer Philosophische Studien 7 (1):231-252.
    Chisholm holds that each person's empirical knowledge is a structure resting on a foundation of self-presenting propositions. He also holds that a person's knowledge of the past and the external world cannot be inferred from his self-presenting propositions by the rules of deduction and induction; special rules of evidence are needed. I argue that Chisholm has not made a compelling case for either view and that there is good reason to doubt that either view is correct.
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  49.  46
    (1 other version)Legal punishment, abortion and the substance view.Bruce P. Blackshaw - 2019 - The New Bioethics (3):1-3.
    A response to Henrik Friberg-Fernros' commentary on ‘The Ethics of Killing: Strengthening the Substance View with Time-relative Interests’.
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  50.  5
    Prologues to Canonical Collections as a Source for Jurisprudential Change to the Eve of the Investiture Contest.Bruce C. Brasington - 1994 - Frühmittelalterliche Studien 28 (1):226-242.
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