Results for 'Catherine Bernal'

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  1.  39
    Reduccionismo, leyes naturales y complejidad: diferentes estrategias de investigación y explicación científica.Maximiliano Martínez, Eduardo García & Catherine Bernal - 2017 - Scientiae Studia 15 (2):243.
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  2. Feminist bioethics meets experimental philosophy: Embracing the qualitative and experiential.Catherine Womack & Norah Mulvaney-Day - 2012 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 5 (1):113-132.
    Experimental philosophers advocate expansion of philosophical methods to include empirical investigation into the concepts used by ordinary people in reasoning and action. We propose also including methods of qualitative social science, which we argue serve both moral and epistemic goals. Philosophical analytical tools applied to interdisciplinary research designs can provide ways to extract rich contextual information from subjects. We argue that this approach has important implications for bioethics; it provides both epistemic and moral reasons to use the experiences and perspectives (...)
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  3. V—Moral Truth: Observational or Theoretical?Catherine Wilson - 2011 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 111 (1pt1):97-114.
    Moral properties are widely held to be response‐dependent properties of actions, situations, events and persons. There is controversy as to whether the putative response‐dependence of these properties nullifies any truth‐claims for moral judgements, or rather supports them. The present paper argues that moral judgements are more profitably compared with theoretical judgements in the natural sciences than with the judgements of immediate sense‐perception. The notion of moral truth is dependent on the notion of moral knowledge, which in turn is best understood (...)
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  4. The Invisible World: Early Modern Philosophy and the Invention of the Microscope.Catherine Wilson - 1995 - Journal of the History of Biology 29 (3):466-468.
     
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  5.  11
    Política a contratiempo. Apuntes para un futuro posible en el marco de la sociedad del rendimiento (Leistungsgesellschaft).Andrés Botero-Bernal, Javier Orlando Aguirre-Román & Juan David Almeyda-Sarmiento - 2024 - Co-herencia 21 (40):143-171.
    Esta investigación expone cómo el tiempo, en cuanto categoría existencial, es fundamental en el marco actual de dominación y control neoliberal. Para ello, el artículo se divide en tres momentos: el primero, expone el actual neoliberalismo temporal como esa figura hegemónica con la cualidad de capturar y cancelar el futuro, y evitar toda alternativa a dicho sistema. El segundo presenta los elementos de la ontología aromática, como una forma de resistencia frente a la aceleración, la hiperindividualización y el rendimiento del (...)
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  6.  7
    Before, Above, Beneath, Below.Catherine Wilson - 2015 - Philosophical Topics 43 (1-2):1-12.
    In this paper I discuss the largely obsolete notion of ‘metaphysical foundations for science’ and the problems of representation, truth, and embodiment in Descartes identified by Adrian Moore. I explain why rather than enaging in a project of pure inquiry Descartes needed to fit the pursuit and findings of the physical and life sciences into a theological framework. His much misunderstood scientifc image of the human being as a psychosomatic unity is defended as coherent and influential, as is his rejection (...)
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  7.  7
    Index.Catherine Wilson - 1992 - In Donald Rutherford (ed.), Leibniz's Metaphysics: A Historical and Comparative Study. Duke University Press. pp. 345-350.
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  8.  73
    What is the importance of Descartes’s meditation six?Catherine Wilson - 2005 - Philosophica 76 (2).
    In this essay, I argu e that Descartes considered his theory that the body is an inn ervated machine – in which the soul is situated – to be his most original contribution to philosophy. His ambition to prove the immortality of the soul was very poorly realized, a predictable outcome, insofar as his aims were ethical, not theological. His dualism accordingly requires reassessment.
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  9.  37
    Theorizing the Feminine on Stage, or Filling (in) the Margins.Catherine A. Wiley - 1990 - Semiotics:97-103.
  10.  12
    V. Atom, substance, soul.Catherine Wilson - 1992 - In Donald Rutherford (ed.), Leibniz's Metaphysics: A Historical and Comparative Study. Duke University Press. pp. 158-202.
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  11.  44
    What do simple folks know? Commentary on the papers of Adler, Arikha, martensen, Origgi, and stoler.Catherine Wilson - 2008 - Philosophical Forum 39 (3):363-372.
  12.  50
    Randomization, Persuasiveness and Rigor in Proofs.Catherine Womach & Matrin Farach - 2003 - Synthese 134 (1-2):71-84.
  13.  32
    Ethical Issues and Potential Solutions Surrounding the Use of Spoken Language Interpreters in Psychology.Catherine L. Wright - 2014 - Ethics and Behavior 24 (3):215-228.
    The need for psychological services to limited English proficient clients is increasing. Psychologists who provide clinical services to limited English proficient clients are frequently required to use the services of spoken language interpreters. Research has shown that the quality and consistency of interpretation services are often in question. Interpreters are generally not required to hold any certifications or to meet training requirements prior to providing interpretation services. This lack of oversight leaves the psychologist responsible for the quality of the interpretation (...)
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  14. Leibniz’s Metaphysics: A Historical and Comparative Study.Catherine Wilson - 1989 - Philosophy 65 (253):377-378.
     
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  15. Páginas Legales.Alba Lucía Bernal Cerquera - 2012 - Revista Aletheia 4 (2).
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  16.  38
    Construire philosophiquement le concept de laïcité. Quelques réflexions sur la constitution et le statut d'une théorie.Catherine Kintzler - 2012 - Cités 52 (4):51.
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  17.  23
    L’école de la République est-elle faite pour la République?Catherine Kintzler - 2021 - Cités 85 (1):139-150.
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  18.  12
    Thé'tre et philosophie. Présentation.Catherine Kintzler - 2018 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 98 (2):147.
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  19. God and Power: Counter-Apocalyptic Journeys.Catherine Keller - 2005
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  20. Plenitude and Compossibility in Leibniz.Catherine Wilson - 2000 - The Leibniz Review 10:1-20.
    Leibniz entertained the idea that, as a set of “striving possibles” competes for existence, the largest and most perfect world comes into being. The paper proposes 8 criteria for a Leibniz-world. It argues that a) there is no algorithm e.g., one involving pairwise compossibility-testing that can produce even possible Leibniz-worlds; b) individual substances presuppose completed worlds; c) the uniqueness of the actual world is a matter of theological preference, not an outcome of the assembly-process; and d) Goedel’s theorem implies that (...)
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  21. The moral epistemology of Locke's Essay.Catherine Wilson - 2007 - In Lex Newman (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Locke's "Essay Concerning Human Understanding". New York: Cambridge University Press.
  22. Ñucanchic Huasipungo. Ecuador y Colombia, más de 500 años de resistencia indígena.Fabián Andrés Bernal Angulo - 2011 - Aletheia: Anuario de Filosofía 2 (3):19 - 8.
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  23.  88
    Love of God and Love of Creatures: The Masham-Astell Debate.Catherine Wilson - 2004 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 21 (3):281-298.
  24.  35
    Investigating the Functional Utility of the Left Parietal ERP Old/New Effect: Brain Activity Predicts within But Not between Participant Variance in Episodic Recollection.A. MacLeod Catherine & I. Donaldson David - 2017 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 11.
  25. (1 other version)Rethinking Early Greek Philosophy: Hippolytus of Rome and the Presocratics.Catherine Osborne - 1988 - Phronesis 33 (3):327-344.
  26.  18
    Relevance Theory: Pragmatics and Cognition.Catherine Wearing - 2015 - WIREs Cognitive Science 6:87-95.
    Relevance Theory is a cognitively oriented theory of pragmatics, i.e., a theory of language use. It builds on the seminal work of H.P. Grice1 to develop a pragmatic theory which is at once philosophically sensitive and empirically plausible (in both psychological and evolutionary terms). This entry reviews the central commitments and chief contributions of Relevance Theory, including its Gricean commitment to the centrality of intention-reading and inference in communication; the cognitively grounded notion of relevance which provides the mechanism for explaining (...)
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  27.  49
    Martin Heidegger.Catherine H. Zuckert - 1990 - Political Theory 18 (1):51-79.
  28.  23
    Learning legal ethics in the law clinics: ‘one hundred thousand housing law’ for offences against minors.María L. Torres-Villarreal & Diana R. Bernal-Camargo - 2019 - Legal Ethics 22 (1-2):103-108.
    ABSTRACTIn the process of teaching law, is necessary to address some aspects that are not framed in strictly legal knowledge and require different strategies to be approach by the professor. An exa...
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  29. Foreword: After the flesh.Catherine Malabou - 2014 - In Tom Sparrow (ed.), Plastic Bodies: Rebuilding Sensation After Phenomenology. London: Open Humanities Press.
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  30. The role of a merit principle in distributive justice.Catherine Wilson - 2003 - The Journal of Ethics 7 (3):277-314.
    The claim that the level of well-beingeach enjoys ought to be to some extent afunction of individuals'' talents, efforts,accomplishments, and other meritoriousattributes faces serious challenge from bothegalitarians and libertarians, but also fromskeptics, who point to the poor historicalrecord of attempted merit assays and theubiquity of attribution biases arising fromlimited sweep, misattribution, custom andconvention, and mimicry. Yet merit-principlesare connected with reactive attitudes andinnate expectations, giving them some claim torecognition and there is a widespread beliefthat their use indirectly promotes thewell-being of all. (...)
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  31.  74
    Who’s a Philosopher? Who’s a Sophist? The Stranger V. Socrates.Catherine H. Zuckert - 2000 - Review of Metaphysics 54 (1):65 - 97.
    MANY READERS HAVE TAKEN THE ELEATIC STRANGER to represent a later stage of Plato’s philosophical development because the arguments or doctrines the Stranger presents in the Sophist appear to be better than those Socrates articulates in earlier dialogues. In particular, in the Sophist Plato shows the Stranger answering two questions Socrates proved unable to resolve in two of his conversations the day before. In the Theaetetus Socrates admitted that he had long been perplexed by the fact of false opinion; he (...)
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  32.  44
    Socrates’ Search for Self-Knowledge.Catherine H. Zuckert - 2024 - In David Keyt & Christopher Shields (eds.), Principles and Praxis in Ancient Greek Philosophy: Essays in Ancient Greek Philosophy in Honor of Fred D. Miller, Jr. Springer Verlag. pp. 75-98.
    Early in the Phaedrus, Socrates tells his interlocutor that he does not have time to formulate naturalistic reinterpretations of old stories, because he is not yet able, according to the Delphic inscription, to know myself. Indeed, it appears laughable to me for one who is still ignorant of this to examine alien things. … [So] I examine not them but myself: whether I happen to be some wild animal more multiply twisted and filled with desire than Typhon, or a gentler, (...)
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  33.  21
    Herculine Barbin : Archéologie d’une révolution.Catherine Marnas & Diogo Sardinha - 2024 - Cités 97 (1):107-117.
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  34.  16
    La invención del hombre desde la exteriorización tecno-lógica: una relación asimétrica.Steve Macraigne, María Daniela Parra Bernal & Sergio Néstor Osorio García - 2018 - Cuadernos de Filosofía Latinoamericana 39 (119):215-237.
    Uno de los problemas centrales que el filósofo francés Bernard Stiegler ha abordado para sostener una constitución tecno- lógica de la humanidad, es la cuestión del origen del hombre. El asunto recae en preguntarse si es posible pensar quién es el hombre desde esta tesis, sin volver a la metafísica o la filosofía trascendental. Esta posición ha de estar enraizada en una ontología que aprehenda el componente causal a nivel relacional, dejando de lado las explicaciones en las cuales la causa (...)
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  35.  26
    Apophatic Beauty in the Hippias Major and the Symposium.Catherine Wesselinoff - forthcoming - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism.
    Plato’s discourse on beauty in the Hippias Major and the Symposium is distinctly apophatic in nature. Plato describes beauty in terms of what it is not (an approach sometimes referred to apophasis, or the via negativa). In this paper, I argue that Platonic apophatic practise in the Hippias Major and the Symposium depicts beauty as an ally to certain aspirations of philosophical discourse. In the first section, I offer some brief prefatory remarks on the nature of apophasis and its presence (...)
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  36.  25
    Generating Facial Expressions for Speech.Catherine Pelachaud, Norman I. Badler & Mark Steedman - 1996 - Cognitive Science 20 (1):1-46.
    This article reports results from a program that produces high‐quality animation of facial expressions and head movements as automatically as possible in conjunction with meaning‐based speech synthesis, including spoken intonation. The goal of the research is as much to test and define our theories of the formal semantics for such gestures, as to produce convincing animation. Towards this end, we have produced a high‐level programming language for three‐dimensional (3‐D) animation of facial expressions. We have been concerned primarily with expressions conveying (...)
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  37.  39
    Community-Based Participatory Research in United States Bioethics: Steps Toward More Democratic Theory and Policy.Catherine Myser - 2004 - American Journal of Bioethics 4 (2):67-68.
  38.  35
    Defining “Global Health Ethics”: Offering a Research Agenda for More Bioethics and Multidisciplinary Contributions—From the Global South and Beyond the Health Sciences—to Enrich Global Health and Global Health Ethics Initiatives.Catherine Myser - 2015 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 12 (1):5-10.
    Some claim that “global health is public health” but most regard global health as a new field, rapidly emerging mostly at North American academic institutions . The term was first incorporated into University of California, San Francisco’s Institute for Global Health in 1999 and UCSF also inaugurated the first North American master of science in global health in 2009. Global health is commonly acknowledged to have historical precedents in tropical medicine and international health. All three fields are regarded as having (...)
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  39.  15
    ‘And Truth—So Manifold!’—Transfeminist Entanglements.Catherine Keller - 2013 - Feminist Theology 22 (1):77-87.
    How are we theologically imagining feminism’s further becomings at this juncture of multiple intertwined uncertainties? Aided by a poem by Emily Dickinson, this meditation on a transfeminist potentiality within and beyond Christianity plies a trinity of entanglement, mystery, and multiplicity.
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  40.  13
    La inviabilidad epistémica del análisis conceptual inmodesto.Kenneth Einar Himma & Andrés Botero Bernal - 2024 - Revista Filosofía Uis 23 (1):224-244.
    Este ensayo argumenta que el análisis conceptual inmodesto es epistémicamente inviable para seres como nosotros, porque no tenemos forma de justificar afirmaciones inmodestas acerca de la naturaleza de algo. Como argumento más adelante, las afirmaciones inmodestas no pueden ser justificadas por medios a priori o a posteriori. Si como suponen nuestras prácticas epistemológicas evaluativas tradicionales, no hay otras formas de justificar una creencia, entonces no podemos justificar afirmaciones inmodestas sobre la naturaleza de algo. El análisis conceptual inmodesto es epistemológicamente inviable, (...)
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  41.  8
    Studying Aesthetics in the Concert Hall.Catherine Kautsky - 1990 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 24 (4):103.
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  42.  61
    The Influence of Maximus the Confessor on Eriugena’s Treatment of Aristotle’s Categories.Catherine Kavanagh - 2005 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 79 (4):567-596.
    The Aristotelian categories are a fundamental element in Eriugena’s philosophical system on account of his realist view of dialectic. He received his texts concerning the categories from Boethius and the De decem catagoriis, but key ideas in his treatment of them—namely, the metaphysical importance of dialectic, the unknowability of essence, and the origin of being in place and time, ideas fundamentally rooted in Byzantine developments of the Christology of Chalcedon—are taken from Maximus the Confessor. Eriugena’s work on the categories represents (...)
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  43.  17
    Lessons in Reading: Horace on Homer at Epistles 1.2. 1-31.Catherine Keane - 2011 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 104 (4):427-450.
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  44.  43
    Just Do It: Pragma, Prehension, and Planetary Politics.Catherine Keller - 2015 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 36 (2):107-120.
    It is an honor and a surprise to find myself speaking with you this evening. I have not yet taken direct part in this community of discourse that is gathered in the name of AJTP; but I have operated for decades in the same intellectual neighborhood—or at least universe—and have always been entangled in some margin or other of your intellectual projects. Which projects I understand are not one. You are after all a plurality of pluralists; and you perhaps all (...)
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  45. Of symbolism: climate concreteness, causal efficacy and the Whiteheadian cosmopolis.Catherine Keller - 2017 - In Roland Faber, Jeffrey A. Bell & Joseph Petek (eds.), Rethinking Whitehead’s Symbolism: Thought, Language, Culture. [Edinburgh]: Edinburgh University Press.
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  46.  34
    Peace Talk, or, The Unspeakable Conviviality of Becoming.Catherine Keller - 2011 - Process Studies 40 (2):315-339.
    This essay unfolds within the wider theological project of an apophatic relationalism. The moral intention of political theology, in its progressive hope, takes refuge here in the apophatic folds of a Cusan cosmological mysticism that, in turn, lends depth to a polyvocal Whiteheadian theology. In this paper hope finds itself tangled in the question of religio-political peace, vis-à-vis a specific thousand-year loop of Western history. In the knotty present, this cosmopolitics—with an eye to each new wave of Islamophobia—lives with uncertainty (...)
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  47.  30
    Strange Wonder: The Closure of Metaphysics and the Opening of Awe – By Mary–Jane Rubenstein.Catherine Keller - 2010 - Modern Theology 26 (2):308-311.
  48.  29
    The messianic without Marxism: Derrida's Marx and the question of justice.Catherine Kellogg - 1998 - Cultural Values 2 (1):51-69.
    This paper considers the traditional debate about Marx and justice in light of Jacques Derrida's recent text, Spectres of Marx Specifically, I treat Derrida's consideration of the Marxist notion of justice in terms of the problematic of time. Following Derrida, I suggest that while much of the history of Marxism relies on a teleological and Hegelian understanding of time‐becoming‐history, the Marxist critique of justice is actually made possible by what Derrida calls a ‘messianic’ notion of time; one wherein history does (...)
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  49. The place of multiple meanings: The dragon daughter rides today.Catherine Keller - 2005 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 32 (2):281–296.
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  50.  14
    Territory, Terror and Torture: Dream-reading the Apocalypse.Catherine Keller - 2005 - Feminist Theology 14 (1):47-67.
    Beginning from the apocalyptic work, Hardboiled Wonderland and the End of the World, this article explores the Christian Apocalypse through dream-reading the imagery in the context of American responses to 9/11. The apocalyptic figures of the Whore, the Messiah and the Beast appear in interaction with each other. Apocalyptic language, like the tension between nationalism and globalization, both deterritorializes and reterritorializes, unleashing the total destructive power of Armageddon on whole populations through war or torture, legitimized through the notions of absolute (...)
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