Results for 'Glen Warren Bowersock'

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  1.  45
    Greek Sophists in the Roman Empire.Glen Warren Bowersock - 1969 - Oxford,: Clarendon Press.
  2.  10
    From Gibbon to Auden: Essays on the Classical Tradition.Glen Warren Bowersock - 2009 - Oxford University Press USA.
    For several decades G. W. Bowersock has been one of our leading historians of the classical world. This volume collects seventeen of his essays, each illustrating how the classical past has captured the imagination of some of the greatest figures in modern historiography and literature. The essays here range across three centuries, the eighteenth to the twentieth, and are divided chronologically. The great Enlightenment historian Edward Gibbon is in large part the unifying force of this collection as he appears (...)
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  3. Philosophy in the Second Sophistic.Glen Bowersock - 2002 - In Gillian Clark & Tessa Rajak, Philosophy and Power in the Graeco-Roman World: Essays in Honour of Miriam Griffin. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  4. Nonnos Rising.Glen W. Bowersock - 1994 - Topoi 4:385-399.
     
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  5.  35
    Aldrete, Gregory S. Daily Life in the Roman City: Rome, Pompeii, and Ostia. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2008. xv+ 278 pp. Numerous black-and-white figs. Paper, $19.95. Barker, Elton TE Entering the Agon: Dissent and Authority in Homer, His-toriography and Tragedy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009. xiii+ 433 pp. [REVIEW]Irene Berti, Marta García Morcillo, Isabelle Boehm, Pascal Luccioni, Glen W. Bowersock & Claude Calame - 2009 - American Journal of Philology 130:475-480.
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  6.  38
    The Coin collection of Louis Robert - F. delrieux Les monnaies du fonds Louis Robert. Préface de Glen Bowersock, avant-propos de François de callataÿ. Pp. 344, fig., Ills, colour maps. Paris: Académie Des inscriptions et belLes-lettres, 2011. Paper. Isbn: 978-2-87754-270-8. [REVIEW]Stanley Ireland - 2013 - The Classical Review 63 (1):241-243.
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  7.  16
    Homer and the wrath of Julian.David Neal Greenwood - 2019 - Classical Quarterly 69 (2):887-895.
    ‘Everyone who now reads and writes in the West, of whatever racial background, sex or ideological camp, is still a son or daughter of Homer.’ While the extent to which this claim is accurate has been disputed, it is not wrong in our own day to grant the highest honours for ongoing influence to the author of theIliad. All the more so in Late Antiquity, a period frequently viewed as hermetically isolated from the classical world, but which resolutely viewed itself (...)
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  8. Actions, Intentions, and Consequences: The Doctrine of Double Effect.Warren S. Quinn - 1989 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 18 (4):334-351.
  9. Moral Status: Obligations to Persons and Other Living Things.Mary Anne Warren - 1997 - Oxford, GB: Clarendon Press.
    Mary Anne Warren investigates a theoretical question that is at the centre of practical and professional ethics: what are the criteria for having moral status? That is: what does it take to be an entity towards which people have moral considerations? Warren argues that no single property will do as a sole criterion, and puts forward seven basic principles which establish moral status. She then applies these principles to three controversial moral issues: voluntary euthanasia, abortion, and the status (...)
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  10. Actions, Intentions, and Consequences: The Doctrine of Doing and Allowing.Warren S. Quinn - 1989 - Philosophical Review 98 (3):287-312.
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  11. Logic in the twenties: The nature of the quantifier.Warren D. Goldfarb - 1979 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 44 (3):351-368.
  12.  21
    Althusser and His Contemporaries: Philosophy’s Perpetual War.Warren Montag - 2013 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    _Althusser and His Contemporaries_ alters and expands understanding of Louis Althusser and French philosophy of the 1960s and 1970s. Thousands of pages of previously unpublished work from different periods of Althusser's career have been made available in French since his death in 1990. Based on meticulous study of the philosopher's posthumous publications, as well as his unpublished manuscripts, lecture notes, letters, and marginalia, Warren Montag provides a thoroughgoing reevaluation of Althusser's philosophical project. Montag shows that the theorist was intensely (...)
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  13. (1 other version)The right to threaten and the right to punish.Warren Quinn - 1985 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 14 (4):327-373.
  14. A Comparative Study of Four Change Detection Methods for Aerial Photography Applications.Gil Abramovich, Glen Brooksby, Stephen Bush, Manickam F., Ozcanli Swaminathan, Garrett Ozge & D. Benjamin - 2010 - Spie. Edited by Daniel J. Henry.
    We present four new change detection methods that create an automated change map from a probability map. In this case, the probability map was derived from a 3D model. The primary application of interest is aerial photographic applications, where the appearance, disappearance or change in position of small objects of a selectable class (e.g., cars) must be detected at a high success rate in spite of variations in magnification, lighting and background across the image. The methods rely on an earlier (...)
     
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  15.  14
    Teleology in the philosophy of Joseph Butler and Abraham Tucker..William Glen Harris - 1941 - Duke University Press.
  16. Abortion: Identity and loss.Warren Quinn - 1984 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 13 (1):24-54.
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  17. (2 other versions)Kripke on Wittgenstein on rules.Warren D. Goldfarb - 1982 - Journal of Philosophy 79 (September):471-488.
  18. The Forgiveness We Speak: The Illocutionary Force of Forgiving.Glen Pettigrove - 2004 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 42 (3):371-392.
    What are we doing when we say "I forgive you"? This paper employs Austin's notion of illocutionary force to analyze three different kinds of acts in which we might engage when saying "I forgive you." We might use it (1) to disclose an emotional condition, (2) to declare a debt cancelled, or (3) to commit ourselves to a future course of action. I suggest that the forgiving utterances we seek possess qualities of both the first and the third types of (...)
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  19.  57
    Lefort and the Symbolic Dimension.Warren Breckman - 2012 - Constellations 19 (1):30-36.
  20.  89
    An ethics of care or an ethics of justice.Warren French & Alexander Weis - 2000 - Journal of Business Ethics 27 (1-2):125 - 136.
    A conflict within the community of those investigating business ethics is whether decision makers are motivated by an ethics of justice or an ethics of caring. The proposition put forward in this paper is that ethical orientations are strongly related to cultural backgrounds. Specifically, Hofstede's cultural stereotyping using his masculine-feminine dimension may well match a culture's reliance on justice or caring when decisions are made. A study of college graduates from six countries showed that Hofstede's dimension was remarkably accurate in (...)
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  21. Resolving a moral conflict through discourse.Warren French & David Allbright - 1998 - Journal of Business Ethics 17 (2):177-194.
    Plato claimed that morality exits to control conflict. Business people increasingly are called upon to resolve moral conflicts between various stakeholders who maintain opposing ethical positions or principles. Attempts to resolve these moral conflicts within business discussions may be exacerbated if disputants have different communicative styles. To better understand the communication process involved in attempts to resolve a moral dilemma, we investigate the "discourse ethics" procedure of Jürgen Habermas. Habermas claims that an individual's level of moral reasoning parallels the type (...)
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  22. (1 other version)On gödel's way in: The influence of Rudolf Carnap.Warren Goldfarb - 2005 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 11 (2):185-193.
    The philosopher Rudolf Carnap, although not himself an originator of mathematical advances in logic, was much involved in the development of the subject. He was the most important and deepest philosopher of the Vienna Circle of logical positivists, or, to use the label Carnap later preferred, logical empiricists. It was Carnap who gave the most fully developed and sophisticated form to the linguistic doctrine of logical and mathematical truth: the view that the truths of mathematics and logic do not describe (...)
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  23.  36
    Adventures of the Symbolic: Post-Marxism and Radical Democracy.Warren Breckman - 2013 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Marxism's collapse in the twentieth century profoundly altered the style and substance of Western European radical thought. To build a more robust form of democratic theory and action, prominent theorists moved to reject revolution, abandon class for more fragmented models of social action, and elevate the political over the social. Acknowledging the constructedness of society and politics, they chose the "symbolic" as a concept powerful enough to reinvent leftist thought outside a Marxist framework. Following Maurice Merleau-Ponty's Adventures of the Dialectic, (...)
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  24.  75
    Reflection and the loss of moral knowledge: Williams on objectivity.Warren Quinn - 1987 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 16 (2):195-209.
  25. Logicism and logical truth.Warren D. Goldfarb - 1982 - Journal of Philosophy 79 (11):692-695.
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  26.  16
    So-Called Preterite Prefix Conjugation in the Aramaic of the Bible and Qumran.Andrew Glen Daniel - 2022 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 142 (4):789-816.
    The Aramaic of the Bible and Qumran, unlike Imperial Aramaic, possesses a unique prefix conjugation that functions as a narrative tense. Aramaists have appealed to various notions of tense, aspect, text-linguistics, and even Hebrew and Akkadian influence to solve the conundrum of the so-called preterite prefix conjugation. A novel proposal is offered here, based on the semantic category of modality. By beginning with future functions of the prefix conjugation and working backward through the present temporal sphere to occurrences in the (...)
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  27.  39
    Politics in a symbolic key: Pierre Leroux, Romantic socialism, and the Schelling affair.Warren Breckman - 2005 - Modern Intellectual History 2 (1):61-86.
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  28. The perfectibility of human nature in eastern and western thought (review).Warren Todd - 2011 - Philosophy East and West 61 (3):568-572.
  29.  20
    A Reply to a recent review.Warren Treadgold - 2003 - Byzantinische Zeitschrift 96 (2):802-804.
    In replying to Dr. Wolfram Brandes' review of my History of the Byzantine State and Society and Concise History of Byzantium in BZ 95 (2002), pp. 716–25, I shall confine myself to correcting what I consider distortions of fact, and pass over my differences with the reviewer about theory, which cannot be usefully discussed until those distortions are corrected.
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  30. The Bride-Shows of the Byzantine Emperors.Warren T. Treadgold - 1979 - Byzantion 49:395-413.
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  31. Measurement units and theory construction.Warren W. Tryon - 1996 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 17 (3):213-228.
    The central thesis of this article is that measurement units are theoretical concepts because measurement presumes theoretical definition. New theoretical constructs can be defined in terms of algebraic combinations of previously defined measurement units. Physics has developed an impressive hierarchical knowledge structure on this basis. The unitless measures favored by psychology preclude the generation of such a knowledge hierarchy. It also leads to definitions of reliability and validity in correlational terms which can result in inaccurate measurement. Psychology has long used (...)
     
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  32. On rejecting Foss's image of Van Fraassen.Warren Bourgeois - 1987 - Philosophy of Science 54 (2):303-308.
    Foss's critique of van Fraassen's constructive empiricism is shown to be completely wide of the mark (Foss 1984, van Fraassen 1980). Foss misunderstands van Fraassen's use of the terms 'observable', 'phenomena', 'empirical adequacy', and 'epistemic community'. He misconstrues constructive empiricism as making knowledge, and perhaps existence, dependent on the observer. On the basis of this error, he attempts to reduce constructive empiricism to skepticism. None of his criticisms are to the point.
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  33. A Miserable Argument.Mark Warren - 2023 - In Sandra Woien, Sam Harris: Critical Responses. Chicago: Carus Books. pp. 115-25.
    In his arguments that science itself can answer moral questions, Sam Harris often appeals to our intuitions about the badness of suffering. If we share these intuitions, Harris argues, we’ve taken a significant step in conceding to a basically utilitarian worldview. In this chapter, I critically assess Harris’ arguments and find them deeply wanting.
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  34.  16
    The consequences of restricted water accessibility on schedule-induced polydipsia.William Daniel & Glen D. King - 1975 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 5 (4):297-299.
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  35. The medical profession and the corporatization of the health sector.J. Warren Salmon - 1987 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 8 (1).
    This article describes the most important determinant of contemporary American medical practice: the corporatization of the health care delivery system. It argues that there is an urgent need for greater reflection by physicians on the values inherent in profit-based health care and on the implications of such a model of care. Other pressures on the medical profession and several available responses are examined. The article then poses a challenge to the profession to assume a more forthright advocacy for social equity (...)
     
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  36. Religion on the American Frontier 1783–1840.William Warren Sweet - 1946
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  37. The American Churches: An Interpretation.William Warren Sweet - 1948
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  38. Montaigne's legacy.Warren Boutcher - 2005 - In Ullrich Langer, The Cambridge Companion to Montaigne. New York: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  39.  33
    Emancipation and the Bounds of Meaning: Reading, Representation and Politics in Young Hegelianism.Warren Breckman - 2003 - The European Legacy 8 (4):425-439.
    This paper explores the status of symbolic representation in the work of the Left Hegelians Bruno Bauer and Ludwig Feuerbach. Hegel believed, contrary to his Romantic contemporaries, that symbols were too ambiguous to serve as means of philosophical communication; and as his followers turned against religion, they radicalized Hegel's critique of Romantic symbolism in the name of an emancipatory impulse toward clarity and full possession of the object of meaning. While Bauer insisted that the possibility of human emancipation depended on (...)
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  40.  16
    Ein zweifaches Hurra auf den Kontext.Warren Breckman - 2023 - Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift für Literaturwissenschaft Und Geistesgeschichte 97 (1):13-21.
    Though contextualism is a powerful orthodoxy in the Humanities, it is not without its critics. They complain that reliance on context creates the illusion of full meaning at a work’s point of origin, unjustly contains the work within a historical box, and neutralizes the critical potential of past texts and ideas. Starting with the Spitzer-Lovejoy debate over Geistesgeschichte and History of Ideas in the 1940s and moving to a discussion of recent critics of contextualism, the essay concludes by rethinking the (...)
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  41.  44
    Nationalism, individualism, and capitalism: Reply to Greenfeld.Warren Breckman & Lars Trägårdh - 1996 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 10 (3):389-407.
    Abstract Reversing the arguments of Anderson, Gellner, and Hobs?bawm, Liah Greenfeld contends that it is nationalism that produces economic development. Specifically, she claims that nationalism inspired three seminal economic thinkers: Marx, List, and Smith. However, Greenfeld's ideological preferences lead her to a problematic conception of individualism as nationalism, as well as to flawed treatments of Smith, List, and Marx. Nationalism is better understood as an attempt to address the deepening conflict between the imperative of community and the secular trends of (...)
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  42.  55
    The modernist imagination: intellectual history and critical theory: essays in honor of Martin Jay.Warren Breckman & Martin Jay (eds.) - 2009 - New York: Berghahn Books.
    This volumeincludes work from some of the most prominentcontemporary scholars in the humanities.
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  43.  12
    Cultural Economics and Theory: The Evolutionary Economics of David Hamilton.David Hamilton, Glen Atkinson, William M. Dugger & William T. Waller Jr (eds.) - 2009 - Routledge.
    David Hamilton is a leader in the American institutionalist school of heterodox economics that emerged after WWII. This volume includes 25 articles written by Hamilton over a period of nearly half a century. In these articles he examines the philosophical foundations and practical problems of economics. The result of this is a unique institutionalist view of how economies evolve and how economics itself has evolved with them. Hamilton applies insight gained from his study of culture to send the message that (...)
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  44.  23
    Death and Beyond in Eastern Perspective.Death.Jung Young Lee & Warren Shibles - 1975 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 35 (4):583-585.
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  45.  31
    Revisiting the launching of the Kennedy institute: Re-visioning the origins of bioethics.Warren T. Reich - 1996 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 6 (4):323-327.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Revisiting the Launching of the Kennedy Institute: Re-visioning the Origins of BioethicsWarren Thomas Reich (bio)Twenty-five years ago, on October 1, 1971, at a press conference held at Georgetown University, the Joseph and Rose Kennedy Institute for the Study of Human Reproduction and Bioethics, later called the Kennedy Institute of Ethics, was officially inaugurated. To revisit that event—and the Institute’s five founding collaborators who spoke at it—provides an opportunity to (...)
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  46.  21
    The Intimacy of Disappearance.Nicolas de Warren - 2024 - In Gustav Strandberg & Hugo Strandberg, Jan Patočka and the Phenomenology of Life After Death. Springer Verlag. pp. 53-68.
    That the presence of others, after their death, continues to resonate within our own lives, that, in other words, death does not rob the other of their meaning for us, as if the meaning of their lives for us would suddenly become extinguished upon their death, is revealing of who we are, of how I am constituted in relation to others. The question of life after death is thus inseparable from the question of life before death, of what it is (...)
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  47. Heaven's partners or Nietzschean free spirits?Warren G. Frisina - 1995 - Philosophy East and West 45 (1):29-60.
  48. Ordinal Bounds for k-consistency.Warren D. Goldfarb - 1974 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 39 (4):693-699.
  49.  25
    Abortion.Mary Anne Warren - 1998 - In Helga Kuhse & Peter Singer, A Companion to Bioethics. Malden, Mass., USA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 140–148.
    This chapter contains sections titled: The Arguments for the Freedom to Choose Fetal Life and Humanity The Argument from Fetal Potential Abortion and Fetal Development Making Abortion Difficult to Obtain Ideological Bases of the Abortion Debate Conclusion References.
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  50.  11
    Philosophy and Literature in Francophone Africa.Jean-Godefory Bidima & Nicolas De Warren - 2004 - In Kwasi Wiredu, A Companion to African Philosophy. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 549–558.
    This chapter contains sections titled: The Relationship Between Philosophy and Literature Intersecting Themes.
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