Results for 'Forsyth Neil'

971 found
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  1.  37
    ‘Comfort Me With Apples’: Ambivalent Allusion in Paradise Lost.Neil Forsyth - 2012 - The European Legacy 17 (2):185 - 196.
    Paradise Lost can be read on various levels, some of which challenge or even contradict others. The main, explicit narrative from Genesis chapters 2 and 3 is shadowed by many other related stories. Some of these buried tales question or subvert the values made explicit in the dominant narrative. An attentive reader needs to be alert to the ways in which such references introduce teasing complexities. The approach of Satan to Eve in the ninth book of Paradise Lost is loaded (...)
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  2.  31
    ‘Lycidas’: A Wolf in Saint's Clothing.Neil Forsyth - 2009 - Critical Inquiry 35 (3):684-702.
    The article takes seriously the etymology of the hero's name in Milton's Lycidas, suggesting that the wolfish presence, also denounced in the course of the poem, complicates the praise for Milton's dead friend.
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  3.  33
    The Tell-Tale Hand: Gothic Narratives and the Brain.Neil Forsyth - 2016 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 6 (1):96-113.
    The opening story in Winesburg, Ohio by Sherwood Anderson is called simply “Hands.” It is about a teacher’s remarkable hands that sometimes seem to move independently of his will. This essay explores some of the relevant contexts and potential links, beginning with other representations of teachers’ hands, such as Caravaggio’s St. Matthew and the Angel, early efforts to establish a sign-language for the deaf, and including the Montessori method of teaching children to read and write by tracing the shape of (...)
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  4.  7
    Milton and Catholicism. Edited by Ronald Corthell & Thomas N. Corns. Pp. viii, 220, Notre Dame, Indiana, University of Notre Dame Press, 2017, £35.43/$50.00. [REVIEW]Neil Forsyth - 2018 - Heythrop Journal 59 (1):114-115.
    Reviws a book about Milton and catholiciam.
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  5.  24
    Divine Evil? The Moral Character of the God of Abraham. Edited by Michael Bergmann, Michael J. Murray, Michael C. Rea. Pp. xii, 337, Oxford University Press, PB 2013 [HB 2011], $43.59. [REVIEW]Neil Forsyth - 2017 - Heythrop Journal 58 (2):279-282.
    this artidle reviews a book about biblical influence.
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  6.  28
    The Quest For The Historical Satan. By Miguel A. De La Torre & Albert Hernandez. Pp. xii, 248, Minneapolis, Fortress Press, 2011, $20.00. [REVIEW]Neil Forsyth - 2015 - Heythrop Journal 56 (1):146-148.
    The book reviewed is interesting but not top quality, not properly professional.
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  7.  23
    John Milton: a Biography. By Neil Forsyth.Peter Milward - 2010 - Heythrop Journal 51 (1):144-145.
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  8.  61
    Two modes of learning for interactive tasks.Neil A. Hayes & Donald E. Broadbent - 1988 - Cognition 28 (3):249-276.
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  9. Aristotle’s Syllogistic and Core Logic.Neil Tennant - 2014 - History and Philosophy of Logic 35 (2):120-147.
    I use the Corcoran–Smiley interpretation of Aristotle's syllogistic as my starting point for an examination of the syllogistic from the vantage point of modern proof theory. I aim to show that fresh logical insights are afforded by a proof-theoretically more systematic account of all four figures. First I regiment the syllogisms in the Gentzen–Prawitz system of natural deduction, using the universal and existential quantifiers of standard first-order logic, and the usual formalizations of Aristotle's sentence-forms. I explain how the syllogistic is (...)
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  10.  54
    Mental Acts.Neil Cooper - 1959 - Philosophical Quarterly 9 (36):278-279.
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  11. Open-mindedness and the duty to gather evidence.Neil Levy - 2006 - Public Affairs Quarterly 20 (1):55–66.
    Most people believe that we have a duty to gather evidence on both sides of central moral and political controversies, in order to fulfil our epistemic responsibilities and come to hold justified cognitive attitudes on these matters. I argue, on the contrary, that to the extent to which these controversies require special expertise, we have no such duty. We are far more likely to worsen than to improve our epistemic situation by becoming better informed on these questions. I suggest we (...)
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  12.  49
    The psychophysics of subliminal perception.Neil A. Macmillan - 1986 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9 (1):38-39.
  13.  83
    Theory of Games as a Tool for the Moral Philosopher.Neil Cooper - 1957 - Philosophical Quarterly 7 (29):383.
    It is a common complaint against moral philosophers that their abstract theorising bears little relation to the practical problems of everyday life. Professor Braithwaite believes that this criticism need not be inevitable. With the help of the Theory of Games he shows how arbitration is possible between two neighbours, a jazz trumpeter and a classical pianist, whose performances are a source of mutual discord. The solution of the problem in the lecture is geometrical, and is based on the formal analogy (...)
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  14.  30
    Harmful Choices, the Case of C, and Decision-Making Competence.Neil Pickering, GIles Newton-Howes & Greg Young - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (10):38-50.
    In this paper, we make the case that a person who is considering or has already made a decision that appears seriously harmful to that person should in some cases be judged incapable of making that...
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  15.  48
    Core Logic.Neil Tennant - 2017 - Oxford, England: Oxford University Press.
    Neil Tennant presents an original logical system with unusual philosophical, proof-theoretic, metalogical, computational, and revision-theoretic virtues. Core Logic is the first system that ensures both relevance and adequacy for the formalization of all mathematical and scientific reasoning.
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  16. Explaining the Geometry of Desert.Neil Feit & Stephen Kershnar - 2004 - Public Affairs Quarterly 18 (4):273-298.
    In the past decade, three philosophers in particular have recently explored the relation between desert and intrinsic value. Fred Feldman argues that consequentialism need not give much weight – or indeed any weight at all – to the happiness of persons who undeservedly experience pleasure. He defends the claim that the intrinsic value of a state of affairs is determined by the “fit” between the amount of well-being that a person receives and the amount of well-being that the person deserves. (...)
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  17.  29
    Risk-related standards of competence are a nonsense.Neil John Pickering, Giles Newton-Howes & Simon Walker - 2022 - Journal of Medical Ethics 48 (11):893-898.
    If a person is competent to consent to a treatment, is that person necessarily competent to refuse the very same treatment? Risk relativists answer no to this question. If the refusal of a treatment is risky, we may demand a higher level of decision-making capacity to choose this option. The position is known as asymmetry. Risk relativity rests on the possibility of setting variable levels of competence by reference to variable levels of risk. In an excellent 2016 article inJournal of (...)
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  18.  85
    Chomsky: Ideas and Ideals.Neil Smith - 2004 - Cambridge University Press.
    Noam Chomsky is one of the leading intellectual figures of modern times. He has had a major influence on linguistics, psychology and philosophy, and a significant effect on many other disciplines, from anthropology to mathematics, education to literary criticism. In this rigorous yet accessible account of Chomsky's work and influence, Neil Smith analyses Chomsky's key contributions to the study of language and the study of mind. He gives a detailed exposition of Chomsky's linguistic theorizing, discusses the psychological and philosophical (...)
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  19. Comparative Harm, Creation and Death.Neil Feit - 2016 - Utilitas 28 (2):136-163.
    Given that a person's death is bad for her,whenis it bad? I defendsubsequentism, the view that things that are bad in the relevant way are bad after they occur. Some have objected to this view on the grounds that it requires us to compare the amount of well-being the victim would have enjoyed, had she not died, with the amount she receives while dead; however, we cannot assign any level of well-being, not even zero, to a dead person. In the (...)
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  20.  21
    Deprivation and maximization: Mixed feelings about Tom Collins et al.Neil Rowland - 1981 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4 (3):402-402.
  21.  35
    A model-theoretic characterization of the weak pigeonhole principle.Neil Thapen - 2002 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 118 (1-2):175-195.
    We bring together some facts about the weak pigeonhole principle from bounded arithmetic, complexity theory, cryptography and abstract model theory. We characterize the models of arithmetic in which WPHP fails as those which are determined by an initial segment and prove a conditional separation result in bounded arithmetic, that PV + lies strictly between PV and S21 in strength, assuming that the cryptosystem RSA is secure.
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  22. Metaethics and the Nature of Properties.Neil Sinclair - 2024 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 98 (1):133-152.
    This paper explores connections between theories of morality and theories of properties. It argues that (1) moral realism is in tension with predicate, class and mereological nominalism; (2) moral non-naturalism is incompatible with standard versions of resemblance nominalism, immanent realism and trope theory; and (3) the standard semantic arguments for property realism do not support moral realism. I also raise doubts about trope-theoretic explanations of moral supervenience and argue against one version of the principle that we should accept theories that (...)
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  23. Harming by Failing to Benefit.Neil Feit - 2017 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 22 (4):809-823.
    In this paper, I consider the problem of omission for the counterfactual comparative account of harm. A given event harms a person, on this account, when it makes her worse off than she would have been if it had not occurred. The problem arises because cases in which one person merely fails to benefit another intuitively seem harmless. The account, however, seems to imply that when one person fails to benefit another, the first thereby harms the second, since the second (...)
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  24. Heidegger's argument for fascism.Neil Sinhababu - 2025 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 110 (2):643-660.
    Heidegger's ontological theories, his observations about liberalism and fascism, and his evaluation of Being are three premises of an argument for fascism. The ontological premise is that integrated wholes and instruments or objects of will are ontologically superior, as Being and Time suggests in discussing Being‐a‐whole and using tools. The social premise is that fascist societies are wholes integrated by dictatorial will, while liberal societies are looser aggregates of free individuals, as Heidegger describes in his 1930s seminars. The evaluative premise, (...)
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  25.  27
    The First Recension of Robert Grosseteste's De Libero Arbitrio.Neil Lewis - 1991 - Mediaeval Studies 53 (1):1-88.
  26. Belief About the Self: A Defense of the Property Theory of Content.Neil Feit - 2008 - New York, US: Oxford University Press.
    This book offers a defense of the Property Theory of Content, according to which properties rather than propositions are the contents of our beliefs, desires, and other cognitive attitudes. New arguments for the theory are offered, objections are answered, and applications to problems in the philosophy of mind are discussed.
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  27.  33
    The strategy of biological research programmes: Reassessing the ‘dark age’ of biochemistry, 1910–1930.Neil Morgan - 1990 - Annals of Science 47 (2):139-150.
    The historiography of the ‘dark age’ of biochemistry between 1910–1930 is examined. The biochemistry of the period is located within a larger contemporary debate on the interrelationship between structure and function on a submicroscopic level. It is suggested that biocolloid science was an understandable part of the historical development of biochemistry, representing a conceptual bridge between the cell biology of the late nineteenth century, and the era of structural macromolecular studies of proteins that began after 1930.
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  28.  35
    Your Brain on Comics: A Cognitive Model of Visual Narrative Comprehension.Neil Cohn - 2020 - Topics in Cognitive Science 12 (1):352-386.
    Visual narratives like comics involve a range of complex cognitive operations in order to be understood. The Parallel Interfacing Narrative‐Semantics (PINS) Model integrates an emerging literature showing that comprehension of wordless image sequences balances two representational levels of semantic and narrative structure. The neurocognitive mechanisms that guide these processes are argued to overlap with other domains, such as language and music.
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  29.  35
    Memory for serial order: A network model of the phonological loop and its timing.Neil Burgess & Graham J. Hitch - 1999 - Psychological Review 106 (3):551-581.
  30.  47
    How Harms Can Be Better than Benefits: Reply to Carlson, Johansson, and Risberg.Neil Feit - 2022 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 100 (3):628-633.
    I respond here to an argument given recently in this journal by Erik Carlson, Jens Johansson, and Olle Risberg. The authors object to the counterfactual comparative account of harm. They argue that, on this account, an action that would harm the agent might leave her better off than would some alternative action that would benefit her, and they object to this implication. By appealing to group or plural harm, I argue that their objection fails.
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  31.  29
    What Difference Does Consciousness Make?Neil Levy - 2009 - Monash Bioethics Review 28 (2):13-25.
    The question whether and when it is morally appropriate to withdraw life-support from patients diagnosed as being in the persistent vegetative state is one of the most controversial in bioethics. Recent work on the neuroscience of consciousness seems to promise fundamentally to alter the debate, by demonstrating that some entirely unresponsive patients are in fact conscious. In this paper, I argue that though this work is extremely important scientifically, it ought to alter the debate over the moral status of the (...)
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  32.  47
    Historical and Historiographical Issues in the Study of Pre-Modern Japanese Religions.Neil McMullin - 1989 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 16 (1):3-40.
  33.  42
    Structures interpretable in models of bounded arithmetic.Neil Thapen - 2005 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 136 (3):247-266.
    We look for a converse to a result from [N. Thapen, A model-theoretic characterization of the weak pigeonhole principle, Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 118 175–195] that if the weak pigeonhole principle fails in a model K of bounded arithmetic, then there is an end-extension of K interpretable inside K. We show that if a model J of an induction-free theory of arithmetic is interpretable inside K, then either J is isomorphic to an initial segment of K , or (...)
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  34.  73
    Why Regret Language Death?Neil Levy - 2001 - Public Affairs Quarterly 15 (4).
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  35.  33
    Tacit Knowledge.Neil Gascoigne & Tim Thornton - 2012 - Routledge.
    Tacit knowledge is the form of implicit knowledge that we rely on for learning. It is invoked in a wide range of intellectual inquiries, from traditional academic subjects to more pragmatically orientated investigations into the nature and transmission of skills and expertise. Notwithstanding its apparent pervasiveness, the notion of tacit knowledge is a complex and puzzling one. What is its status as knowledge? What is its relation to explicit knowledge? What does it mean to say that knowledge is tacit? Can (...)
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  36. [no title].Neil Coffee - unknown
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  37.  39
    Ethics and Rules: A Political Reading of Foucault's Aesthetics of Existence.Neil Levy - 1998 - Philosophy Today 42 (1):79-84.
  38.  13
    Rorty, Liberal Democracy, and Religious Certainty.Neil Gascoigne - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    This book asks whether there any limits to the sorts of religious considerations that can be raised in public debates, and if there are, by whom they are to be identified. Its starting point is the work of Richard Rorty, whose pragmatic pluralism leads him to argue for a politically motivated anticlericalism rather than an epistemologically driven atheism. Rather than defend Rorty’s position directly, Gascoigne argues for an epistemological stance he calls ‘Pragmatist Fideism’. The starting point for this exercise in (...)
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  39.  43
    Which ‘Intensional Paradoxes’ are Paradoxes?Neil Tennant - 2024 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 53 (4):933-957.
    We begin with a brief explanation of our proof-theoretic criterion of paradoxicality—its motivation, its methods, and its results so far. It is a proof-theoretic account of paradoxicality that can be given in addition to, or alongside, the more familiar semantic account of Kripke. It is a question for further research whether the two accounts agree in general on what is to count as a paradox. It is also a question for further research whether and, if so, how the so-called Ekman (...)
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  40.  48
    Harm and the concept of medical disorder.Neil Feit - 2017 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 38 (5):367-385.
    According to Jerome Wakefield’s harmful dysfunction analysis of medical disorder, the inability of some internal part or mechanism to perform its natural function is necessary, but not sufficient, for disorder. HDA also requires that the part dysfunction be harmful to the individual. I consider several problems for HDA’s harm criterion in this article. Other accounts on which harm is necessary for disorder will suffer from all or almost all of these problems. Comparative accounts of harm imply that one is harmed (...)
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  41.  25
    Gray's Neuropsychology of anxiety: An enquiry into the functions of septohippocampal theories.Neil McNaughton - 1982 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 5 (3):492-493.
  42.  47
    The Questionable Logic of" Miracles" in the Dynamics of Knowledge Growth in the Social Sciences.Neil J. Smelser - 2005 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 72 (1):1-26.
  43.  26
    Collected Papers on Epistemology, Philosophy of Science and History of Philosophy, Vols. I and II.Neil Tennant - 1979 - Philosophical Quarterly 29 (116):270.
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  44.  35
    Medical disorder, harm, and damage.Neil Feit - 2020 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 41 (1):39-52.
    Jerome Wakefield’s harmful dysfunction analysis of medical disorder is an influential hybrid of naturalist and normative theories. In order to conclude that a condition is a disorder, according to the HDA, one must determine both that it results from a failure of a physical or psychological mechanism to perform its natural function and that it is harmful. In a recent issue of this journal, I argued that the HDA entails implausible judgments about which disorders there are and how they are (...)
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  45.  14
    Bad Things: The Nature and Normative Role of Harm.Neil Feit - 2023 - New York, US: OUP Usa.
    This book focuses on the nature and importance of harm by providing a sustained defense of the counterfactual comparative account, in particular by extending the account to allow for a certain kind of plural or collective harm. According to the counterfactual comparative account, an event harms a person provided that she would have been better off had it not occurred. On the account defended in this book, there are cases in which some events harm a given individual even though none (...)
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  46.  23
    Levels of polymorphism on the sex‐limited chromosome: a clue to Y from W?Neil Gemmell - 2003 - Bioessays 25 (12):1249-1249.
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  47.  27
    The Effect of Education on Physicians’ Knowledge of a Laboratory Test: The Case of Maternal Serum Alpha-Fetoprotein Screening.Neil A. Holtzman, Ruth R. Faden, Claire O. Leonard, Gary A. Chase & S. R. Ulrich - 1991 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 2 (4):243-247.
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  48.  61
    On Possible Worlds with Modal Parts: A Semantics for Modal Interaction.Neil Kennedy - 2014 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 43 (6):1129-1152.
    This paper is predicated on the idea that some modal operators are better understood as quantificational expressions over worlds that determine not only first-order facts but modal facts also. In what follows, we will present a framework in which these two types of facts are brought closer together. Structural features will be located in the worlds themselves. This result will be achieved by decomposing worlds into parts, where some of these parts will have “modal import” in the sense that they (...)
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  49.  74
    It Is Easy to See.Neil Ormerod - 1999 - Philosophy and Theology 11 (2):257-264.
    This article analyzes a single paragraph in John Milbank’s The Word Made Strange that criticizes Bernard Lonergan’s understanding of Thomas Aquinas’ theology of the trinitarian processions. It demonstrates that the criticisms are unsubstantiated by the texts referenced in the footnote citations and are thus, in all probability, baseless. In doing so, it calls into question the level of argumentation adopted in Milank’s works.
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  50. Garden of Forgiveness-Hadiqat As-Samah, Beirut.".Neil Porter - 2003 - Topos: European Landscape Magazine 45:57-64.
     
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