Results for 'Gary Lachman'

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  1.  48
    A secret history of consciousness.Gary Lachman - 2003 - Great Barrington, MA: Lindisfarne Books.
    Part one: the search for cosmic consciousness -- R.M. Bucke and the future of humanity -- William James and the anesthetic revelation -- Henri Bergson and the Elan Vital -- The superman -- A.R. Orage and the new age -- Ouspensky's fourth dimension -- Part two: esoteric evolution -- The bishop and the bulldog -- Enter the madame -- Dr. Steiner, I presume? -- From Goethean science to the wisdom of the human being -- Cosmic evolution -- Hypnagogia -- Part (...)
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  2.  11
    Colin Wilson as Philosopher.John Shand & Gary Lachman - 1996
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  3.  20
    Rudolf Steiner: An Introduction to His Life and Work, by Gary Lachman[REVIEW]John Lanigan - 2008 - Philosophy Now 68:40-41.
  4. Animals as Persons: Essays on the Abolition of Animal Exploitation.Gary Lawrence Francione - 2008 - Columbia University Press.
    A prominent and respected philosopher of animal rights law and ethical theory, Gary L. Francione is known for his criticism of animal welfare laws and regulations, his abolitionist theory of animal rights, and his promotion of veganism and nonviolence as the baseline principles of the abolitionist movement. In this collection, Francione advances the most radical theory of animal rights to date. Unlike Peter Singer, Francione maintains that we cannot morally justify using animals under any circumstances, and unlike Tom Regan, (...)
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  5.  71
    Birth of the Mind: How a Tiny Number of Genes Creates the Complexity of Human Thought.Gary Marcus - 2004 - Basic Books.
    A psychologist offers a detailed study of the genetic underpinnings of human thought, looking at the small number of genes that contain the instructions for building the vastly complex human brain to determine how these genes work, common misconceptions about genes, and their implications for the future of genetic engineering. 30,000 first printing.
  6.  79
    What Philosophers Know: Case Studies in Recent Analytic Philosophy.Gary Gutting - 2009 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Philosophy has never delivered on its promise to settle the great moral and religious questions of human existence, and even most philosophers conclude that it does not offer an established body of disciplinary knowledge. Gary Gutting challenges this view by examining detailed case studies of recent achievements by analytic philosophers such as Quine, Kripke, Gettier, Lewis, Chalmers, Plantinga, Kuhn, Rawls, and Rorty. He shows that these philosophers have indeed produced a substantial body of disciplinary knowledge, but he challenges many (...)
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  7.  44
    Whitehead's Influence on the Thought of G. H. Mead.Gary A. Cook - 1979 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 15 (2):107 - 131.
  8. Representation and rule-instantiation in connectionist systems.Gary Hatfield - 1991 - In Terence E. Horgan & John L. Tienson (eds.), Connectionism and the Philosophy of Mind. Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    There is disagreement over the notion of representation in cognitive science. Many investigators equate representations with symbols, that is, with syntactically defined elements in an internal symbol system. In recent years there have been two challenges to this orthodoxy. First, a number of philosophers, including many outside the symbolist orthodoxy, have argued that "representation" should be understood in its classical sense, as denoting a "stands for" relation between representation and represented. Second, there has been a growing challenge to orthodoxy under (...)
     
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  9.  83
    A psychobiological theory of attachment.Gary W. Kraemer - 1992 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 15 (3):493-511.
  10.  45
    Transnational Models for Regulation of Nanotechnology.Gary E. Marchant & Douglas J. Sylvester - 2006 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (4):714-725.
    There is much we do not know about nanotechnology. Despite its tremendous promise, nanotechnology today is mostly forecast and fervent hope. Predictions that spending on nanotechnology will increase from current levels of $13 billion to more than $1 trillion by 2015 are no more than that – simply predictions. Hopes that nanotechnology will be an essential part of solving the globe's energy, food, and water problems should be tempered by recalling a century of revolutionary technologies that failed to live up (...)
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  11.  58
    Does ethics code design matter? Effects of ethics code rationales and sanctions on recipients' justice perceptions and content recall.Gary R. Weaver - 1995 - Journal of Business Ethics 14 (5):367 - 385.
    Prior research on ethics codes has suggested, but rarely tested, the effects of code design alternatives on the impact of codes. This study considers whether the presence of explanatory rationales and descriptions of sanctions in ethics codes affects recipients'' responses to a code. Theories of organizational justice and persuasive communication support an expectation that rationales and sanctions will be positively related to code recipients'' recall of code content and perceptions of organizational justice. Content recall is an obvious precondition of code (...)
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  12. Psychology, philosophy, and cognitive science: Reflections on the history and philosophy of experimental psychology.Gary Hatfield - 2002 - Mind and Language 17 (3):207-232.
    This article critically examines the views that psychology first came into existence as a discipline ca. 1879, that philosophy and psychology were estranged in the ensuing decades, that psychology finally became scientific through the influence of logical empiricism, and that it should now disappear in favor of cognitive science and neuroscience. It argues that psychology had a natural philosophical phase (from antiquity) that waxed in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, that this psychology transformed into experimental psychology ca. 1900, that philosophers (...)
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  13.  28
    The acquisition of the English past tense in children and multilayered connectionist networks.Gary F. Marcus - 1995 - Cognition 56 (3):271-279.
    The apparent very close similarity between the learning of the past tense by Adam and the Plunkett and Marchman model is exaggerated by several misleading comparisons--including arbitrary, unexplained changes in how graphs were plotted. The model's development differs from Adam's in three important ways: Children show a U-shaped sequence of development which does not depend on abrupt changes in input; U-shaped development in the simulation occurs only after an abrupt change in training regimen. Children overregularize vowel-change verbs more than no-change (...)
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  14.  96
    Completeness and super-valuations.Gary M. Hardegree - 2005 - Journal of Philosophical Logic 34 (1):81 - 95.
    This paper uses the notion of Galois-connection to examine the relation between valuation-spaces and logics. Every valuation-space gives rise to a logic, and every logic gives rise to a valuation space, where the resulting pair of functions form a Galois-connection, and the composite functions are closure-operators. A valuation-space (resp., logic) is said to be complete precisely if it is Galois-closed. Two theorems are proven. A logic is complete if and only if it is reflexive and transitive. A valuation-space is complete (...)
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  15. Advances in Research on Punishment in Organizations: Descriptive and Normative Perspectives.Linda Klebe Treviño & Gary R. Weaver - 2010 - In Marshall Schminke (ed.), Managerial Ethics: Managing the Psychology of Morality. Routledge.
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  16.  32
    Plato and Hegel : Two Modes of Philosophizing About Politics.Gary K. Browning - 1991 - New York: Routledge.
    Hegel and Plato are united as political theorists by the convergence of their philosophical aspirations. But their political writings manifest the general disparities involved in their particular ways of seeking to fulfil these aspirations. Professor Browning compares the political thought of Plato and Hegel by locating their political theorizing within the context of their divergent modes of philosophizing.
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  17. Aligning Natural and Positive Law: The Case of Non-Human Sentients.Gary Chartier - 2016 - In Andreas Blank (ed.), Animals: New Essays. Munich: Philosophia. pp. 355-75.
    Examines the possibility of converging support for animal well being rendered by a non-standard version of new classical natural law theory and the kind of institutional framework suggested by spontaneous-order natural law theory. Argues that non-state mechanisms consistent with the latter kind of natural law theory could maintain the rights defended by the former.
     
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  18. A Progressive Case for a Universal Transaction Tax.Gary Chartier - 2006 - Maine Law Review 58:1-16.
    Concerns with autonomy and privacy, among other factors (including the potential to move toward a basic income scheme), could give progressives reason to favor replacing the personal income tax with a universal transaction tax (so named to distinguish it from transaction taxes just applied to consumer sales, for instance).
     
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  19. Contracts and Vows.Gary Chartier - 2016 - Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 5 (3):482-509.
    Examines analogies between contracts and vows and uses analytical tools from contract law to highlight the limits of religious vows.
     
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  20. Contested Practices: Arthur Isak Applbaum's Ethics for Adversaries.Gary Chartier - 2002 - Jahrbuch für Recht Und Ethik/Annual Review of Law and Ethics 16:254-77.
    Examines Applbaum's elaboration, on contractualist grounds, of a plausible understanding of adversarial ethics, primarily but not exclusively in the contest of the legal system. Raises criticisms of what are arguably unnecessary concessions and offers the behavior of US government lawyers in the Korematsu case as an example for consideration.
     
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  21. Loving Friends and Loving God.Gary Chartier - 1999 - Spectrum 27 (4):11-22.
    Examines issues in ethics and philosophical theology raised by the attempt to understand the relationship between particular creaturely loves and love for God.
     
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  22. Natural Law and Non-Aggression.Gary Chartier - 2010 - Acta Juridica Hungarica 51 (2):79-96.
    Argues that new classical natural law theory can provide an alternative grounding for what is often called the "non-aggression principle.".
     
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  23. Radical Liberalism and Social Freedom.Gary Chartier - 2019 - In Roger Bissell, Chris Matthew Sciabarra & Ed Younkins (eds.), The Dialectics of Liberty: Exploring the Context of Human Freedom. Roman & Littlefield. pp. 255-74.
    Defends a link between political and social freedom, and argues both for an understanding of social freedom and for institutional safeguards for this kind of freedom.
     
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  24. Response to Charles Clark.Gary Chartier - 2011 - Conversations in Religion and Theology 9:188-99.
    Addresses Charles Clark's challenges to my book Economic Justice and Natural Law.
     
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  25. Toward a New Employer-Worker Compact.Gary Chartier - 2005 - Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal 9:51-119.
    Proposes a new model of worker-employer relationships in the US employment context, involving shifts in law and social norms and designed to offer options of potential value to both progressives and libertarians. Emphasizes the importance of decentralized governance and of decoupling income support and other social services from employment.
     
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  26. Two Faces of the Right to Privacy in Litigators' Ethics.Gary Chartier - 2006 - Litigation Ethics 4 (2):1+.
    Explores a tension between clients' rights to informational privacy and lawyers' rights to flourishing privates lives.
     
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  27. Truth-Telling, Incommensurability, and the Ethics of Grading.Gary Chartier - 2003 - Brigham Young University Education and Law Journal 3:37-81.
    Develops an approach to think normatively about the assignment of grades. Argues that grades should reflected reasonably estimated subject-matter competence rather than the quantity of submitted work or moral character. Responds to alternatives labeled "academic retributivism" and "academic consequentialism." Applies to the model to a variety of concrete grading policy issues.
     
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  28. Understanding Friendship.Gary Chartier - 2022 - Minneapolis, MN, USA: Fortress Press.
    An exploration of the meaning of friendship and its moral, political, and spiritual significance.
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  29. Victims and Parole Decisions.Gary Chartier - 2003 - Jahrbuch für Recht Und Ethik 11.
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  30.  5
    The Calumet Region: An American Place.Gary Cialdella - 2009 - University of Illinois Press.
    Cialdella found himself drawn to the Calumet Region of his youth for a photographic exploration that has lasted more than twenty years, and that has resulted in hundreds of rich and complex works.
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  31. Search for reality.Gary R. Collins - 1969 - Wheaton, Ill.,: Key Publishers.
  32.  18
    Response to Lynch.Gary Comstock - 2002 - Between the Species 13 (2):5.
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  33.  10
    Pass the jelly: tales of ordinary enlightenment: a memoir.Gary Crowley - 2009 - Boulder, Colo.: Sentient Publications.
    This book is both very funny and unexpectedly profound.
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  34. Ecclesial being and one theologian: Pannenberg's doctrine of faith in its sacramental context.Gary M. Culpepper - 1999 - The Thomist 63 (2):283-306.
  35.  47
    Science and Religion: A Historical Introduction.Gary B. Ferngren (ed.) - 2002 - Johns Hopkins University Press.
    Weissenbacher, Stephen P. Weldon, and Tomoko Yoshida.
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  36. Some moral considerations on teaching as a profession.Gary D. Fenstermacher - 1990 - In John I. Goodlad, Roger Soder & Kenneth A. Sirotnik (eds.), The Moral dimensions of teaching. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers. pp. 130--151.
  37.  73
    A Mark of the Mental: In Defense of Informational Teleosemantics.Gary Ostertag - 2019 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 97 (3):628-631.
    Volume 97, Issue 3, September 2019, Page 628-631.
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  38. Evolutionary efficiency and happiness.Gary Becker - manuscript
    We model happiness as a measurement tool used to rank alternative actions. Evolution favors a happiness function that measures the individual’s success in relative terms. The optimal function, in particular, is based on a time-varying reference point –or performance benchmark –that is updated over time in a statistically optimal way in order to match the individual’s potential. Habits and peer comparisons arise as special cases of such updating process. This updating also results in a volatile level of happiness that continuously (...)
     
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  39. Far-Persons.Gary Comstock - 2017 - In Woodhall Andrew & Garmendia da Trindade Gabriel (eds.), Ethics and/or Politics: Approaching the Issues Concerning Nonhuman Animals. Palgrave. pp. 39-71.
    I argue for the moral relevance of a category of individuals I characterize as far-persons. Following Gary Varner, I distinguish near-persons, animals with a " robust autonoetic consciousness " but lacking an adult human's " biographical sense of self, " from the merely sentient, those animals living "entirely in the present." I note the possibility of a third class. Far-persons lack a biographical sense of self, possess a weak autonoetic consciousness, and are able to travel mentally through time a (...)
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  40. Truth in Frege's 'laws of truth'.Gary Kemp - 1995 - Synthese 105 (1):31 - 51.
  41. Simpson’s Paradox.Gary Malinas - 2001 - The Monist 84 (2):265-283.
    This article examines Simpson's paradox as applied to the theory of probabilites and percentages. The author discusses possible flaws in the paradox and compares it to the Sure Thing Principle, statistical inference, causal inference and probabilistic analyses of causation.
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  42. Simulation and psychological concepts.Gary Fuller - 1995 - In Martin Davies & Tony Stone (eds.), Mental Simulation: Evaluations and Applications - Reading in Mind and Language. Wiley-Blackwell.
  43.  67
    Inner speech as a forward model?Gary M. Oppenheim - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (4):369-370.
    Pickering & Garrod (P&G) consider the possibility that inner speech might be a product of forward production models. Here I consider the idea of inner speech as a forward model in light of empirical work from the past few decades, concluding that, while forward models could contribute to it, inner speech nonetheless requires activity from the implementers.
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  44.  73
    An axiom system for orthomodular quantum logic.Gary M. Hardegree - 1981 - Studia Logica 40 (1):1 - 12.
    Logical matrices for orthomodular logic are introduced. The underlying algebraic structures are orthomodular lattices, where the conditional connective is the Sasaki arrow. An axiomatic calculusOMC is proposed for the orthomodular-valid formulas.OMC is based on two primitive connectives — the conditional, and the falsity constant. Of the five axiom schemata and two rules, only one pertains to the falsity constant. Soundness is routine. Completeness is demonstrated using standard algebraic techniques. The Lindenbaum-Tarski algebra ofOMC is constructed, and it is shown to be (...)
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  45.  89
    How strange a sadness?Gary Iseminger - 1983 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 42 (1):81-82.
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  46.  19
    The paca that roared: Immediate cumulative semantic interference among newly acquired words.Gary M. Oppenheim - 2018 - Cognition 177 (C):21-29.
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  47. Gibsonian representations and connectionist symbol-processing: Prospects for unification.Gary Hatfield - 1990 - Psychological Research 52:243-52.
    Not long ago the standard view in cognitive science was that representations are symbols in an internal representational system or language of thought and that psychological processes are computations defined over such representations. This orthodoxy has been challenged by adherents of functional analysis and by connectionists. Functional analysis as practiced by Marr is consistent with an analysis of representation that grants primacy to a stands for conception of representation. Connectionism is also compatible with this notion of representation; when conjoined with (...)
     
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  48.  22
    Why Veganism Matters: The Moral Value of Animals.Gary L. Francione - 2020 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Most people care about animals, but only a tiny fraction are vegan. The rest often think of veganism as an extreme position. They certainly do not believe that they have a moral obligation to become vegan. Gary L. Francione—the leading and most provocative scholar of animal rights theory and law—demonstrates that veganism is a moral imperative and a matter of justice. He shows that there is a contradiction in thinking that animals matter morally if one is also not vegan, (...)
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  49. Salmon on Fregean approaches to the paradox of analysis.Gary Kemp - 1995 - Philosophical Studies 78 (2):153 - 162.
  50.  87
    The Evolution of Epigenetics.Gary Felsenfeld - 2014 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 57 (1):132-148.
    Since the early days of embryology, a central puzzle for biologists has been how a fertilized egg can execute a clearly defined and reproducible program that leads ultimately to a complex organism. It was clear that all of the information necessary to create the adult must already reside in the zygote, but how that information was translated into a complex organism was obscure. Even as recently as the late 1940s, the molecular mechanisms associated with early development were unknown and, in (...)
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