Results for 'Guillermo Agustín Clarke'

965 found
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  1. Una imagen entre el recuerdo y el olvido: El caso del enfrentamiento entre la Escuela Naval de Río Santiago y los aliados del gobierno peronista: 16 de septiembre de 1955.Claudio Panella, Guillermo Agustín Clarke & Laura Casareto - 2012 - Aletheia: Anuario de Filosofía 3 (5):12 - 12.
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  2.  56
    ¿ Abismo o armonía entre la imaginación y la razón? Una aproximación crítica a la Religionskritik Spinozas de Leo Strauss1.Agustín VoLCo & Guillermo SIbILIA - 2009 - Foro Interno. Anuario de Teoría Política 9:87-110.
    En su Religionskritik Spinozas Leo Strauss sostiene que la crítica de la religión de Spinoza se expresa y fundamenta “en la alternativa cruda y desnuda entre la superstición, el prejuicio, la barbarie, la ignorancia, las tinieblas de un lado, y la razón, la libertad, la cultura, las luces, del otro”. La critica spinoziana de la religión aparece entonces, de acuerdo con Strauss, como “la critica…operada por el Iluminismo mas radical”. Un abismo se abre entre la vida del sabio regida por (...)
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  3. Aflicción y consuelo de san Agustín en la muerte de su madre.Guillermo Pons Pons - 2009 - Ciudad de Dios 222 (3):659-670.
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  4. El misterio de las bodas de Caná en San Agustín.Guillermo Pons Pons - 2009 - Revista Agustiniana 50 (152):359-378.
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  5. La Egloga IV de Virgilio y san Agustín.Guillermo Pons Pons - 2011 - Revista Agustiniana 52 (159):747-774.
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  6. La naturaleza y la agricultura en los Sermones de San Agustín.Guillermo Pons Pons - 1995 - Revista Agustiniana 36 (111):975-1003.
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  7. La Roma clásica y cristiana en Aurelio Prudencio y en san Agustín.Guillermo Pons Pons - 2013 - Ciudad de Dios 226 (1):67-98.
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  8. María "estrella en la noche" en un sermón de San Agustín.Guillermo Pons Pons - 2005 - Revista Agustiniana 46 (141):521-532.
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  9. Ángeles y demonios en el combate del martirio según San Agustín.Guillermo Pons Pons - 2007 - Revista Agustiniana 48 (146):247-278.
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  10.  11
    La misión de la persona divina al justo, en 'De Trinitate' de san Agustín.Guillermo Andrés Juárez - 2008 - Augustinus 53 (208):99-126.
    El artículo estudia el envío del Hijo y del Espíritu Santo a los justos tal y como son tratados por Agustín en "De Trinitate" 4, 20 y 2, 5, resaltando las misiones visibles y sus diversas implicaciones, así como los capítulos 17 al 19 del Libro XV, para explicar la vinculación del Espíritu Santo al amor fraterno.
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  11.  77
    Guillermo de Ockham rechaza las Ideas: el giro filosófico de la modernidad y Platón.Agustín Uña Juárez - 1990 - Anales Del Seminario de Historia de la Filosofía 8:9-40.
    Plotinus’ thought is generally viewed as a “system”, the One’s system, wich embraces and considers the Totality as such, as a whole, ruled by the metaphysical law of the unity. Scholars as É. Bréhier, J. Moreau, G. Reale, J. Igal, A. H. Armstrong... agree to it. The present study tries to make explicit and interpret it, examining some basic features, or general traits, wich reveal the Plotinian doctrine from this same point of view. Therefore, the systematic side of Plotinus’ thought (...)
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  12. La "buena muerte" en el pensamiento y en la vida de San Agustín.Guillermo Pons Pons - 2004 - Revista Agustiniana 45 (136):85-114.
     
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  13. El martirio y la gloria de San Lorenzo en los Sermones de San Agustín y San Máximo.Guillermo Pons Pons - 2011 - Ciudad de Dios 224 (2):283-297.
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  14.  19
    Verbs, Bones, and Brains: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Human Nature.Agustin Fuentes & Aku Visala (eds.) - 2016 - Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press.
    Introduction: The many faces of human nature / Agustín Fuentes and Aku Visala Chapter 1. Off human nature / Jonathan Marks. Response I. On your marks... get set, we’re off human nature / James M. Calcagno ; Response II. Rethinking human nature : comments on Jonathan Marks’s anti-essentialism / Phillip R. Sloan ; Response III. Off human nature and on human culture : the importance of the concept of culture to science and society / Robert Sussman and Linda Sussman (...)
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  15. El solsticio de invierno y la fiesta de Navidad en los sermones de San Agustín.Guillermo Pons Pons - 2008 - Revista Agustiniana 49 (150):915-925.
     
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  16. La Eucaristía en el ministerio y en los escritos de San Agustín.Guillermo Pons Pons - 2010 - Revista Agustiniana 51 (155):497-518.
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  17. La naturaleza y el cultivo de la tierra en los comentarios de San Agustín al libro del Génesis.Guillermo Pons Pons - 2002 - Revista Agustiniana 43 (131):283-307.
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  18.  7
    Agustín y la unidad.Mary T. Clark - 1989 - Augustinus 34 (135-136):293-304.
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  19.  17
    El humanismo cristiano de san Agustín.Mary T. Clark - 2002 - Augustinus 47 (186-87):333-361.
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  20.  5
    ¿Fue san Agustín voluntarista?Mary T. Clark & P. Merino - 1986 - Augustinus 31 (121-122):33-39.
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  21.  30
    A chasm or harmony between imagination and reason? A critical examination of Religionskritik Spinozas by Leo Strauss................ Agustín VOLCO-Guillermo SIBILIA Thomas Hobbes and Sigmund Freud: two thinkers of (dis) order. [REVIEW]Ariana Reano, Daniel Blanch, Demetrio CAStRO, Laura Adrián-Lara & BOOk CRItIqUES - 2009 - Foro Interno. Anuario de Teoría Política 9.
  22.  8
    La teoría del lenguaje interior en san Agustín y en Guillermo de Occam.Bruce S. Bubacz - 1985 - Augustinus 30 (119-120):383-391.
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  23.  32
    ¿ Abismo o armonía entre la imaginación y la razón? Una aproxi-mación crítica a la Religionskritik Spinozas de Leo Strauss........ Agustín VOLCO-Guillermo SIBILIA Thomas Hobbes y Sigmund Freud: pensadores del (des) orden..... [REVIEW]Ariana Reano, Daniel Blanch, Demetrio CAStRO & Laura Adrián-Lara - 2009 - Foro Interno. Anuario de Teoría Política 9.
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  24. Libertarian Accounts of Free Will.Randolph Clarke - 2003 - New York, US: Oxford University Press USA.
    This comprehensive study offers a balanced assessment of libertarian accounts of free will. Bringing to bear recent work on action, causation, and causal explanation, Clarke defends a type of event-causal view from popular objections concerning rationality and diminished control. He subtly explores the extent to which event-causal accounts can secure the things for the sake of which we value free will, judging their success here to be limited. Clarke then sets out a highly original agent-causal account, one that (...)
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  25. The Multiple Realizability of Biological Individuals.Ellen Clarke - 2013 - Journal of Philosophy 110 (8):413-435.
    Biological theory demands a clear organism concept, but at present biologists cannot agree on one. They know that counting particular units, and not counting others, allows them to generate explanatory and predictive descriptions of evolutionary processes. Yet they lack a unified theory telling them which units to count. In this paper, I offer a novel account of biological individuality, which reconciles conflicting definitions of ‘organism’ by interpreting them as describing alternative realisers of a common functional role, and then defines individual (...)
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  26. The Legacy of Skepticism.Thompson Clarke - 1972 - Journal of Philosophy 69 (20):754.
  27.  34
    The Correspondence of Samuel Clarke and Anthony Collins, 1707-08.Samuel Clarke & Anthony Collins (eds.) - 2011 - Peterborough, CA: Broadview Press.
    An important work in the debate between materialists and dualists, the public correspondence between Anthony Collins and Samuel Clarke provided the framework for arguments over consciousness and personal identity in eighteenth-century Britain. In Clarke's view, mind and consciousness are so unified that they cannot be compounded into wholes or divided into parts, so mind and consciousness must be distinct from matter. Collins, by contrast, was a perceptive advocate of a materialist account of mind, who defended the possibility that (...)
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  28.  60
    The Leibniz-Clarke correspondence: together with extracts from Newton's Principia and Opticks.Samuel Clarke - 1956 - New York: Barnes & Noble. Edited by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Isaac Newton & H. G. Alexander.
    This book presents extracts from Leibniz's letters to Newtonian scientist Samuel Clarke.
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  29. Objectivity and reliability.Justin Clarke-Doane - 2017 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 47 (6):841-855.
    Scanlon’s Being Realistic about Reasons (BRR) is a beautiful book – sleek, sophisticated, and programmatic. One of its key aims is to demystify knowledge of normative and mathematical truths. In this article, I develop an epistemological problem that Scanlon fails to explicitly address. I argue that his “metaphysical pluralism” can be understood as a response to that problem. However, it resolves the problem only if it undercuts the objectivity of normative and mathematical inquiry.
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  30. Debunking and Dispensability.Justin Clarke-Doane - 2016 - In Uri D. Leibowitz & Neil Sinclair (eds.), Explanation in Ethics and Mathematics: Debunking and Dispensability. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press UK.
    In his précis of a recent book, Richard Joyce writes, “My contention…is that…any epistemological benefit-of-the-doubt that might have been extended to moral beliefs…will be neutralized by the availability of an empirically confirmed moral genealogy that nowhere…presupposes their truth.” Such reasoning – falling under the heading “Genealogical Debunking Arguments” – is now commonplace. But how might “the availability of an empirically confirmed moral genealogy that nowhere… presupposes” the truth of our moral beliefs “neutralize” whatever “epistemological benefit-of-the-doubt that might have been extended (...)
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  31. Free Will and Agential Powers.Randolph Clarke & Thomas Reed - 2015 - Oxford Studies in Agency and Moral Responsibility 3:6-33.
    Free will is often said—by compatibilists and incompatibilists alike—to be a power (or complex of powers) of agents. This paper offers proposals for, and examines the prospects of, a powers-conception of free will that takes the powers in question to be causal dispositions. A difficulty for such an account stems from the idea that when one exercises free will, it is up to oneself whether one wills to do this or that. The paper also briefly considers whether a powers-conception that (...)
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  32. Number nativism.Sam Clarke - 2025 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 110 (1):226-252.
    Number Nativism is the view that humans innately represent precise natural numbers. Despite a long and venerable history, it is often considered hopelessly out of touch with the empirical record. I argue that this is a mistake. After clarifying Number Nativism and distancing it from related conjectures, I distinguish three arguments which have been seen to refute the view. I argue that, while popular, two of these arguments miss the mark, and fail to place pressure on Number Nativism. Meanwhile, a (...)
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  33. The Leibniz-Clarke correspondence.Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz & Samuel Clarke - 2007 - In Elizabeth Schmidt Radcliffe, Richard McCarty, Fritz Allhoff & Anand Vaidya (eds.), Late modern philosophy: essential readings with commentary. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
  34. The Linguistic Determination of Conscious Thought Contents.Agustín Vicente & Marta Jorba - 2017 - Noûs (3):737-759.
    In this paper we address the question of what determines the content of our conscious episodes of thinking, considering recent claims that phenomenal character individuates thought contents. We present one prominent way for defenders of phenomenal intentionality to develop that view and then examine ‘sensory inner speech views’, which provide an alternative way of accounting for thought-content determinacy. We argue that such views fare well with inner speech thinking but have problems accounting for unsymbolized thinking. Within this dialectic, we present (...)
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  35.  29
    The Ethics of Human Enhancement: Understanding the Debate.Steve Clarke, Julian Savulescu, Tony Coady, Alberto Giubilini & Sagar Sanyal (eds.) - 2016 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press UK.
    We humans can enhance some of our mental and physical abilities above the normal upper limits for our species with the use of particular drug therapies and medical procedures. We will be able to enhance many more of our abilities in more ways in the near future. Some commentators have welcomed the prospect of wide use of human enhancement technologies, while others have viewed it with alarm, and have made clear that they find human enhancement morally objectionable. The Ethics of (...)
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  36. Seedtime of Reform: American Social Service and Social Action, 1918-1933.Clarke A. Chambers - 1965 - Science and Society 29 (4):448-453.
     
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  37.  14
    The Belief in Progress in Twentieth-Century America.Clarke A. Chambers - 1958 - Journal of the History of Ideas 19 (2):197.
  38. Replies to Carroll, Horwich and McGrath.Justin Clarke-Doane - forthcoming - Analysis.
    I am grateful to Sean Carroll, Paul Horwich, and Sarah McGrath for their stimulating responses to Morality and Mathematics (M&M). Their arguments concern the reality of unapplied mathematics, the practical import of moral facts, and the deliberative and explanatory roles of evaluative theories. In what follows, I address their responses, as well as some broader issues.
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  39.  24
    Minorities in a model for opinion formation.M. F. Laguna, Guillermo Abramson & Damián H. Zanette - 2004 - Complexity 9 (4):31-36.
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  40. Précis of Morality and Mathematics.Justin Clarke-Doane - forthcoming - Analysis.
  41. How to define levels of explanation and evaluate their indispensability.Christopher Clarke - 2017 - Synthese 194 (6).
    Some explanations in social science, psychology and biology belong to a higher level than other explanations. And higher explanations possess the virtue of abstracting away from the details of lower explanations, many philosophers argue. As a result, these higher explanations are irreplaceable. And this suggests that there are genuine higher laws or patterns involving social, psychological and biological states. I show that this ‘abstractness argument’ is really an argument schema, not a single argument. This is because the argument uses the (...)
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  42. Preferences and Positivist Methodology in Economics.Christopher Clarke - 2016 - Philosophy of Science 83 (2):192-212.
    I distinguish several doctrines that economic methodologists have found attractive, all of which have a positivist flavour. One of these is the doctrine that preference assignments in economics are just shorthand descriptions of agents' choice behaviour. Although most of these doctrines are problematic, the latter doctrine about preference assignments is a respectable one, I argue. It doesn't entail any of the problematic doctrines, and indeed it is warranted independently of them.
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  43.  97
    Descartes' Philosophy of Science.Desmond M. Clarke - 1982 - Manchester: Pennsylvania State University Press.
    This major new study of Descartes explores a number of key issues, including his use of experience and reason in science; the metaphysical foundations of Cartesian science; the Cartesian concept of explanation and proof; and an empiricist interpretation of the _Regulae_ and the _Discourse_. Dr. Clarke argues that labels such as empiricism and rationalism are useless for understanding Descartes because, at least in his scientific methodology, he is very much an Aristotelian for whom reflection on ordinary experience is the (...)
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  44. Is Blameworthiness Terminable?Randolph Clarke - forthcoming - Philosophical Quarterly.
    Benjamin Matheson has recently argued that blameworthiness is terminable: in at least some cases, one’s blameworthiness for a given offense can be diminished or even eliminated. Although Matheson presents a forceful challenge to those who deny this view—interminability theorists, he calls them—he misconstrues their position and fails to come to grips with several considerations that favor it. This paper aims to clarify key aspects of the debate and defend the claim that blameworthiness is interminable.
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  45. Causation, norms, and omissions: A study of causal judgments.Randolph Clarke, Joshua Shepherd, John Stigall, Robyn Repko Waller & Chris Zarpentine - 2015 - Philosophical Psychology 28 (2):279-293.
    Many philosophical theories of causation are egalitarian, rejecting a distinction between causes and mere causal conditions. We sought to determine the extent to which people's causal judgments discriminate, selecting as causes counternormal events—those that violate norms of some kind—while rejecting non-violators. We found significant selectivity of this sort. Moreover, priming that encouraged more egalitarian judgments had little effect on subjects. We also found that omissions are as likely as actions to be judged as causes, and that counternormative selectivity appears to (...)
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  46. Some Theses on Desert.Randolph Clarke - 2013 - Philosophical Explorations 16 (2):153-64.
    Consider the idea that suffering of some specific kind is deserved by those who are guilty of moral wrongdoing. Feeling guilty is a prime example. It might be said that it is noninstrumentally good that one who is guilty feel guilty (at the right time and to the right degree), or that feeling guilty (at the right time and to the right degree) is apt or fitting for one who is guilty. Each of these claims constitutes an interesting thesis about (...)
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  47. The Evidence that Evidence-based Medicine Omits.Brendan Clarke, Donald Gillies, Phyllis Illari, Federica Russo & Jon Williamson - unknown
    According to current hierarchies of evidence for EBM, evidence of correlation (e.g., from RCTs) is always more important than evidence of mechanisms when evaluating and establishing causal claims. We argue that evidence of mechanisms needs to be treated alongside evidence of correlation. This is for three reasons. First, correlation is always a fallible indicator of causation, subject in particular to the problem of confounding; evidence of mechanisms can in some cases be more important than evidence of correlation when assessing a (...)
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  48. Chomskyan Arguments Against Truth-Conditional Semantics Based on Variability and Co-predication.Agustín Vicente - 2019 - Erkenntnis 86 (4):919-940.
    In this paper I try to show that semantics can explain word-to-world relations and that sentences can have meanings that determine truth-conditions. Critics like Chomsky typically maintain that only speakers denote, i.e., only speakers, by using words in one way or another, represent entities or events in the world. However, according to their view, individual acts of denotations are not explained just by virtue of speakers’ semantic knowledge. Against this view, I will hold that, in the typical cases considered, semantic (...)
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  49.  19
    What environmental problem are we narrating? The epistemological impoverishment of intergovernmental organizations in contrast to disturbance ecology.Matias Lamberti, Guillermo Folguera, Tomás Emilio Busan, Gabriela Klier & Federico di Pasquo - 2023 - Principia: An International Journal of Epistemology 27 (3):475-496.
    Since its emergence, the contemporary environmental problem has become an object of analysis and intervention both for ecology (area of biology) and for different intergovernmental organizations with a global reach. In both fields, a series of conceptual frameworks have been developed aimed at addressing ecological changes, that is, those alterations that affect units that are the object of study of ecology. The aim of this paper is to clarify and contrast the ways in which disturbance ecology (a recent field within (...)
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  50. Conspiracy Theories and the Internet: Controlled Demolition and Arrested Development.Steve Clarke - 2007 - Episteme 4 (2):167-180.
    Abstract Following Clarke (2002), a Lakatosian approach is used to account for the epistemic development of conspiracy theories. It is then argued that the hypercritical atmosphere of the internet has slowed down the development of conspiracy theories, discouraging conspiracy theorists from articulating explicit versions of their favoured theories, which could form the hard core of Lakatosian research pro grammes. The argument is illustrated with a study of the “controlled demolition” theory of the collapse of three towers at the World (...)
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