Results for 'Donald Winslow Fiske'

968 found
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  1.  15
    Metatheory in Social Science: Pluralisms and Subjectivities.Donald Winslow Fiske & Richard A. Shweder - 1986 - University of Chicago Press.
    What is the nature of the social sciences? What kinds of knowledge can they—and should they—hope to create? Are objective viewpoints possible and can universal laws be discovered? Questions like these have been asked with increasing urgency in recent years, as some philosophers and researchers have perceived a "crisis" in the social sciences. Metatheory in Social Science offers many provocative arguments and analyses of basic conceptual frameworks for the study of human behavior. These are offered primarily by practicing researchers and (...)
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  2.  17
    The several kinds of generalization.Donald W. Fiske - 1978 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 1 (3):393-394.
  3.  15
    Scientists making a difference, editors not so much: Robert J. Sternberg, Susan T. Fiske, Donald J. Foss : Scientists making a difference: one hundred eminent behavioral and brain scientists talk about their most important contributions, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016, 536 pages, £19.99/$28.00pb. [REVIEW]Saray Ayala-López - 2018 - Metascience 27 (2):343-346.
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  4.  13
    Machiavellian Politics, Modern Management and the Rise of Donald Trump.Gladden J. Pappin - 2018 - In Angel Jaramillo Torres & Marc Benjamin Sable (eds.), Trump and Political Philosophy: Leadership, Statesmanship, and Tyranny. Springer Verlag. pp. 131-148.
    Machiavelli replaces the distinction between the few and the many with a division on the basis of the two humors: the desire not to be ruled and the desire to rule. In teaching princes how to rule those with the princely humor and satisfy those of the popular humor, Machiavelli introduces the notion of managing and management. Since Machiavelli’s time, the direction of princely acquisition toward market activities has increased the range of activities that require “management,” making management a universal (...)
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  5.  28
    Mapping Ethnic Stereotypes and Their Antecedents in Russia: The Stereotype Content Model.Dmitry Grigoryev, Susan T. Fiske & Anastasia Batkhina - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  6. Universals and existents.Donald C. Williams - 1986 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 64 (1):1 – 14.
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  7.  17
    Inquiries Into Truth and Interpretation: Philosophical Essays Volume 2.Donald Davidson - 2001 - Clarendon Press.
    Donald Davidson presents a new edition of the 1984 volume which set out his enormously influential philosophy of language. Inquiries into Truth and Interpretation has been a central point of reference and a focus of controversy in the subject ever since, and its influence has extended into linguistic theory, philosophy of mind, and epistemology. The central question which these essays address is what it is for words to mean what they do. This new edition features an additional essay, previously (...)
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  8.  23
    Die Psychologie der Verrücktheit.Donald W. Winnicott - 2018 - Psyche 72 (4):254-266.
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  9.  15
    The Logic of Conditionals: An Application of Probability to Deductive Logic.Donald Nute - 1981 - Noûs 15 (3):432-436.
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  10.  55
    Unjustified variation and selective retention in scientific discovery.Donald T. Campbell - 1974 - In Francisco Jose Ayala & Theodosius Dobzhansky (eds.), Studies in the Philosophy of Biology: Reduction and Related Problems : [papers Presented at a Conference on Problems of Reduction in Biology Held in Villa Serbe, Bellagio, Italy 9-16 September 1972. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 139--161.
  11.  42
    Rights, Justice, and the Bounds of Liberty.Donald Vandeveer - 1982 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 43 (1):120-127.
  12.  26
    Re-evaluation of norepinephrine function: a potential neuromodulatory role?Donald J. Woodward, Hylan C. Moises & Barry D. Waterhouse - 1979 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2 (3):440-440.
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  13.  20
    The facilitating effect of conflict measured with the probe stimulus technique.Donald R. Yelen - 1980 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 15 (6):385-386.
  14.  24
    A note of caution in neurohumor nomenclature.Donald H. York - 1979 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 2 (3):440-441.
  15.  62
    Something to offend everyone: Tipler's vision of immortality.Donald G. York - 1995 - Zygon 30 (3):477-478.
    Frank Tipler's The Physics of Immortality provides abundant cause for intellectual offense—including challenges to physics, to theology, and, seemingly, to common sense. Few philosophical conundrums remain unaddressed. Still, the book is stimulating and well presented.
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  16. Hume’s Reflections on the Identity and Simplicity of Mind.Donald C. Ainslie - 2001 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 62 (3):557-578.
    The article presents a new interpretation of Hume’s treatment of personal identity, and his later rejection of it in the “Appendix” to the Treatise. Hume’s project, on this interpretation, is to explain beliefs about persons that arise primarily within philosophical projects, not in everyday life. The belief in the identity and simplicity of the mind as a bundle of perceptions is an abstruse belief, not one held by the “vulgar” who rarely turn their minds on themselves so as to think (...)
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  17.  71
    Human and Animal Well‐Being.Donald W. Bruckner - 2021 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 102 (3):393-412.
    There is almost no theoretical discussion of non‐human animal well‐being in the philosophical literature on well‐being. To begin to rectify this, I develop a desire satisfaction theory of well‐being for animals. I contrast this theory with my desire theory of well‐being for humans, according to which a human benefits from satisfying desires for which she can offer reasons. I consider objections. The most important are (1) Eden Lin's claim that the correct theory of well‐being cannot vary across different welfare subjects (...)
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  18.  36
    Language mechanisms and reading disorder: A modular approach.Donald Shankweiler & Stephen Crain - 1986 - Cognition 24 (1-2):139-168.
  19.  49
    Moral Hazard in Pediatrics.Donald Brunnquell & Christopher M. Michaelson - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (7):29-38.
    “Moral hazard” is a term familiar in economics and business ethics that illuminates why rational parties sometimes choose decisions with bad moral outcomes without necessarily intending to behave selfishly or immorally. The term is not generally used in medical ethics. Decision makers such as parents and physicians generally do not use the concept or the word in evaluating ethical dilemmas. They may not even be aware of the precise nature of the moral hazard problem they are experiencing, beyond a general (...)
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  20.  15
    A history of cynicism from Diogenes to the 6th century A.D.Donald Reynolds Dudley - 1937 - New York,: Gordon Press.
  21. Adequate ideas and modest scepticism in Hume's metaphysics of space.Donald C. Ainslie - 2010 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 92 (1):39-67.
    In the Treatise of Human Nature , Hume argues that, because we have adequate ideas of the smallest parts of space, we can infer that space itself must conform to our representations of it. The paper examines two challenges to this argument based on Descartes's and Locke's treatments of adequate ideas, ideas that fully capture the objects they represent. The first challenge, posed by Arnauld in his Objections to the Meditations , asks how we can know that an idea is (...)
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  22. Hempelian and Kuhnian approaches in the philosophy of medicine: the Semmelweis case.Donald Gillies - 2005 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 36 (1):159-181.
    Semmelweis’s investigations of puerperal fever are some of the most interesting in the history of medicine. This paper considers Hempel’s analysis of the Semmelweis case. It argues that this analysis is inadequate and needs to be supplemented by some Kuhnian ideas. Kuhn’s notion of paradigm needs to be modified to apply to medicine in order to take account of the classification schemes involved in medical theorising. However with a suitable modification it provides an explanation of Semmelweis’s failure which is argued (...)
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  23.  64
    Symbols are Grounded not in Things, but in Scaffolded Relations and their Semiotic Constraints.Donald Favareau - 2015 - Biosemiotics 8 (2):235-255.
    As the accompanying articles in the Special Issue on Semiotic Scaffolding will attest, my colleagues in biosemiotics have done an exemplary job in showing us how to think about the critically generative role that semiotic scaffolding plays “vertically” – i.e., in evolutionary and developmental terms – by “allowing access to the upper floors” of biological complexity, cognition and evolution.In addition to such diachronic considerations of semiotic scaffolding, I wish to offer here a consideration of semiotic scaffolding’s synchronic power, as well (...)
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  24.  78
    Republicanism, Deliberative Democracy, and Equality of Access and Deliberation.Donald Bello Hutt - 2018 - Theoria 84 (1):83-111.
    The article elaborates an original intertwined reading of republican theory, deliberative democracy and political equality. It argues that republicans, deliberative democrats and egalitarian scholars have not paid sufficient attention to a number of features present in these bodies of scholarships that relate them in mutually beneficial ways. It shows that republicanism and deliberative democracy are related in mutually beneficial ways, it makes those relations explicit, and it deals with potential objections against them. Additionally, it elaborates an egalitarian principle underpinning the (...)
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  25.  99
    The Logic of Medical Diagnosis.Donald E. Stanley & Daniel G. Campos - 2013 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 56 (2):300-315.
  26.  49
    Strategies in Abduction: Generating and Selecting Diagnostic Hypotheses.Donald E. Stanley & Rune Nyrup - 2020 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 45 (2):159-178.
    We distinguish three aspects of medical diagnosis: generating new diagnostic hypotheses, selecting hypotheses for further pursuit, and evaluating their probability in light of the available evidence. Drawing on Peirce’s account of abduction, we argue that hypothesis generation is amenable to normative analysis: physicians need to make good decisions about when and how to generate new diagnostic hypothesis as well as when to stop. The intertwining relationship between the generation and selection of diagnostic hypotheses is illustrated through the analysis of a (...)
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  27.  70
    The conflict between social and biological evolution and the concept of original sin.Donald T. Campbell - 1975 - Zygon 10 (3):234-249.
  28.  36
    Belief systems today.Donald R. Kinder - 2006 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 18 (1-3):197-216.
    My purpose is to offer an assessment of the scientific legacy of Converse's “Belief Systems” by reviewing five productive lines of research stimulated by his authoritative analysis and unsettling conclusions. First I recount the later life history of Converse's notion of “nonattitudes,” and suggest that as important as nonattitudes are, we should be paying at least as much attention to their opposite: attitudes held with conviction. Second, I argue that the problem of insufficient information that resides at the center of (...)
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  29.  17
    Operational delineation of "what is learned" via the transposition experiment.Donald T. Campbell - 1954 - Psychological Review 61 (3):167-174.
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  30. The Happiness of the City and the Happiness of the Individual in Plato’s Republic.Donald Morrison - 2001 - Ancient Philosophy 21 (1):1-24.
  31.  54
    Prototype abstraction and classification of new instances as a function of number of instances defining the prototype.Homa Donald, Cross Joseph, Cornell Don, Goldman David & Shwartz Steven - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 101 (1):116.
  32.  88
    Business Ethics Assessment Criteria: Business v. Philosophy—Survey Results.Donald Morris - 2001 - Business Ethics Quarterly 11 (4):623-650.
    This paper presents the results of and conclusions from a survey of 2,830 college and university undergraduate business andphilosophy departments regarding their business ethics offerings. The impetus for this survey included seeking a better understandingof the problems for which business ethics courses are the solution. It was proposed that, if we knew what it is that professors teachingbusiness ethics believe they are teaching-not in terms of content or methods, but in terms of what criteria they are using to assessstudents' achievement (...)
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  33.  16
    Incentives: Motivation and the Economics of Information.Donald E. Campbell - 2006 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book, first published in 2006, examines the incentives at work in a wide range of institutions to see how and how well coordination is achieved by informing and motivating individual decision makers. The book examines the performance of agents hired to carry out specific tasks, from taxi drivers to CEOs. It investigates the performance of institutions, from voting schemes to kidney transplants, to see if they enhance general well being. The book examines a broad range of market transactions, from (...)
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  34.  27
    The Rockefeller Foundation and the development of scientific medicine in Great Britain.Donald Fisher - 1978 - Minerva 16 (1):20-41.
  35.  68
    Tokens, types, words, and terms.Donald C. Williams - 1936 - Journal of Philosophy 33 (26):701-707.
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  36. A Bayesian proof of a Humean principle.Donald Gillies - 1991 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 42 (2):255-256.
    Hume bases his argument against miracles on an informal principle. This paper gives a formal explication of this principle of Hume’s, and then shows that this explication can be rigorously proved in a Bayesian framework.
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  37.  11
    Sextus, Montaigne, Hume: Pyrrhonizers by Brian C. Ribeiro (review).Donald C. Ainslie - 2024 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 62 (3):517-518.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content: Reviewed by Sextus, Montaigne, Hume: Pyrrhonizers by Brian C. Ribeiro Donald C. Ainslie Brian C. Ribeiro. Sextus, Montaigne, Hume: Pyrrhonizers. Brill: Leiden, 2021. Pp. 165. Hardback, $154.00. Brian C. Ribeiro’s Sextus, Montaigne, Hume: Pyrrhonizers is a charming and quirky investigation of his three titular skeptics. It is perhaps best understood as a skeptical investigation of skepticism. By that I mean that, like a good Pyrrhonist, Ribeiro explains (...)
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  38.  22
    Frege's Conception of Numbers as Objects. [REVIEW]Donald Gillies - 1984 - Mind 93 (372):613-617.
  39. The social scientist as philosopher and King.Donald C. Williams - 1949 - Philosophical Review 58 (4):345-359.
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  40.  28
    The Moral Animus of David Hume.Donald T. Siebert - 1990 - University of Delaware Press.
    Rejecting a morality based on religious sanctions and appeals to a spiritual order of being, David Hume advocated a wholehearted immersion in worldliness. Contemtus mundi is replaced with amor mundi, an orientation that Hume saw as fostering virtue and socially beneficial relationships.
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  41.  40
    Hume, a Scottish Locke? Comments on Terence Penelhum’s Hume.Donald C. Ainslie - 2012 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 42 (S1):161-170.
    Where Terence Penelhum sees a deep continuity between John Locke's theory of ideas and David Hume's theory of perceptions, I argue that the two philosophers disagree over some fundamental issues in the philosophy of mind. While Locke treats ideas as imagistic objects that we recognize as such by a special kind of inner consciousness, Hume thinks that we do not normally recognize the imagistic content of our perceptions, and instead unselfconsciously take ourselves to sense a shared public world. My disagreement (...)
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  42.  55
    Hume Studies Referees, 2004–2005.Donald Ainslie, Julia Annas, Margaret Atherton, Neera Badhwar, Donald Lm Baxter, Martin Bell, Lorraine Besser-Jones, Richard Bett, Simon Blackburn & M. A. Box - 2005 - Hume Studies 31 (2):385-387.
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  43. Principlism.Donald C. Ainslie - 1982 - In Warren T. Reich (ed.), Encyclopedia of Bioethics. Macmillan.
     
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  44.  4
    Arms and the University: Military Presence and the Civic Education of Non-Military Students.Donald Alexander Downs & Ilia Murtazashvili - 2003 - Cambridge University Press.
    Alienation between the U.S. military and society has grown in recent decades. Such alienation is unhealthy, as it threatens both sufficient civilian control of the military and the long-standing ideal of the 'citizen soldier'. Nowhere is this issue more predominant than at many major universities, which began turning their backs on the military during the chaotic years of the Vietnam War. Arms and the University probes various dimensions of this alienation, as well as recent efforts to restore a closer relationship (...)
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  45.  5
    Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Man: Psychoanalysis and Masculinity.Donald Moss - 2012 - Routledge.
    Images and ideas associated with masculinity are forever in flux. In this book, Donald Moss addresses the never-ending effort of men—regardless of sexual orientation—to shape themselves in relation to the unstable notion of masculinity. Part 1 looks at the lifelong labor faced by boys and men of assessing themselves in relation to an always shifting, always receding, ideal of "masculinity." In Part 2, Moss considers a series of nested issues regarding homosexuality, homophobia and psychoanalysis. Part 3 focuses on the (...)
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  46. Text versus word: C. S. Lewis's view of inspiration and the inerrancy of Scripture.Donald T. Williams - 2016 - In Terry L. Miethe & Norman L. Geisler (eds.), I am put here for the defense of the Gospel: Dr. Norman L. Geisler: a festschrift in his honor. Eugene, Oregon: Pickwick Publications, an imprint of Wipf and Stock Publishers.
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  47. Whose woods are these.Donald H. Williams - 1972 - Thoreau Journal Quarterly 4:27-28.
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  48.  2
    Commercial Realities, Republican Principles’.Donald Winch - 2005 - In Winch Donald (ed.). pp. 293-310.
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  49. O valor da ilusão e os estados transicionais.Donald Woods Winnicott - forthcoming - Natureza Humana. Trad. Davi Litman Bogomoletz. Rio de Janeiro: Imago.
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  50.  50
    The geometry of justice: Three existence and uniqueness theorems.Donald Wittman - 1984 - Theory and Decision 16 (3):239-250.
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