Results for 'Goodwin Jean'

967 found
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  1.  60
    Cicero's authority.Jean Goodwin - 1999 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 34 (1):38-60.
    In this paper I propose to continue the analysis of the appeal to authority begun at the last OSSA conference. I proceed by examining the well-documented use of the appeal made by the ancient Roman advocate, Cicero. The fact that Cicero expressed his opinion was expectably sufficient to give his auditors--responsible citizens all--reason to do as he desired. But why? The resolution of this puzzle points to a strong sense in which arguments can be called rhetorical , for the rational (...)
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  2. Argument Has No Function.Jean Goodwin - 2007 - Informal Logic 27 (1):69-90.
    Douglas Walton has been right in calling us to attend to the pragmatics of argument. He has, however, also insisted that arguments should be understood and assessed by considering the functions they perform; and from this, I dissent. Argument has no determinable function in the sense Walton needs, and even if it did, that function would not ground norms for argumentative practice. As an alternative to a functional theory of argumentative pragmatics, I propose a design view, which draws attention to (...)
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  3. Accounting for the Appeal to the Authority of Experts.Jean Goodwin - 2011 - Argumentation 25 (3):285-296.
    Work in Argumentation Studies (AS) and Studies in Expertise and Experience (SEE) has been proceeding on converging trajectories, moving from resistance to expert authority to a cautious acceptance of its legitimacy. The two projects are therefore also converging on the need to account for how, in the course of complex and confused civic deliberations, nonexpert citizens can figure out which statements from purported experts deserve their trust. Both projects recognize that nonexperts cannot assess expertise directly; instead, the nonexpert must judge (...)
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  4.  67
    Forms of Authority and the Real Ad Verecundiam.Jean Goodwin - 1998 - Argumentation 12 (2):267-280.
    This paper provides a typology of appeals to authority, identifying three distinct types: that which is based on a command; that which is based on expertise; and that which is based on dignity. Each type is distinguished with respect to the reaction that a failure to follow it ordinarily evokes. The rhetorical roots of Locke's ad verecundiam are traced to the rhetorical practices of ancient Rome.
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  5.  37
    The Pragmatic Force of Making an Argument.Jean Goodwin & Beth Innocenti - 2019 - Topoi 38 (4):669-680.
    Making arguments makes reasons apparent. Sometimes those reasons may affect audiences’ relationships to claims (e.g., accept, adhere). But an over-emphasis on audience effects encouraged by functionalist theories of argumentation distracts attention from other things that making arguments can accomplish. We advance the normative pragmatic program on argumentation through two case studies of how early advocates for women’s suffrage in the U.S. made reasons apparent in order to show that what they were doing wasn’t ridiculous. While it might be possible to (...)
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  6.  53
    Theoretical pieties, Johnstone's impiety, and ordinary views of argumentation.Jean Goodwin - 2007 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 40 (1):36-50.
  7.  34
    Should Climate Scientists Fly?Jean Goodwin - 2020 - Informal Logic 40 (2):157-203.
    I inquire into argument at the system level, exploring the controversy over whether climate scientists should fly. I document participants’ knowledge of a skeptical argument that because scientists fly, they cannot testify credibly about the climate emergency. I show how this argument has been managed by pro-climate action arguers, and how some climate scientists have developed parallel reasoning, articulating a sophisticated case why they will be more effective in the controversy if they fly less. Finally, I review some strategies arguers (...)
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  8.  44
    Comments on `Rhetoric and Dialectic from the Standpoint of Normative Pragmatics'.Jean Goodwin - 2000 - Argumentation 14 (3):287-292.
  9. The Public Sphere and the Norms of Transactional Argument.Jean Goodwin - 2005 - Informal Logic 25 (2):151-165.
    An outsider to argument theory, should she look through the rich outpouring of our recent work, might be amused to find us theorists not following our own prescriptions. We propound our ideas, but we don't always interact with each other--we don't argue. The essays by William Rehg and Robert Asen make promising start on rectifying this difficulty. I want to discuss them, first, to show how they acknowledge in exemplary fashion a pair of challenges I think we should all be (...)
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  10. Walter Lippmann, the indispensable opposition.Jean Goodwin - 2014 - In Brian Jackson & Gregory Clark, Trained capacities: John Dewey, rhetoric, and democratic practice. Columbia, South Carolina: The University of South Carolina Press.
     
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  11.  32
    What does arguing look like?Jean Goodwin - 2005 - Informal Logic 25 (1):79-93.
  12.  57
    Conceptions of Speech Acts in the Theory and Practice of Argumentation: A Case Study of a Debate About Advocating.Jean Goodwin - 2014 - Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric 36 (1):79-98.
    Far from being of interest only to argumentation theorists, conceptions of speech acts play an important role in practitioners’ self-reflection on their own activities. After a brief review of work by Houtlosser, Jackson and Kauffeld on the ways that speech acts provide normative frameworks for argumentative interactions, this essay examines an ongoing debate among scientists in natural resource fields as to the appropriateness of the speech act of advocating in policy settings. Scientists’ reflections on advocacy align well with current scholarship, (...)
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  13.  36
    Citizen Science Ethics: It’s a Community Thing.Jean Goodwin & Laura Roberts - 2019 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 9 (1):35-40.
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  14. Wigmore's Chart Method.Jean Goodwin & Alec Fisher - 2000 - Informal Logic 20 (3).
    A generation before Beardsley, legal scholar John Henry Wigmore invented a scheme for representing arguments in a tree diagram, aimed to help advocates analyze the proof of facts at trial. In this essay, I describe Wigmore's "Chart Method" and trace its origin and influence. Wigmore, I argue, contributes to contemporary theory in two ways. His rhetorical approach to diagramming provides a novel perspective on problems about the theory of reasoning, premise adequacy, and dialectical obligations. Further, he advances a novel solution (...)
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  15. Henry Johnstone, Jr.'s Still-Unacknowledged Contributions to Contemporary Argumentation Theory.Jean Goodwin - 2001 - Informal Logic 21 (1).
    Given the pragmatic tum recently taken by argumentation studies, we owe renewed attention to Henry Johnstone's views on the primacy of process over product. In particular, Johnstone's decidedly non-cooperative model is a refreshing alternative to the current dialogic theories of arguing, one which opens the way for specifically rhetorical lines of inquiry.
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  16.  17
    Commentary on Jean Goodwin, "Objectivity in controversial science communication: a case study of Kevin Folta".Patrick Bondy - unknown
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  17. Functionalism, Normativity and the Concept of Argumentation.Steven W. Patterson - 2011 - Informal Logic 31 (1):1-26.
    In her 2007 paper, “Argument Has No Function” Jean Goodwin takes exception with what she calls the “explicit function claims”, arguing that not only are function-based accounts of argumentation insufficiently motivated, but they fail to ground claims to normativity. In this paper I stake out the beginnings of a functionalist answer to Goodwin.
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  18. Vitesse et univers relativiste.Jean Abelé, Pierre Malvaux, D'henry Villat & O. Costa de Beauregard - 1954 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 59 (4):458-459.
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  19.  3
    Vitesse et univers relativiste.Jean Abelé - 1954 - Paris,: Société d'édition d'enseignement supérieur. Edited by Pierre Malvaux.
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  20.  39
    Access to health insurance at small establishments: What can we learn from analyzing other fringe benefits?Jean Marie Abraham, Thomas DeLeire & Anne Beeson Royalty - 2009 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 46 (3):253-273.
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  21. L'esprit de système chez Sade.Jean-Christophe Abramovici - 2017 - In Sophie Marchand, Élise Pavy-Guilbert & Michel Delon, L'esprit de système au XVIIIe siècle. Paris: Hermann.
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  22. Michel de Certeau et la littérature.Jean-Christophe Abramovici & Christian Jouhaud (eds.) - 2018 - Paris: CRH.
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  23.  33
    Taking up or turning down: new estimates of household demand for employer-sponsored health insurance.Jean Marie Abraham & Roger Feldman - 2010 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 47 (1):17-32.
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  24.  23
    Beyond Mind and Body.Howard Brody - 2016 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 59 (2):276-282.
    In 1979, James S. and Jean M. Goodwin and Albert V. Vogel published the first of what became a series of articles that studied current patterns of placebo use. They surveyed 60 house officers and 37 nurses in a New Mexico teaching hospital. Only five of the 1900 patients hospitalized during the study period had received a placebo. Their subjects underestimated the pain relief provided by placebos and believed that a positive placebo response showed that the pain was (...)
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  25.  8
    Parsifal, Siegfried und der Kompromiss der Moderne: Nietzsche über Wagners Verhältnis zum Schopenhauerschen Pessimismus und spinozistischen Optimismus.Jean Yhee - 2016 - In Renate Reschke & Jutta Georg, Nietzsche Und Wagner: Perspektiven Ihrer Auseinandersetzung. De Gruyter. pp. 171-180.
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  26. L'Âme des choses.Jean Zafiropulo - 1967 - Paris,: les Belles Lettres.
     
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  27. L'école éléate.Jean Zafiropulo - 1950 - Paris,: Société d'édition "L4s Belles Lettres,".
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  28.  37
    Reverting to a hidden interactional order: Epistemics, informationism, and conversation analysis.Jean Wong & Michael Lynch - 2016 - Discourse Studies 18 (5):526-549.
    This article critically examines the relations between epistemics in conversation analysis and linguistic and cognitivist conceptions of communicative interaction that emphasize information and information transfer. The epistemic program adheres to the focus on recorded instances of talk-in-interaction that is characteristic of CA, explicitly identifies its theoretical origins with ethnomethodology, and points to implications of its research for the social distribution of knowledge. However, despite such affiliations with CA and ethnomethodology, the EP is cognitivist in the way it emphasizes information exchange (...)
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  29.  42
    Presumptions in Communication.Andrei Moldovan - 2016 - Studia Humana 5 (3):104-117.
    In the first part of this paper I consider the Gricean account of communication, as structured by the Cooperative Principle and the four maxims. Several authors, including Jean Goodwin [10], Fred Kauffeld [17], Michael Gilbert [7], Ernie Lepore and Mathew Stone [22], among others, argue that the Gricean view of communication fails in as much as it pretends to offer an account of all such human interactions. As Goodwin and Kauffeld suggest, a more promising starting point is (...)
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  30.  45
    Molière and the Sociology of Exchange.Jean-Marie Apostolidès & Alice Musick McLean - 1988 - Critical Inquiry 14 (3):477-492.
    The method chosen here draws on concepts borrowed from sociology and anthropology. This double conceptual approach is necessary for a society divided between values inherited from medieval Christianity and precapitalist practices. Seventeenth-century France did not think of itself as a class society but as a society of orders. Since sociology is a system of knowledge whose concepts are taken from an imaginary construct, it is thus more suited to analyzing bourgeois society than societies in transition.6 In trying to measure the (...)
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  31.  6
    L'école de la curiosité: lettre à un jeune scientifique.Jean Audouze - 2017 - Paris: La Librairie Vuibert.
    Au fil d'une carrière commencée il y a près d'un demi-siècle, Jean Audouze a tout connu de la science, depuis la recherche en laboratoire jusqu'aux négociations internationales, en passant par la direction de grandes institutions. D'Hubert Reeves à François Mitterrand, il a travaillé avec les plus grands. Alors que sévit une "guerre contre la science", il nous raconte à l'aide de nombreuses anecdotes la science au quotidien et surtout nous explique pourquoi il faut la défendre. C'est la mission qu'il (...)
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  32.  43
    Revenu garanti, coopératives municipales et monnaies locales.Jean Zin - 2007 - Multitudes 4 (4):107-116.
    Résumé Le revenu garanti s’impose à l’ère de l’information, du travail autonome et du développement humain mais aussi pour des raisons écologistes de sortie du salariat productiviste. Cependant, pour assurer effectivement une production alternative, il ne faut pas seulement s’occuper des revenus mais aussi de la production elle-même, des moyens de production comme des moyens monétaires et des circuits marchands. Dans une perspective écologiste de relocalisation de l’économie, revenu garanti, coopératives municipales et monnaies locales se révèlent ainsi indissociables pour construire (...)
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  33.  19
    Introduction.Jean-Claude Simard - 2022 - Philosophiques 49 (2):347-349.
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  34. Merleau-Ponty et la pensée acausale.Jean Weexsteen - 2006 - Kairos (Université de Toulouse-Le Mirail. Faculté de philosophie) 27:59-88.
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  35.  13
    Dispositifs de croyance.Jean-Louis Weissberg - 1999 - Hermes 25:169.
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  36.  35
    Les pasteures et les mutations contemporaines du rôle du clerc.Jean‑Paul Willaime - 2002 - Clio 15:69-83.
    La grande majorité des Églises protestantes de tradition luthérienne et réformée admettent aujourd’hui, sans restriction, les femmes au pastorat. La proportion des femmes parmi les pasteurs augmente au fil des ans ; elle est de 15 % en France aujourd’hui. Sur la base des premiers résultats d’une enquête qualitative et quantitative effectuée auprès des pasteures, en 1995-1998, cet article montre que la féminisation du pastorat représente une étape supplémentaire dans un processus de sécularisation et de professionnalisation du rôle du clerc. (...)
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  37.  31
    Théorie et pratique de l'image sainte à la veille de la Réforme.Jean Wirth - 1986 - Bibliothèque d'Humanisme Et Renaissance 48 (2):319-358.
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  38. Imaginaire et rationalité chez Gilbert Durand : D'une révolution copernicienne à une nouvelle sagesse anthropologique.Jean-Jacques Wunenburger - 2011 - In Yves Durand, Jean-Pierre Sironneau & Alberto Filipe Araújo, Variations sur l'imaginaire: l'épistémologie ouverte de Gilbert Durand: orientations et innovations. Bruxelles: E.M.E..
     
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  39.  15
    Imaginaire et représentation : de la sémiotique à la symbolique.Jean-Jacques Wunenburger - 2014 - Iris 35:39-48.
    Les conceptions de l’imaginaire propres à la tradition française sont souvent assimilées aux théories de la représentation, conformes au paradigme sémiotique. Il s’agit de montrer que l’imaginaire s’en distingue par une approche d’anthropologie générale qui inscrit le plan de la représentation dans un schématisme corporel, le confronte à une transcendance du sens et l’implique dans une logique figurative autopoïétique, qui ne se laisse pas réduire aux formalismes des structuralismes dominants dans la linguistique et la sémiotique. Conceptions about the Imaginary specific (...)
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  40. (1 other version)Philosophie des images, coll. « Thémis ».Jean-Jacques Wunenburger - 1999 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 189 (3):424-426.
     
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  41.  56
    Tschirnhaus et l'accusation de spinozisme : la polémique avec Christian Thomasius.Jean-Paul Wurtz - 1980 - Revue Philosophique De Louvain 78 (40):489-506.
  42.  22
    Andrew Michael Smith II, Roman Palmyra. Identity, Community, and State Formation.Jean-Baptiste Yon - 2015 - Klio 97 (2):837-840.
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  43.  10
    Le role de l'analogie dans le déchiffrement de l'écriture mycénienne linéaire B.Jean Zafiropulo - 1963 - Dialectica 17 (4):307-327.
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  44.  24
    Happiness: a guide to a good life: Aristotle for the new century.Jean Vanier - 2001 - New York: Arcade.
    Reinterprets the ancient wisdom of the Greek philosopher Aristotle for the modern world, exploring the interconnections among morality, psychology, and spirituality and showing how they lead to meaning, joy, and fulfillment.
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  45.  19
    Plus de contention ni d’isolement sans contrôle du juge judiciaire.Jean-Philippe Vauthier - 2021 - Médecine et Droit 2021 (166):11-16.
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  46.  26
    La Sentencia libri De anima de Thomas d'Aquin.Jean-Marie Vernier - 2002 - Revue des Sciences Philosophiques Et Théologiques 1:33-49.
  47.  20
    Relevance of Chaos and Strange Attractors in the Samuelson-Hicks Oscillator.Jean-Francois Verne - 2021 - Economic Thought 10 (1):32.
    In this paper, we look for the relevance of chaos in the well-known Hicks-Samuelson's oscillator model investigating the endogenous fluctuations of the national income between two limits: full employment income and under-employment income. We compute the Lyapunov exponent, via Monte- Carlo simulations, to detect chaos in the evolution of the income between both limits. In the case of positive Lyapunov exponent and large values of the parameter (i.e. marginal propensity to consume and technical coefficient for capital), the evolution of income (...)
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  48.  37
    Capitalisme et nihilisme.Jean Vioulac - 2009 - Philosophie 3 (3):18.
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  49.  1
    (1 other version)Le Philosophe-artiste.Jean-Noël Vuarnet - 1977 - Paris: Union générale d'éditions.
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  50.  37
    What's hot in... argumentation theory.Jean Hm Wagemans - 2011 - The Reasoner 5 (4):61.
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