Results for 'Charles Willemen'

945 found
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  1.  8
    Dharmapravicaya: aspects of Buddhist studies: essays in honour of N.H. Samtani.N. H. Samtani, Lālajī & Charles Willemen (eds.) - 2012 - Delhi: Buddhist World Press.
    Contributed articles on Buddhist doctrines and philosophy; festschrift in honor of Narayan Hemandas Samtani, Buddhist scholar.
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  2.  10
    Sarvastivada Buddhist Scholasticism. Charles Willemen, Bart Dessein and Collett Cox.Rupert Gethin - 2003 - Buddhist Studies Review 20 (1):93-97.
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  3.  20
    The Dialectical Path of Law.Charles Lincoln - 2021 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    The Dialectical Path of Law discusses the origin of law leading to the development of advanced corporate law intertwined with the formation of technical tax rules. Lincoln explores the recent developments of the OECD and United States tax rules within a hardly discussed context in legal academia - the Hegelian dialectic.
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  4. (1 other version)The Abilities of Man: Their Nature and Measurement.Charles Spearman - 1927 - Mind 37 (146):215-221.
  5. The Metaphors Of Consciousness.Charles T. Tart - 1981 - New York: Plenum Press.
  6.  65
    The true and the false: the domain of the pragmatic.Charles Travis - 1981 - Amsterdam: Benjamins.
    The main thrust of the present work is to show why truth and truth bearers lie essentially beyond the descriptive reach of semantics, and to outline a theory of ...
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  7.  12
    The foundations of the Origin of species: two essays written in 1842 and 1844.Charles Darwin - 1987 - New York: New York University Press. Edited by Francis Darwin.
    Are they needed? To be sure. The Darwinian industry, industrious though it is, has failed to provide texts of more than a handful of Darwin's books. If you want to know what Darwin said about barnacles (still an essential reference to cirripedists, apart from any historical importance) you are forced to search shelves, or wait while someone does it for you; some have been in print for a century; various reprints have appeared and since vanished." -Eric Korn,Times Literary Supplement (...) Robert Darwin (1880-1882) has been widely recognized since his own time as one of the most influential writers in the history of Western thought. His books were widely read by specialists and the general public, and his influence had been extended by almost continuous public debate over the last 130 years. New York University Press' edition makes it possible for the first time to review Darwin's public literary output as a whole, plus his scientific journal articles, his private notebooks, and his correspondence. This is the first complete edition containing all of Darwin's published books, featuring definitive texts recording original paginations with Darwin's indexes retained. All illustrations and plates are presented, inclucing 82 color plates of birds and mammals and several folding maps and plates. The set also features a general introduction and index, and textural introductions in each volume. (shrink)
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  8.  71
    The Mass of the Gravitational Field.Charles T. Sebens - 2022 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 73 (1):211-248.
    By mass-energy equivalence, the gravitational field has a relativistic mass density proportional to its energy density. I seek to better understand this mass of the gravitational field by asking whether it plays three traditional roles of mass: the role in conservation of mass, the inertial role, and the role as source for gravitation. The difficult case of general relativity is compared to the more straightforward cases of Newtonian gravity and electromagnetism by way of gravitoelectromagnetism, an intermediate theory of gravity that (...)
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  9.  21
    What would you do?: juggling bioethics and ethnography.Charles L. Bosk - 2008 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    In hospital rooms across the country, doctors, nurses, patients, and their families grapple with questions of life and death. Recently, they have been joined at the bedside by a new group of professional experts, bioethicists, whose presence raises a host of urgent questions. How has bioethics evolved into a legitimate specialty? When is such expertise necessary? How do bioethicists make their decisions? And whose interests do they serve? Renowned sociologist Charles L. Bosk has been observing medical care for thirty-five (...)
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  10. Signs, Language, and Behavior.CHARLES MORRIS - 1947 - Synthese 6 (5):259-260.
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  11. Is the appearance of shape protean?Charles Siewert - 2006 - PSYCHE: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Research On Consciousness 12:1-16.
    </b>This commentary focuses on shape constancy in vision and its relation to sensorimotor knowledge. I contrast “Protean” and “Constancian” views about how to describe perspectival changes in the appearance of an object’s shape. For the Protean, these amount to changes in apparent shape; for Constance, things are not merely judged, but literally appear constant in shape. I give reasons in favor of the latter view, and argue that Noë’s attempt to combine aspects of both views in a “dual aspect” account (...)
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  12.  55
    Are Conspiracy Theorists Epistemically Vicious?Charles R. Pigden - 2016 - In Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen, Kimberley Brownlee & David Coady (eds.), A Companion to Applied Philosophy. Malden, MA: Wiley. pp. 120–132.
    Are conspiracy theorists epistemically vicious? That is the conventional wisdom. It has distinguished supporters, including Quassim Cassam, Cass Sunstein and Adrian Vermeule. For me, a trait is an epistemic virtue if leads to the discovery of salient truths and the avoidance of pernicious falsehoods, and an epistemic vice the contrary. As such epistemic virtues and vices are role‐relative, context‐relative and end‐relative. I argue that that it is not necessarily or even usually vicious to be a conspiracy theorist, even if we (...)
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  13.  18
    Journal of researches.Charles Darwin - 1839 - New York: New York University Press.
    Are they needed? To be sure. The Darwinian industry, industrious though it is, has failed to provide texts of more than a handful of Darwin's books. If you want to know what Darwin said about barnacles (still an essential reference to cirripedists, apart from any historical importance) you are forced to search shelves, or wait while someone does it for you; some have been in print for a century; various reprints have appeared and since vanished." -Eric Korn,Times Literary Supplement (...) Robert Darwin (1880-1882) has been widely recognized since his own time as one of the most influential writers in the history of Western thought. His books were widely read by specialists and the general public, and his influence had been extended by almost continuous public debate over the last 130 years. New York University Press' edition makes it possible for the first time to review Darwin's public literary output as a whole, plus his scientific journal articles, his private notebooks, and his correspondence. This is the first complete edition containing all of Darwin's published books, featuring definitive texts recording original paginations with Darwin's indexes retained. All illustrations and plates are presented, inclucing 82 color plates of birds and mammals and several folding maps and plates. The set also features a general introduction and index, and textural introductions in each volume. (shrink)
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  14. (1 other version)Varieties of Religion Today: William James Revisited.Charles Taylor - 2003 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 39 (2):342-347.
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  15.  44
    From Kant to Husserl: selected essays.Charles Parsons - 2012 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    The transcendental aesthetic -- Arithmetic and the categories -- Remarks on pure natural science -- Two studies in the reception of Kant's philosophy of arithmetic: postscript to part I -- Some remarks on Frege's conception of extension -- Postscript to essay 5 -- Frege's correspondence: postscript to essay 6 -- Brentano on judgment and truth -- Husserl and the linguistic turn.
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  16. Learning causal schemata.Charles Kemp, Noah D. Goodman & Joshua B. Tenenbaum - 2007 - In McNamara D. S. & Trafton J. G. (eds.), Proceedings of the 29th Annual Cognitive Science Society. Cognitive Science Society. pp. 389--394.
     
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  17.  23
    (1 other version)Psychology Normal and Morbid.Charles A. Mercier - 1902 - Philosophical Review 11 (2):202-204.
  18.  13
    Reckoning with the Imagination: Wittgenstein and the Aesthetics of Literary Experience.Charles Altieri - 2015 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    Much current theorizing about literature involves efforts to renew our sense of aesthetic values in reading. Such is the case with new formalism as well as recent appeals to the notion of “surface reading.” While sympathetic to these efforts, Charles Altieri believes they ultimately fall short because too often they fail to account for the values that engage literary texts in the social world. In Reckoning with the Imagination, Altieri argues for a reconsideration of the Kantian tradition of Idealist (...)
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  19.  32
    Ethically Alluring but Legally Destructive.Charles Foster - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 23 (8):85-87.
    Garland, Morain, and Sugarman's (2023) proposal is ethically attractive. But (assuming that ethics and medical law should have a close relationship with one another) it is legally seismic. It requi...
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  20. El contrato racial (español).Charles Mills (ed.) - 1997 - Cornell University Press.
    The Racial Contract pone la teoría clásica del contrato social occidental, sin ambages, al servicio de un uso radical extraordinario. Con una mirada arrolladora sobre el expansionismo y el racismo europeos de los últimos quinientos años, Charles W. Mills demuestra cómo este peculiar y no reconocido "contrato" ha dado forma a un sistema de dominación europea global: cómo da lugar a la existencia de "blancos" y "no blancos", personas de pleno derecho y subpersonas, cómo influye en la teoría moral (...)
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  21.  73
    The Passibility of God.Charles Taliaferro - 1989 - Religious Studies 25 (2):217 - 224.
    John Dewey once said of philosophical problems that they are quite different from old soldiers. Not only do they never die, but they do not even fade away. Something similar might be said about the unfavourable Divine attributes of the 1950s and 60s, timelessness or eternity, necessary existence, foreknowledge of creaturely free choices, and immutability. All have contemporary defenders. Even the puzzling, traditional tenet that God is metaphysically simple now has formidable apologists. Perhaps the least popular of the traditional theistic (...)
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  22. Implicit racial bias and epistemic pessimism.Charles Lassiter & Nathan Ballantyne - 2017 - Philosophical Psychology 30 (1-2):79-101.
    Implicit bias results from living in a society structured by race. Tamar Gendler has drawn attention to several epistemic costs of implicit bias and concludes that paying some costs is unavoidable. In this paper, we reconstruct Gendler’s argument and argue that the epistemic costs she highlights can be avoided. Though epistemic agents encode discriminatory information from the environment, not all encoded information is activated. Agents can construct local epistemic environments that do not activate biasing representations, effectively avoiding the consequences of (...)
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  23.  57
    Population transcriptomics with single‐cell resolution: A new field made possible by microfluidics.Charles Plessy, Linda Desbois, Teruo Fujii & Piero Carninci - 2013 - Bioessays 35 (2):131-140.
    Tissues contain complex populations of cells. Like countries, which are comprised of mixed populations of people, tissues are not homogeneous. Gene expression studies that analyze entire populations of cells from tissues as a mixture are blind to this diversity. Thus, critical information is lost when studying samples rich in specialized but diverse cells such as tumors, iPS colonies, or brain tissue. High throughput methods are needed to address, model and understand the constitutive and stochastic differences between individual cells. Here, we (...)
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  24.  41
    Kim on deductive explanation.Charles G. Morgan - 1970 - Philosophy of Science 37 (3):434-439.
    In [2] Hempel and Oppenheim give a definition of “explanation” for a certain formal language. In [1] Eberle, Kaplan, and Montague prove five theorems demonstrating that the Hempel and Oppenheim definition is not restrictive enough. In [3] Kim proposes two further conditions to supplement the Hempel and Oppenheim definition in order to avoid the objections posed in [1]. In this paper it is shown that the definition of Hempel and Oppenheim supplemented by Kim's conditions is open to a trivialization very (...)
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  25. Evil and the Augustinian tradition.Charles T. Mathewes - 2001 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Recent scholarship has focused attention on the difficulties that evil, suffering, and tragic conflict present to religious belief and moral life. Thinkers have drawn upon many important historical figures, with one significant exception - Augustine. At the same time, there has been a renaissance of work on Augustine, but little discussion of either his work on evil or his influence on contemporary thought. This book fills these gaps. It explores the 'family biography' of the Augustinian tradition by looking at Augustine's (...)
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  26. Introduction: Basic Rights and Beyond.Charles R. Beitz & Robert E. Goodin - 2009 - In Charles R. Beitz & Robert E. Goodin (eds.), Global Basic Rights. Oxford University Press. pp. 1--24.
  27.  41
    Why Not to Trust Other Philosophers.Charles Huenemann - 2004 - American Philosophical Quarterly 41 (3):249 - 258.
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  28.  74
    Pragmatism and metaphysics.Charles W. Morris - 1934 - Philosophical Review 43 (6):549-564.
  29.  28
    Using Stories to Teach Business Ethics–Developing Character through Examples of Admirable Actions.Charles E. Watson - 2003 - Teaching Business Ethics 7 (2):93-105.
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  30.  15
    On Taking Substituted Judgment Seriously.Charles Baron - 1990 - Hastings Center Report 20 (5):7-8.
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  31.  14
    Just Price in the Markets: A History.Charles R. Geisst - 2023 - Yale University Press.
    _A concise history of “just price,” from Aristotle to the present day_ The question of what constitutes a fair price has been at the center of market interactions since the time of Aristotle. Should a seller sell to the highest bidder, or is there some other standard, such as a morally defined price, to be applied? Charles R. Geisst traces the ways that philosophers, religious leaders, and economists have sought to answer that question, from antiquity through the modern era. (...)
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  32.  32
    The very idea of sustainability.Charles V. Blatz - 1992 - Agriculture and Human Values 9 (4):12-28.
    Discussions of the desirability and ethical justifiability of sustainable agriculture are frequently impeded, if not derailed by the variety of meanings attached to the term “sustainable.” This paper suggests a taxonomy of different notions of sustainability distinguishing between agricultural product and process sustainability, in both static and dynamic forms, pursued by reductive (extractive), compensatory, regenerative, and induced homeostasis strategies. The discussion then goes on to argue that ethics demand sustainable agriculture. Finally the paper tries to identify just which types of (...)
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  33. The Axiomatic Approach to Population Ethics.Charles Blackorby, Walter Bossert & David Donaldson - 2002 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics 2 (3):342-381.
    This article examines several families of population principles in the light of a set of axioms. In addition to the critical-level utilitarian, number-sensitive critical-level utilitarian, and number-dampened utilitarian families and their generalized counterparts, we consider the restricted number-dampened family and introduce two new ones: the restricted critical-level and restricted number-dependent critical-level families. Subsets of the restricted families have non-negative critical levels, avoid the `repugnant conclusion' and satisfy the axiom priority for lives worth living, but violate an important independence condition.
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  34. (1 other version)Evolution and natural selection.Charles Darwin - 1959 - Boston,: Beacon Press. Edited by Alfred Russel Wallace.
  35.  18
    Focus on meaning.Charles Egerton Osgood - 1976 - The Hague: Mouton.
    No detailed description available for "Explorations in Semantic Space".
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  36.  71
    The ideal aesthetic observer revisited.Charles Taliaferro - 1990 - British Journal of Aesthetics 30 (1):1-13.
  37.  81
    After sovereignty: on the question of political beginnings.Charles Barbour & George Pavlich (eds.) - 2010 - New York: Routledge.
    Addressing the three dominant contemporary attitudes towards sovereignty - Sovereignty Renewed; Sovereignty Rethought; Sovereignty Rejected - After Sovereignty ...
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  38.  49
    It is morally permissible to manipulate the genome of domestic hogs.Charles Blatz - 1991 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 4 (2):166-176.
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  39.  26
    En quel sens faut-il entendre la formule de Gilles Deleuze voulant que la philosophie soit une création de concepts?Charles Bolduc - 2006 - Horizons Philosophiques 17 (1):47-68.
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  40.  38
    Philosophy of Life in the Age of Information: Seinsgeschichte and the Task of “an Ontology of Ourselves”.Charles Bonner - 2013 - In Scott M. Campbell & Paul W. Bruno (eds.), The Science, Politics, and Ontology of Life-Philosophy. New York: Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 109.
  41.  32
    Imre Boba's Reconsiderations of Moravia's Early History and Arnulf of Carinthia's Ostpolitik (887–892).Charles R. Bowlus - 1987 - Speculum 62 (3):552-574.
    In 1971 Imre Boba published a monograph, Moravia's History Reconsidered, in which he argued that the ninth-century Slavic principality of Moravia was located not in central Czechoslovakia, as modern scholars have assumed, but in northern Yugoslavia, in the vicinity of the Roman provincial capital of Sirmium . In his book and in subsequent articles, Boba has assembled an impressive array of sources — Latin, Byzantine Greek, Slavic, Old English, and others — to support his hypothesis. Based on this evidence, the (...)
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  42. Originea speciilor [prin selecție naturală; sau, Păstrarea raselor favorizate l̂upta pentru existență.].Charles Darwin - 1957 - [Buchurești,: Editura Academiei Republicii Populare Romîne.
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  43.  5
    Tropes and Challenges of Islamic Toleration1.Charles Kurzman - 2008 - In Russel Hardin, Ingrid Crepell & Stephen Macedo (eds.), toleration on trial. Lexington Books. pp. 153.
  44.  3
    Esquisse d'une esthétique musicale scientifique.Charles Lalo - 1908 - Paris: F. Alcan.
    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 was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work. This work is in the public domain (...)
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  45.  14
    L'esthétique scientifique.Charles Lalo - 1909 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 68:255 - 267.
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  46. Come siamo [The Way we are].Charles Larmore - 2005 - la Società Degli Individui 23:91-104.
    Nel suo libro Le jardin imparfait Tzvetan Todorov difende una visione dell’umanesimo modesta e plurale. Ai detrattori, in particolare francesi, degli ideali umanistici egli rimprovera una concezione della modernità troppo semplicistica e incapace di comprendere quanto l’enfasi sull’individuo e sulla sua volontà sia bilanciata in essa da un’analoga enfasi sulla socievolezza umana e sulla natura relazionale dell’identità personale. L’umanesimo moderno, a ben vedere, non è una religione, non aspira cioè a porre l’uomo al posto di Dio. Il suo obiettivo è (...)
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  47. The Interpreter's One-Volume Commentary on the Bible.Charles M. Laymon - 1971
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  48. L'idee de liberte morale.Charles Leuridan - 1938 - Philosophical Review 47:99.
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  49.  12
    Texte der Philosophie des Pragmatismus.Charles S. Peirce & Ekkehard Martens (eds.) - 1975 - Stuttgart: Reclam.
    Peirce, Ch. S. Die Festlegung einer Überzeugung.--Peirce, Ch. S. Was heisst Pragmatismus?--James, W. Der Wille zum Glauben.--James, W. Der Wahrheitsbegriff des Pragmatismus.--Schiller, F. C. S. Humanismus.--Dewey, J. Pragmatismus und Pädagogik.
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  50.  45
    The Foundations of Socratic Ethics.Charles M. Young & Alfonso Gomez-Lobo - 1996 - Philosophical Review 105 (2):233.
    Self-interest theories hold that rationality requires one always to choose what is best for oneself. Where these theories differ is in their accounts of what is best for one. Hedonism is a typical self-interest theory, distinguished from other versions by the claim that what is best for one is what gives one the greatest net balance of pleasure over pain. Gómez-Lobo thinks that Socrates is a self-interest theorist: Socrates believes that “a choice is rational if and only if it is (...)
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