Results for 'Eric Freitag'

964 found
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  1.  8
    The use of consistent and inconsistent evidence with a set of 2-4-6 problems.William A. Stock & Eric Freitag - 1991 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 29 (1):4-6.
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  2.  11
    Ontologie de l’agir et matérialisme pratique : un dialogue Marx / Freitag.Éric Pineault - 2017 - Les Cahiers Philosophiques de Strasbourg 41:117-137.
    Alors que se développe un nouveau matérialisme dans la théorie sociale contemporaine qui prétend dépasser les apories d’un dualisme cartésien dans lequel seraient prises les sciences sociales modernes par une ontologie relationnelle et processuelle d’actants posthumains, nous nous tournons vers l’ontologie de l’agir qu’élabore Marx dans ces écrits philosophiques pour souligner qu’un tel dépassement a déjà été effectué, mais sur des bases radicalement différentes. L’étude de l’ontologie de l’agir, inspiré des travaux interprétatifs de Fischbach, débouche sur un ensemble de thèses (...)
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  3.  24
    Politics and the Order of Love: An Augustinian Ethic of Democratic Citizenship.Eric Gregory - 2008 - University of Chicago Press.
    Augustine—for all of his influence on Western culture and politics—was hardly a liberal. Drawing from theology, feminist theory, and political philosophy, Eric Gregory offers here a liberal ethics of citizenship, one less susceptible to anti-liberal critics because it is informed by the Augustinian tradition. The result is a book that expands Augustinian imaginations for liberalism and liberal imaginations for Augustinianism. Gregory examines a broad range of Augustine’s texts and their reception in different disciplines and identifies two classical themes which (...)
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  4. Comparative Religion: A History.Eric J. Sharpe - 1989 - Philosophy East and West 39 (3):362-364.
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  5.  74
    Public Discourse on the Biology of Alcohol Addiction: Implications for Stigma, Self-Control, Essentialism, and Coercive Policies in Pregnancy.Eric Racine, Emily Bell, Natalie Zizzo & Courtney Green - 2015 - Neuroethics 8 (2):177-186.
    International media have reported cases of pregnant women who have had their children apprehended by social services, or who were incarcerated or forced into treatment programs based on a history of substance use or lack of adherence to addiction treatment programs. Public discourse on the biology of addiction has been criticized for generating stigma and a diminished perception of self-control in individuals with an addiction, potentially contributing to coercive approaches and criminalization of women who misuse substances during pregnancy. We explored (...)
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  6. (1 other version)Human Acts.Eric D’Arcy - 1963 - Ethics 75 (2):145-147.
     
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  7.  90
    Historicity and ecological restoration.Eric Desjardins - 2015 - Biology and Philosophy 30 (1):77-98.
    This paper analyzes the relevance and interconnection of two forms of historicity in ecological restoration, namely historical fidelity and path dependence. Historical fidelity is the practice of attempting to restore an ecological system to some sort of idealized past condition. Path dependence occurs when a system can evolve in alternative local equilibria, and that the order and timing of the events that follow from the initial state influence which equilibrium is reached. Using theoretical examples and case studies, the following analysis (...)
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  8.  69
    Creations of the Mind: Theories of Artifacts and their Representation.Eric Margolis & Stephen Laurence - 2009 - Analysis 69 (1):171-172.
    This collection of 16 original articles by prominent theorists from a variety of disciplines provides an excellent insight into current thinking about artifacts. The four sections address issues concerning the metaphysics of artifacts, the nature and cognitive development of artifact concepts, and the place of artifacts in evolutionary history. The most overtly philosophical contributions are in the first two sections. Metaphysical issues addressed include the ‘mind-dependence’ of artifacts and the bearing of this on their ‘real’ existence, and the distinction between (...)
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  9. Naturalistic Theories of Life after Death.Eric Steinhart - 2015 - Philosophy Compass 10 (2):145-158.
    After rejecting substance dualism, some naturalists embrace patternism. It states that persons are bodies and that bodies are material machines running abstract person programs. Following Aristotle, these person programs are souls. Patternists adopt four-dimensionalist theories of persistence: Bodies are 3D stages of 4D lives. Patternism permits at least six types of life after death. It permits quantum immortality, teleportation, salvation through advanced technology, promotion out of a simulated reality, computational monadology, and the revision theory of resurrection.
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  10. Mental causation in a physical world.Eric Marcus - 2005 - Philosophical Studies 122 (1):27-50.
    <b> </b>Abstract: It is generally accepted that the most serious threat to the possibility of mental causation is posed by the causal self-sufficiency of physical causal processes. I argue, however, that this feature of the world, which I articulate in principle I call Completeness, in fact poses no genuine threat to mental causation. Some find Completeness threatening to mental causation because they confuse it with a stronger principle, which I call Closure. Others do not simply conflate Completeness and Closure, but (...)
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  11. Heidegger and Dilthey: Language, History, and Hermeneutics.Eric S. Nelson - 2015 - In Megan Altman & Hans Pedersen, Horizons of Authenticity in Phenomenology, Existentialism, and Moral Psychology: Essays in Honor of Charles Guignon. Dordrecht: Imprint: Springer. pp. 109-128.
    The hermeneutical tradition represented by Yorck, Heidegger, and Gadamer has distrusted Dilthey as suffering from the two sins of modernism: scientific “positivism” and individualistic and aesthetic “romanticism.” On the one hand, Dilthey’s epistemology is deemed scientistic in accepting the priority of the empirical, the ontic, and consequently scientific inquiry into the physical, biological, and human worlds; on the other hand, his personalist ethos and Goethean humanism, and his pluralistic life- and worldview philosophy are considered excessively aesthetic, culturally liberal, relativistic, and (...)
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  12.  41
    Metaphysics of the Profane: The Political Theology of Walter Benjamin and Gershom Scholem.Eric Jacobson - 2003 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Drawing from Benjamin's and Scholem's ideas on messianism, language, and divine justice, this book traces the intellectual exchange through the early decades of the twentieth century—from Berlin, Bern, and Munich in the throws of war and revolution to Scholem's departure for Palestine in 1923. It begins with a close reading of Benjamin's early writings and a study of Scholem's theological politics, followed by an examination of Benjamin's proposals on language and the influence these ideas had on Scholem's scholarship on Jewish (...)
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  13.  19
    Modeling the evolution of interconnected processes: It is the song and the singers.Eric Bapteste & François Papale - 2021 - Bioessays 43 (1):2000077.
    Recently, Doolittle and Inkpen formulated a thought provoking theory, asserting that evolution by natural selection was responsible for the sideways evolution of two radically different kinds of selective units (also called Domains). The former entities, termed singers, correspond to the usual objects studied by evolutionary biologists (gene, genomes, individuals, species, etc.), whereas the later, termed songs, correspond to re‐produced biological and ecosystemic functions, processes, information, and memes. Singers perform songs through selected patterns of interactions, meaning that a wealth of critical (...)
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  14. Explaining Brute Facts.Eric Barnes - 1994 - PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1994:61-68.
    I aim to show that one way of testing the mettle of a theory of scientific explanation is to inquire what that theory entails about the status of brute facts. Here I consider the nature of brute facts, and survey several contemporary accounts of explanation vis a vis this subject. One problem with these accounts is that they seem to entail that brute facts represent a gap in scientific understanding. I argue that brute facts are non-mysterious and indeed are even (...)
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  15. Why P rather than q? The curiosities of fact and foil.Eric Barnes - 1994 - Philosophical Studies 73 (1):35 - 53.
    In this paper I develop a theory of contrastive why questions that establishes under what conditions it is sensible to ask "why p rather than q?". p and q must be outcomes of a single type of causal process.
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  16. Virtue and Violence in Theravada and Sri Lankan Buddhism.Eric S. Nelson - 2009 - In Chanju Mun and Ronald S. Green, Buddhist Roles in Peacemaking. Blue Pine Books. pp. 199-233.
  17. On the need for integrative phylogenomics, and some steps toward its creation.Eric Bapteste & Richard M. Burian - 2010 - Biology and Philosophy 25 (4):711-736.
    Recently improved understanding of evolutionary processes suggests that tree-based phylogenetic analyses of evolutionary change cannot adequately explain the divergent evolutionary histories of a great many genes and gene complexes. In particular, genetic diversity in the genomes of prokaryotes, phages, and plasmids cannot be fit into classic tree-like models of evolution. These findings entail the need for fundamental reform of our understanding of molecular evolution and the need to devise alternative apparatus for integrated analysis of these genomes. We advocate the development (...)
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  18. The Statistical Riddle of Induction.Eric Johannesson - 2023 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 101 (2):313-326.
    With his new riddle of induction, Goodman raised a problem for enumerative induction which many have taken to show that only some ‘natural’ properties can be used for making inductive inferences. Arguably, however, (i) enumerative induction is not a method that scientists use for making inductive inferences in the first place. Moreover, it seems at first sight that (ii) Goodman’s problem does not affect the method that scientists actually use for making such inferences—namely, classical statistics. Taken together, this would indicate (...)
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  19. Intentionalism and the imaginability of the inverted spectrum.Eric Marcus - 2006 - Philosophical Quarterly 56 (224):321-339.
    There has been much written in recent years about whether a pair of subjects could have visual experiences that represented the colors of objects in their environment in precisely the same way, despite differing significantly in what it was like to undergo them, differing that is, in their qualitative character. The possibility of spectrum inversion has been so much debated1 in large part because of the threat that it would pose to the more general doctrine of Intentionalism, according to which (...)
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  20.  59
    Late Feyerabend on materialism, mysticism, and religion.Eric C. Martin - 2016 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 57:129-136.
  21.  75
    Poor writing, not specialized concepts, drives processing difficulty in legal language.Eric Martínez, Francis Mollica & Edward Gibson - 2022 - Cognition 224 (C):105070.
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  22.  66
    The Nazi Comparison in the Debate over Restoration: Nativism and Domination.Eric Katz - 2014 - Environmental Values 23 (4):377-398.
    In this essay, I discuss the comparison between the restoration of natural environments and the Nazi project to develop a pure homeland for native species and authentic Aryan humans. There exists a metaphorical comparison between Nazi eliminationist policies regarding specific human populations and the eradication of invasive and non-native species in ecological restorations. Moreover, there are substantive environmental policies of the Nazi regime that appear to be similar to the goals and methodology of contemporary restoration practice. But there is also (...)
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  23. ĐẠO ĐỨC, NGHIỆP VÀ SỰ PHÁT TRIỂN BỀN VỮNG.Eric S. Nelson - 2014 - In N. Từ, PHẬT GIÁO VỀ PHÁT TRIỂN BỀN VỮNG VÀ THAY ĐỔI XÃ HỘI. pp. 19-31.
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  24. The Problem of Ecological Restoration.Eric Katz - 1996 - Environmental Ethics 18 (2):222-224.
  25.  40
    The uniform content of partial and linear orders.Eric P. Astor, Damir D. Dzhafarov, Reed Solomon & Jacob Suggs - 2017 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 168 (6):1153-1171.
  26.  35
    Biogerontology, “Anti‐aging Medicine,” and the Challenges of Human Enhancement.Eric T. Juengst, Robert H. Binstock, Maxwell Mehlman, Stephen G. Post & Peter Whitehouse - 2003 - Hastings Center Report 33 (4):21-30.
    Slowing the aging process would be one of the most dramatic and momentous ways of enhancing human beings. It is also one that mainstream science is on the brink of pursuing. The state of the science, together with its possible impact, make it an important example for how to think about research into all enhancement technologies.
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  27. Thoughts on Maher's predictivism.Eric Barnes - 1996 - Philosophy of Science 63 (3):401-410.
    Predictivism asserts that where evidence E confirms theory T, E provides stronger support for T when E is predicted on the basis of T and then confirmed than when E is known before T's construction and 'used', in some sense, in the construction of T. Among the most interesting attempts to argue that predictivism is a true thesis (under certain conditions) is that of Patrick Maher (1988, 1990, 1993). The purpose of this paper is to investigate the nature of predictivism (...)
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  28.  44
    Plato's Laws: Force and Truth in Politics.Gregory Recco & Eric Sanday (eds.) - 2012 - Indiana University Press.
    Readers of Plato have often neglected the Laws because of its length and density. In this set of interpretive essays, notable scholars of the Laws from the fields of classics, history, philosophy, and political science offer a collective close reading of the dialogue "book by book" and reflect on the work as a whole. In their introduction, editors Gregory Recco and Eric Sanday explore the connections among the essays and the dramatic and productive exchanges between the contributors. This volume (...)
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  29.  8
    Foi et philosophie politique: la correspondance Strauss-Voegelin, 1934-1964.Leo Strauss & Eric Voegelin - 2004 - Librairie Philosophique J Vrin.
    Les époques d'instabilité et de désordre politique coïncident généralement avec un développement de la science politique. En atteste une fois de plus la Correspondance qu'entretinrent ces " deux géants de la science politique ", Leo Strauss et Eric Voegelin, tous deux contraints par la révolution national-socialiste à s'exiler aux Etats-Unis. Dans la cinquantaine de lettres échangées, dont le cœur se constitue au cours des années 1942-1953, le lecteur assiste à la gestation des deux grands théoriciens politiques de ce début (...)
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  30.  38
    Six Trees.Eric Katz - 2023 - Environmental Ethics 45 (2):175-197.
    Consider the existence of six identical trees of the same species across a variety of environments. The first tree is in a wild and isolated landscape. The second is in a wilderness park. The third is in a heavily forested “tree plantation” owned by International Paper. The fourth is in the Ramble in Central Park. The fifth is in a suburban yard. The sixth is inside the six-story atrium of a Manhattan skyscraper. This paper begins with the intuition that the (...)
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  31. Schleiermacher, hermenevtika in neizrekljivo.Eric S. Nelson - 2001 - Phainomena:49-62.
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  32.  96
    The roots of predictivism.Eric Christian Barnes - 2014 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 45:46-53.
    In The Paradox of Predictivism I tried to demonstrate that there is an intimate relationship between predictivism and epistemic pluralism. Here I respond to various published criticisms of some of the key points from Paradox from David Harker, Jarret Leplin, and Clark Glymour. Foci include my account of predictive novelty, the claim that predictivism has two roots, the prediction per se and predictive success, and my account of why Mendeleev’s predictions carried special weight in confirming the Periodic Law of the (...)
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  33. Life and World.Eric S. Nelson - 2014 - In Jeff Malpas & Hans-Helmuth Gander, The Routledge Companion to Hermeneutics. New York: Routledge.
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  34.  41
    Commentary: What "Community Review" Can and Cannot Do.Eric T. Juengst - 2000 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 28 (1):52-54.
  35. The A Priori‐Operator and the Nesting Problem.Eric Johannesson & Sara Packalén - 2016 - Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 5 (3):169-176.
    Many expressions intuitively have different epistemic and modal profiles. For example, co-referring proper names are substitutable salva veritate in modal contexts but not in belief-contexts. Two-dimensional semantics, according to which terms have both a so-called primary and a secondary intension, is a framework that promises to accommodate and explain these diverging intuitions. The framework can be applied to indexicals, proper names or predicates. Graeme Forbes argues that the two-dimensional semantics of David Chalmers fails to account for so-called nested contexts. These (...)
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  36. Holism and Entrenchment in Climate Model Validation.Johannes Lenhard & Eric Winsberg - 2011 - In M. Carrier & A. Nordmann, Science in the Context of Application. Springer. pp. 115--130.
  37.  7
    "But can't you see they are lying": student moral positions and ethical practices in the wake of technological change.Lars-Eric Nilsson - 2008 - Göteborg: Distribution, Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis.
  38.  44
    Anthropocentric Indirect Arguments: Return of the Plastic-tree Zombies.Eric Katz - 2014 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 17 (3):264-266.
    Forget Aldo Leopold. Or Holmes Rolston, III, or Baird Callicott. Forget Arne Naess. I vote for Martin H. Krieger as the most influential environmental philosopher of all time. It has been over 40 y...
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  39.  13
    Updating the Outcome: Gay Athletes, Straight Teams, and Coming Out in Educationally Based Sport Teams.Eric Anderson - 2011 - Gender and Society 25 (2):250-268.
    In this article I report findings from interviews with 26 openly gay male athletes who came out between 2008 and 2010. I compare their experiences to those of 26 gay male athletes who came out between 2000 and 2002. The athletes in the 2010 cohort have had better experiences after coming out than those in the earlier cohort, experiencing less heterosexism and maintaining better support among their teammates. I place these results in the context of inclusive masculinity theory, suggesting that (...)
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  40.  78
    FACE Facts: Why Human Genetics Will Always Provoke Bioethics.Eric T. Juengst - 2004 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (2):267-275.
    Over the last decade, more U.S. taxpayers money has been spent trying to anticipate and address the bioethical issues raised by advances in human genetics than any other set of issues in the field. Does this make sense? Not everyone in bioethics thinks so. Some think there are more important topics, like issues of health care justice, that will be neglected if the field continues to follow the money to dwell on the moral challenges of a relatively small community of (...)
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  41.  72
    Brief Notes on the Meaning of a Genomic Control System for Animal Embryogenesis.Eric Davidson - 2014 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 57 (1):78-86.
    In 2012, we published a computational automaton, based on the most comprehensive gene regulatory network (GRN) model yet available (Peter, Faure, and Davidson 2012). This model had been synthesized over the previous years from extensive experimental studies on specification mechanisms in the endomesodermal territories of the sea urchin embryo. The GRN model explicitly indicated the dynamically changing interactions occurring at the cis-regulatory control sequences of almost 50 genes, mostly encoding transcription factors (the proteins that specifically recognize cis-regulatory DNA sequence and (...)
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  42.  13
    Paul Natorp: de la Psychologie générale à la Systématique philosophique.Eric Dufour - 2010 - Vrin.
    Cette étude met en évidence la spécificité et l'évolution de la philosophie de Natorp (1854-1924). Sa psychologie critique est d'abord une méthodologie s'interrogeant sur les conditions d'une connaissance scientifique des processus cognitifs. Puis Natorp en vient à considérer dans ses derniers textes que la question fondamentale est celle de l'être.
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  43.  13
    Qu'est-ce que la musique?Eric Dufour - 2005 - Librairie Philosophique J Vrin.
    Une interrogation sur la musique suivie de textes D'E.-T. Hoffman et de L. Wittgenstein.
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  44.  11
    Inwardness and Morality.Eric Wolf Fried (ed.) - 2005 - Rodopi.
    This book reminds us that "in inwardness I am in myself. " It defines our experience in terms of subjectivity, private self-awareness, and complex relationships between interiority and outwardness. The book shows that our inwardness need not confine us to narcissistic self-absorption, but may expand our capacity for richer, more sympathetic relations with others.
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  45.  22
    The Eclipse of Xerxes in Herodotus 7.37: Lux a Non Obscurando.Eric Glover - 2014 - Classical Quarterly 64 (2):471-492.
    Reports of lunar and solar eclipses are of interest to students of both history and the history of science. Used with care, they can anchor significant historical events in time. Greek literature, like that of other civilizations, has its fair share of such reports. Often they motivate the actions of characters or expose aspects of belief. Sometimes they shed light on the assumptions of the writer. There are three places in theHistoriesof Herodotus where the author mentions darkenings of the sky (...)
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  46. Preference Utilitarianism, Prior Existence and Moral Replaceability.Eric Mack - 1988 - Reason Papers 13:120-131.
     
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  47. Begründbarkeit und Unergründlichkeit bei Wilhelm Dilthey.Eric S. Nelson - 2002 - Existentia 12 (1-2):1-10.
     
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  48.  41
    Teaching and Learning Guide for: Naturalistic Theories of Life after Death.Eric Steinhart - 2015 - Philosophy Compass 10 (2):159-160.
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  49.  24
    La philosophie de Pietro Pomponazzi ; Pic de la Mirandole et la critique de l'astrologie.Eric Weil - 1986 - Vrin.
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  50.  13
    Schopenhauer: Prize Essay on the Freedom of the Will.Günter Zöller & Eric F. J. Payne (eds.) - 1999 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Written in 1839 and chosen as the winning entry in a competition held by the Royal Norwegian Society of Sciences, Schopenhauer's Prize Essay on the Freedom of the Will marked the beginning of its author's public recognition and is widely regarded as one of the most brilliant and elegant treatments of free will and determinism. Schopenhauer distinguishes the freedom of acting from the freedom of willing, affirming the former while denying the latter. He portrays human action as thoroughly determined but (...)
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