Results for 'David Armour'

941 found
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  1.  56
    Books in review.Rollin S. Armour, Robert H. Ayers & David A. Pailin - 1975 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 6 (3):191-200.
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  2.  1
    Perspectives on cardiopulmonary resuscitation in the frail population: a scoping review.David Armour, Despina Boyiazis & Belinda Delardes - forthcoming - Monash Bioethics Review:1-26.
    Frail and elderly persons approaching end of life who suffer cardiac arrest are often subject to rigorous, undignified, and inappropriate resuscitation attempts despite poor outcomes. This scoping review aims to investigate how people feel about the appropriateness of CPR in this population. This review was guided by the PRISMA-ScR methodological framework. A search strategy was developed for four online databases (MEDLINE, EMCARE, PSYCHINFO, CINAHL). Two reviewers were utilised for title/abstract screening, full text review and data extraction. Full text, peer reviewed (...)
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  3.  42
    The myth of the hoplite's hoplon.J. F. Lazenby & David Whitehead - 1996 - Classical Quarterly 46 (01):27-.
    ‘Hoplites are troops who take their name from their shields’. ‘The individual infantryman took his name, hoplites, from the hoplon or shield’. Such is the orthodox view. This paper will endeavour to show that its basis is inadequate. Rather, we shall argue, hoplites took their name from their arms and armour as a whole, their hopla in that all-encompassing sense; so that the original and essential meaning of the word hoplite was nothing more than ‘armed man’.
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  4.  13
    David A. Mindell. War, Technology, and Experience Aboard the USS Monitor. xii + 187 pp., frontis., illus., bibl., index. Baltimore/London: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000. $35 ; $14.95. [REVIEW]Ed Constant - 2002 - Isis 93 (2):323-324.
    This is a fun, chatty little book that also manages to say, comprehensibly, much that is profound about technology. This trifecta is an embarrassment to those of us phlegmatic of mind and turgid of prose, but more about that presently. First, the book.For any kid who ever doodled his way through junior high school American history—and therefore for most of our countrymen—the “victory” of the Union ironclad Monitor over the CSS Virginia preserved the Union blockade, assured Northern victory in the (...)
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  5.  13
    Appendix to Chapter IV.Francis William Newman - 2009 - The Works of Francis William Newman on Religion 1:146-149.
    The Philistines.—Hebrew monotheism.—Administration of Samuel.—Early Hebrew psalmody.—Exterior marks of the Prophet.—Modes of divination.—Foreigndangers of Israel.—Appointment of Saul.—Romantic Philistine campaign.—Ammonite inroad.—Enmity with Amalek.—Massacre of the Amalekites.—David, anointed by Samuel.—David, Saul’s armour-bearer.—David, Saul’s son-in-law. —David, a freebooter.—David with Achish of Gath.—David reinforced from Israel.—David’s return to Ziklag.—Battle of Mount Gilboa.
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  6. (2 other versions)An Enquiry Concerning Human Understanding.David Hume - 1901 - The Monist 11:312.
  7.  45
    Statistical techniques and sociological theory.David Zaret - 1987 - Sociological Theory 5 (1):36-40.
  8.  25
    Reliability and validity of peer review.David Zeaman - 1982 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 5 (2):245-245.
  9.  25
    Variability of irrelevant discriminative stimuli.David Zeaman & Joseph Denegre - 1967 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 73 (4p1):574.
  10.  12
    Claude Simon : écrivain difficile?David Zemmour - forthcoming - Rhuthmos.
    - Poétique et Études littéraires – GALERIE – Nouvel article.
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  11.  46
    Augustine and Wittgenstein.David E. Zoolalian - 1978 - Augustinian Studies 9:25-33.
  12.  10
    Moral, Social and Political Philosophy of the British Idealists.William Sweet (ed.) - 2009 - Imprint Academic.
    The British idealists of the late 19th and early 20th century are best known for their contributions to metaphysics, logic, and political philosophy. Yet they also made important contributions to social and public policy, social and moral philosophy and moral education, as shown by this volume. Their views are not only important in their own right, but also bear on contemporary discussion in public policy and applied ethics. Among the authors discussed are Green, Caird, Ritchie, Bradley, Bosanquet, Jones, McTaggart, Pringle-Pattison, (...)
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  13.  81
    Drivers of Environmental Behaviour in Manufacturing SMEs and the Implications for CSR.David Williamson, Gary Lynch-Wood & John Ramsay - 2006 - Journal of Business Ethics 67 (3):317-330.
    The authors use empirical research into the environmental practices of 31 manufacturing small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to show that ‚business performance’ and ‚regulation’ considerations drive behaviour. They suggest that this is inevitable, given the market-based decision-making frames that permeate and dominate the industry in which manufacturing SMEs operate. Since the environment is a pillar of corporate social responsibility (CSR), the findings have important implications for CSR policy, which promotes voluntary actions predicated on a business case. It is argued that (...)
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  14.  11
    Essays And Treatises On Several Subjects.David Hume - 2002 - Thoemmes.
    David Hume (1711-76) is the grand intellectual figure of the Scottish Enlightenment. Ironically, what is now considered his magnum opus, the ill-received three-volume A Treatise of Human Nature (1739-40), was rejected by Hume himself by 1751. Subsequently, when Hume first compiled his Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects two years later, he excluded the Treatise and considered this new collection of essays to be his complete philosophical writings. Hume revised the Essays and Treatises some ten times in various editions, (...)
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  15. One Hundred Years of Homosexuality: and other essays on Greek love.David M. Halperin - 1990 - Routledge.
    One. Hundred. Years. of. Homosexuality. I. In 1992, when the patriots among us will be celebrating the fivehundredth anniversary of the discovery of America by Christopher Columbus, our cultural historians may wish to mark the centenary of  ...
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  16.  53
    Isolated systems and their symmetries, part II: Local and global symmetries of field theories.David Wallace - 2022 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 92 (C):249-259.
  17. Force and sense.David Zimmerman - 1980 - Mind 89 (354):214-233.
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  18. Integrating philosophy with anthropology in an approach to morality.David Wong - 2014 - Anthropological Theory 14 (3).
    Philosophy and anthropology need to integrate their accounts of what a morality is. I identify three desiderata that an account of morality should satisfy: (1) it should recognize significant diversity and variation in the major kinds of value, (2) it should specify a set of criteria for what counts as a morality, and (3) it should indicate the basis for distinguishing between more or less justifiable moralities, or true and false moralities. I will discuss why these three desiderata are hard (...)
     
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  19.  75
    Situating the Self in the Kingdom of Ends: Heidegger, Arendt, and Kantian Moral Phenomenology.David Zoller - 2019 - Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 75 (1):159-190.
    In the eyes of many “classical” phenomenologists, Kantianism has seemed to invite individuals to leave the rich, complexly motivated environment of lived experience in favor of a shadowy, formal kingdom of abstract duties and rights. Yet there have been notable attempts within the phenomenological tradition to articulate a richer vision of Kantian moral consciousness and to exhibit, from a first-person perspective, the shape of mental life and the standing dispositions that befit membership in a Kantian kingdom of ends. Here I (...)
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  20. (1 other version)II*—Deliberation and Practical Reason.David Wiggins - 1976 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 76 (1):29-52.
    David Wiggins; II*—Deliberation and Practical Reason, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 76, Issue 1, 1 June 1976, Pages 29–52, https://doi.org/10.
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  21.  39
    (1 other version)Age-related slowing of response selection and production in a visual choice reaction time task.David L. Woods, John M. Wyma, E. William Yund, Timothy J. Herron & Bruce Reed - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  22.  22
    How does emotional content affect lexical processing?David Vinson, Marta Ponari & Gabriella Vigliocco - 2014 - Cognition and Emotion 28 (4):737-746.
  23.  69
    Learning to Represent: Mathematics-first accounts of representation and their relation to natural language.David Wallace - unknown
    I develop an account of how mathematized theories in physics represent physical systems, in response to the frequent claim that any such account must presuppose a non-mathematized, and usually linguistic, description of the system represented. The account I develop contains a circularity, in that representation is a mathematical relation between the models of a theory and the system as represented by some other model --- but I argue that this circularity is not vicious, in any case refers in linguistic accounts (...)
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  24.  14
    Fragments of modernity: theories of modernity in the work of Simmel, Kracauer, and Benjamin.David Frisby - 1985 - Cambridge: MIT Press.
    Fragments of Modernity provides a critical introduction to the work of three of the most original German thinkers of the early 20th century. In their different ways, all three illuminated the experience of the modern in urban life, whether in mid-19th-century Paris or in Berlin at the turn of the century or later as the vanguard city of the Weimar Republic. They related the new modes of experiencing the world to the maturation of the money economy (Simmel), the process of (...)
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  25. Bridges from Classical to Nonmonotonic Logic.David Makinson - 2008 - Studia Logica 89 (3):437-439.
     
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  26. Activity, Process, Continuant, Substance, Organism.David Wiggins - 2016 - Philosophy 91 (2):269-280.
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  27. Making Do: Troubling Stoic Tendencies in an Otherwise Compelling Theory of Autonomy.David Zimmerman - 2000 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 30 (1):25-53.
    Nothing can kill a promising research program in ethics more quickly than a plausible argument to the effect that it is committed to a morally repellent consequence. It is especially troubling when a theory one favors is jeopardized in this way. I have this worry about Harry Frankfurt's theory of free will, autonomous agency and moral responsibility, for there is a very plausible argument to the effect that aspects of his view commit him to a version of the late Stoic (...)
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  28.  16
    The False Prison Vol. One.David Pears - 1987 - Oxford, GB: Clarendon Press.
    This is the first of David Pears's acclaimed two‐volume work on the development of Wittgenstein's philosophy, covering the pre‐1929 writings. Part I of the first volume consists in a brief but eloquent overview of Wittgenstein's philosophy as a whole; Part II critically examines the earlier system, delineating and evaluating the central ideas (logical atomism, picture theory of meaning, and solipsism) with intellectual rigour and clarity. Pears succeeds in both offering an original realist interpretation of Wittgenstein's earlier thought, one that (...)
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  29.  90
    Children, Family and the State.David Archard - 2003 - Routledge.
    This title was first published in 2003. This book critically examines the moral and political status of the child by a consideration of three interrelated questions: What rights if any does the child have? What rights over and duties in respect of a child do parents have? What rights over and duties in respect of a child does the state have? David Archard adopts three areas for particular discussion on the practical implications of the general theoretical issues: education, child (...)
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  30.  75
    Kupperman, Joel J., Six Myths about the Good Life: Thinking about What Has Value: Indianapolis: Hackett Publishing Company, 2006, x + 158 pages.David B. Wong - 2011 - Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 10 (1):107-109.
  31. Self-Profile.David M. Armstrong - 1984 - In Radu J. Bogdan (ed.), D. M. Armstrong. Dordrecht: Reidel. pp. 3-51.
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  32.  81
    (1 other version)Vérifacteurs pour des vérités modales.David M. Armstrong - 2002 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 2 (4):491-507.
    Revenant sur la question des vérifacteurs, D. Armstrong demande ici d'abord comment concilier le maximalisme et la relation de nécessitation. L'A. examine quel sens métaphysique donner à la notion d'implication, et s'il y a un sens à admettre une contingence de re. Il traite à ce niveau des possibilités pures, examine le cas des aliens chez David Lewis, puis pose la question de savoir s'il est contingent de dire qu'il y a de l'être plutôt que rien. L'exposé le conduit (...)
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  33. Beyond Deconstruction?David Wood - 1987 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Lecture Series 21:175-194.
    There are many people who think that deconstruction has run its course, has had its day, and that it is now time to return to the important business of philosophy, or perhaps to serious ethical, social and political questions. Derrida's work, it is said, leads nowhere but a sterile philosophy of difference that in its de-politicized, de-historicized abstractness is a form of conservatism little better than the kinds of identity thinking to which it seems to be so radically opposed. In (...)
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  34.  15
    Toward a Philosophical Anthropology of Nonhuman Animals.Kalpana Seshadri - 2013 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 3 (2):197-206.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Toward a Philosophical Anthropology of Nonhuman AnimalsKalpana SeshadriIn medieval iconography, the ape holds a mirror in which the man who sins must recognize himself as simian dei [ape of God]. In Linnaeus’s optical machine, whoever refuses to recognize himself in the ape, becomes one: to paraphrase Pascal, qui fait l’homme, fait le singe [he who acts the man, acts the ape].—Giorgio Agamben, Man and Animal[It is] then, not just (...)
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  35.  5
    Identifying Primitive Individuals.David Wörner - 2024 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 11.
    According to a widespread contention, individuals are among the basic building blocks of the world. The contention, however, raises a perennial problem. If individuals are basic, they cannot be fully accounted for in terms of their empirically detectable qualities. But then, how can we detect, or know, or identify, individuals? Shamik Dasgupta has influentially argued that considerations along these lines, together with a lesson from the history of physics, should make us reject any picture on which individuals are basic constituents (...)
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  36.  26
    Boom, Gloom, Doom: Balance Sheets, Monetary Fragmentation, and the Politics of Financial Crisis in Argentina and Russia.David M. Woodruff - 2005 - Politics and Society 33 (1):3-45.
    In the 1990s, Russia and Argentina both tied their currencies to the dollar to combat inflation. They later devalued under pressure, but only after an extremely costly delay, and only after an explosive spread of monetary surrogates substituting for official currency. This article explains these puzzling developments using an institutional-sociological approach to money, which relates exchange-rate preferences to financial context rather than sectoral position, as is common. It proposes a “lock-in” mechanism explaining delayed devaluation in both cases, as well as (...)
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  37. Philosophy and Ideology in Hume's Political Thought.David Miller, David Hume & David Fate Norton - 1981 - Ethics 94 (3):534-536.
  38. Essays.David Hume - 1900 - G. Routledge Dutton.
     
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  39.  13
    Terry Eagleton.David Alderson - 2017 - Bloomsbury Publishing.
    Terry Eagleton is the foremost Marxist cultural theorist of our time. In the first book-length study of this highly influential figure, David Alderson provides detailed discussions of Eagleton's Marxism and his engagements with postmodernism, as well as an evaluation of his interventions in Irish Studies. Each of the chapters in this important intervention in current theoretical debates offers accessible contextualization of the key issues and provides detailed analyses of Eagleton's literary criticism. Alderson shows that the complex relations between nature, (...)
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  40.  50
    On Trying to Leave Truth Alone.David Zapero - 2021 - Philosophical Quarterly 72 (1):197-217.
    According to a certain conception of language, any sentence can, when used on an occasion, have any of indefinitely many truth-conditions. Such a conception of language gives us reason to think that the question of whether the notion of truth has a distinctive content cannot be settled by looking solely at the predication of truth. By focusing on the predicate ‘true’ when trying to determine the significance of the notion of truth, we may have been looking in the wrong place.
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  41.  38
    Forum: Chinese philosophy: The beginnings of morality.David B. Wong - 2014 - The Philosophers' Magazine 65:76-83.
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  42. Moral relativity and tolerance.David B. Wong - 2000 - In Christopher W. Gowans (ed.), Moral Disagreements: Classic and Contemporary Readings. New York: Routledge. pp. 141.
  43. Perspectives on human personhood and the self from the Zhuangzi.David B. Wong - 2021 - In Peter D. Hershock & Roger T. Ames (eds.), Human beings or human becomings?: a conversation with Confucianism on the concept of person. Albany: State University of New York Press.
     
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  44. Relativism and pluralism in moral epistemology.David Wong - 2018 - In Aaron Zimmerman, Karen Jones & Mark Timmons (eds.), Routledge Handbook on Moral Epistemology. New York: Routledge.
     
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  45.  43
    Response to Kupperman's review of "moral relativity".David B. Wong - 1986 - Philosophy East and West 36 (3):275-282.
  46.  25
    The Conception of Value.David B. Wong - 1993 - Philosophical Books 34 (1):45-47.
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  47.  31
    Continental philosophy: Back to the future.David Wood - 2012 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 50 (2):206-219.
    In its many interwoven traditions, continental philosophy has a distinctive focus on what escapes the concept—experience, change, agency, responsibility, the future, the Other. The challenges that face us in the future are many: reaffirming and renewing what has already been thought and needs repeating, responding to emergent questions. None could be more urgent than the question of the animal and the fate of the planet. Addressing each of these requires that we suspend our normal conceptual assurances and think anew.
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  48.  61
    Empowerment or repression? Opening up questions of identification and surveillance in Brazil through a case of ‘identity fraud’.David Murakami Wood & Rodrigo Firmino - 2009 - Identity in the Information Society 2 (3):297-317.
    A real but typical case of identity fraud is used to open up the complex web of identification systems in Brazil. It is argued that identification has two poles related to the nature of citizenship—repression and inclusion—and that reactions from citizens to new identification schemes can be attributed to how they view the purpose of the cards in these terms. In Brazil, a sense of inclusion and citizenship based on a fear of anonymity and exclusion predominates leading to widespread support (...)
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  49.  64
    Hume on identity and personal identity.David Wood - 1979 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 57 (1):69 – 73.
  50.  17
    Molecular genetic studies on the thiobacilli and the development of improved biomining bacteria.David Woods & Douglas Rawlings - 1985 - Bioessays 2 (1):8-10.
    Acidophilic autotrophic thiobacilli, which are able to oxidize metal and solubilize sulphide ores, are used industrially to leach metals from mineral ores. Genetic manipulation of the thiobacilli has the potential for the production of leaching bacteria with desirable characteristics for industry. In this review we examine the development of genetic systems in the thiobacilli and the present status of molecular genetics in the group.
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