Results for 'Jay Szpilka'

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  1.  25
    ‘Yr Beast’: Gender Parrhesia and Punk Trans Womanhoods.Jay Szpilka - 2021 - Feminist Review 127 (1):119-134.
    While the subject of women’s activity in historical and contemporary punk scenes has attracted significant attention, the presence of trans women in punk has received comparatively little research, in spite of their increasing visibility and long history in punk. This article examines the conditions for trans women’s entrance in punk and the challenges and opportunities that it offers for their self-assertion. By linking Michel Foucault’s notion of parrhesia with the way trans women in punk do their gender, an attempt is (...)
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  2. Nagarjuna and the limits of thought.Jay L. Garfield & Graham Priest - 2003 - Philosophy East and West 53 (1):1-21.
    : Nagarjuna seems willing to embrace contradictions while at the same time making use of classic reductio arguments. He asserts that he rejects all philosophical views including his own-that he asserts nothing-and appears to mean it. It is argued here that he, like many philosophers in the West and, indeed, like many of his Buddhist colleagues, discovers and explores true contradictions arising at the limits of thought. For those who share a dialetheist's comfort with the possibility of true contradictions commanding (...)
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  3. The silent world of doctor and patient.Jay Katz - 1984 - Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
    In this eye-opening look at the doctor-patient decision-making process, physician and law professor Jay Katz examines the time-honored belief in the virtue of silent care and patient compliance. Historically, the doctor-patient relationship has been based on a one-way trust -- despite recent judicial attempts to give patients a greater voice through the doctrine of informed consent. Katz criticizes doctors for encouraging patients to relinquish their autonomy, and demonstrates the detrimental effect their silence has on good patient care. Seeing a growing (...)
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  4. The Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way:Nagarjuna's Mulamadhyamakakarika: Nagarjuna's Mulamadhyamakakarika.Jay L. Garfield - 1995 - Oxford University Press.
    For nearly two thousand years Buddhism has mystified and captivated both lay people and scholars alike. Seen alternately as a path to spiritual enlightenment, an system of ethical and moral rubrics, a cultural tradition, or simply a graceful philosophy of life, Buddhism has produced impassioned followers the world over. The Buddhist saint Nagarjuna, who lived in South India in approximately the first century CE, is undoubtedly the most important, influential, and widely studied Mahayana Buddhist philosopher. His many works include texts (...)
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  5.  52
    The Thinking Self.Jay F. Rosenberg - 1986 - Philadelphia: Philadephia: Temple University Press.
  6.  70
    Recognition and the moral nexus.R. Jay Wallace - 2021 - European Journal of Philosophy 29 (3):634-645.
    European Journal of Philosophy, Volume 29, Issue 3, Page 634-645, September 2021.
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  7.  23
    (1 other version)The hedgehog, the fox and the magister's pox: mending the gap between science and the humanities.Stephen Jay Gould - 2003 - London: Jonathan Cape.
    The Hedgehog, the Fox, and the Magister's Pox is a controversial discourse, rich with facts and observations gathered by one of the most erudite minds of our ...
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  8. Negation, ambiguity, and presupposition.Jay David Atlas - 1977 - Linguistics and Philosophy 1 (3):321 - 336.
    In this paper I argue for the Atlas-Kempson Thesis that sentences of the form The A is not B are not ambiguous but rather semantically general (Quine), non-specific (Zwicky and Sadock), or vague (G. Lakoff). This observation refutes the 1970 Davidson-Harman hypothesis that underlying structures, as full semantic representations, are logical forms. It undermines the conception of semantical presupposition, removes a support for the existence of truth-value gaps for presuppositional sentences (the remaining arguments for which are viciously circular), and lifts (...)
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  9. The myth of Jones and the mirror of nature: Reflections on introspection.Jay L. Garfield - 1989 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 50 (September):1-26.
  10. Message in the Bottle: The Constraints of Experimentation on Model Building.Jay Odenbaugh - 2006 - Philosophy of Science 73 (5):720-729.
    Some ecologists have argued that theoretical model building in population and community ecology has gone evidentially unconstrained. In the essay, I argue that "bottle experiments" offer ecological model building evidential constraints and illustrate this by considering work on chaotic models tested by the dynamics of flour beetles. Critics reply that these experiments are importantly unlike nonmanipulated natural systems and thus do not constitute genuine tests of the models. I conclude by considering two responses to this worry and a suggestion on (...)
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  11. The exaptive excellence of spandrels as a term and prototype.Stephen Jay Gould - unknown
    In 1979, Lewontin and I borrowed the archi- tectural term “spandrel” (using the pendentives of San Marco in Venice as an example) to designate the class of forms and spaces that arise as necessary byproducts of another decision in design, and not as adaptations for direct utility in them- selves. This proposal has generated a large literature featur- ing two critiques: (i) the terminological claim that the span- drels of San Marco are not true spandrels at all and (ii) the (...)
     
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  12. The Practice of Value.Joseph Raz & R. Jay Wallace - 2004 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 194 (3):358-359.
     
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  13.  30
    Conceptual foundations for multidisciplinary thinking.Stephen Jay Kline - 1995 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    Our current intellectual system provides us with a far more complete and accurate understanding of nature and ourselves than was available in any previous society. This gain in understanding has arisen from two sources: the use of the 'scientific method', and the breaking up of our intellectual enterprise into increasingly narrower disciplines and research programmes. However, we have failed to keep these narrow specialities connected to the intellectual enterprise as a whole. The author demonstrates that this causes a number of (...)
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  14. Time's Arrow, Time's Cycle: Myth and Metaphor in the Discovery of Geological Time.Stephen Jay Gould - 1988 - Journal of the History of Biology 21 (3):522-523.
  15.  11
    Reason, Emotion and Will.R. Jay Wallace - 1999 - Dartmouth Publishing Company.
    The moral strands of psychology are explored in this collection of essays.
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  16. The multidimensionality of empowerment : conceptual and empirical considerations.Jay Drydyk Alejandra Boni, Aurora Lopez-Fogues Alexandre Apsan Frediani & Melanie Walker - 2019 - In Lori Keleher & Stacy J. Kosko (eds.), Agency and Democracy in Development Ethics. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
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  17. Burke and Bonald: Paradigms of Late Eighteenth-Century Conservatism.W. Jay Reedy - 1981 - Historical Reflections 8 (2):69-93.
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  18. Why did Bodhidharma go to the east? Buddhism’s struggle with the mind in the world.Jay L. Garfield - 2006 - Sophia 45 (2):61-80.
    This question—why did Bodhidharma come from the West?— is ubiquitous in Chinese Ch’an Buddhist literature. Though some see it as an arbitrary question intended merely as an opener to obscure puzzles, I think it represents a genuine intellectual puzzle: Why did Bodhidharma come from theWest—that is, fromIndia? Why couldn’tChina with its rich literary and philosophical tradition have given rise to Buddhism? We will approach that question, but I prefer to do so backwards. I want to ask instead, “why was it (...)
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  19. What are negative existence statements about?Jay David Atlas - 1988 - Linguistics and Philosophy 11 (4):373 - 394.
  20.  58
    Zhang Zai's Cosmology of Qi/qi and the Refutation of Arrogant Anthropocentrism: Confucian Green Theory Illustrated.Joel Jay Kassiola - 2022 - Environmental Values 31 (5):533-554.
    This essay seeks to demonstrate the following: 1. the value of metaphysical cosmology to our relationship with nature, and to making policy about the environment; 2. the mistaken nature and harmful consequences of the hegemonic cosmology of anthropocentrism; 3. the possibility of Zhang Zai's Qi/qi Great Harmony cosmology as both the refutation of and replacement for anthropocentrism. The essay concludes that ultimate moral progress of expanding the self from the narrow and exclusionary views of anthropocentrism consists in cosmocentrism, or the (...)
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  21.  72
    The fallacies of flatness: Thomas Friedman's the world is flat.Kathleen Knight Abowitz & Jay Roberts - 2007 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 41 (3):471–481.
    Thomas Friedman’s best-selling The World is Flat has exerted much influence in the west by providing both an accessible analysis of globalisation and its economic and social effects, and a powerful cultural metaphor for globalisation. In this review, we more closely examine Friedman’s notion of the social contract, the moral centre of his hopeful vision of a globalised world. While Friedman’s social contract holds a more generous view of social and state obligation than his neoliberal economic analysis might otherwise allow, (...)
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  22. Where Faith and Morality Meet.John Jay Chapman - 1913 - Hibbert Journal 12:529.
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  23.  97
    Grelling’s Paradox.Jay Newhard - 2005 - Philosophical Studies 126 (1):1 - 27.
    Grelling’s Paradox is the paradox which results from considering whether heterologicality, the word-property which a designator has when and only when the designator does not bear the word-property it designates, is had by ‘ ȁ8heterologicality’. Although there has been some philosophical debate over its solution, Grelling’s Paradox is nearly uniformly treated as a variant of either the Liar Paradox or Russell’s Paradox, a paradox which does not present any philosophical challenges not already presented by the two better known paradoxes. The (...)
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  24. Not necessarily a wing.Stephen Jay Gould - manuscript
    rom Flesh Gordon to Alex in Wonderland , title parodies have been a stock-in-trade of low comedy. We may not anticipate a tactical similarity between the mayhem of Mad magazine's movie reviews and the titles of major scientific works, yet two important nineteenth-century critiques of Darwin parodied his most famous phrases in their headings.
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  25.  96
    Was the soviet union totalitarian? The view of soviet dissidents and the reformers of the gorbachev era.Jay Bergman - 1998 - Studies in East European Thought 50 (4):247-281.
    The article explains why Soviet dissidents and the reformers of the Gorbachev era chose to characterize the Soviet system as totalitarian. The dissidents and the reformers strongly disagreed among themselves about the origins of Soviet totalitarianism. But both groups stressed the effects of totalitarianism on the individual personality; in doing so, they revealed themselves to be the heirs of the tsarist intelligentsia. Although the concept of totalitarianism probably obscures more than it clarifies when it is applied to regimes like the (...)
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  26. Fictional objects in literature and mental representations.Jay E. Bachrach - 1991 - British Journal of Aesthetics 31 (2):134-139.
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  27.  64
    Why is there no category of the city in Hegel's aesthetics?Jay Lampert - 2001 - British Journal of Aesthetics 41 (3):312-324.
  28.  79
    Abstract: Scenario planning, art or science?Jay Ogilvy - 2005 - World Futures 61 (5):331 – 346.
    This article will argue that there is a science of scenario planning; or at least a logos, a logic, a scenariology. Scenario planning is not predictive. But a good set of scenarios, scientifically developed, can reliably and predictably change minds. Scenario planning is both art and science. In joining the club of the sciences, scenario planning calls for a new kind of membership, or a new kind of science, one that, following Stuart Kauffman, relies on the importance of story. Hegel (...)
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  29.  24
    The lessons of theory.Jay Parini - 1997 - Philosophy and Literature 21 (1):91-101.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Lessons of TheoryJay PariniOne does not have to look far these days to find someone bashing literary theory, and in some respects it deserves it. Joseph Epstein, for one, has almost never tired of picking away at the motives of those who engage in literary theory: “The major impulse of theory was suspicion,” he has said. “In this regard theory gave that portion of the professoriat who came (...)
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  30. (1 other version)Kantian schemata and the unity of perception.Jay F. Rosenberg - 1997 - In Language and Thought. Hawthorne: De Gruyter.
  31.  20
    One way of understanding time.Jay F. Rosenberg - 1972 - Philosophia 2 (4):283-301.
  32.  22
    Tensed discourse and the eliminability of tenses.Jay F. Rosenberg - 1966 - Philosophical Quarterly 16 (63):146-150.
  33.  35
    The Common Currency of Our Aesthetic Sensibility.Mark Johnson & Jay Schulkin - 2020 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 56 (3):326-348.
  34.  14
    The Practice of Value.R. Jay Wallace (ed.) - 2003 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    The Practice of Value is an exploration of a pervasive but puzzling aspect of our world: value. The starting-point is the Berkeley Tanner Lectures delivered in 2001 by the leading moral theorist Joseph Raz. His aim is to make sense of the dependence of value on social practice, without falling back on cultural relativism. The lectures are followed by discussions from three eminent philosophers, Christine Korsgaard, Robert Pippin, and Bernard Williams, and a response from Raz. The result is a fascinating (...)
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  35.  26
    Peirce's Graphs—The Continuity Interpretation.J. Jay Zeman - 1968 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 4 (3):144 - 154.
  36.  34
    Recognition: A Chapter in the History of European Ideas, by Axel Honneth.R. Jay Wallace - 2023 - Mind 132 (525):259-269.
    Axel Honneth has done more than any other philosopher to develop and explore the significance of recognition to our social relations. On the broadly Hegelian ap.
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  37.  13
    The Changing Clinical Trials Scene: The Role of the IRB.Shiela C. Mitchell & Jay Steingrub - 1988 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 10 (4):1.
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  38.  31
    An Indian global ethics initiative.Shashi Motilal & Jay Drydyk - 2019 - Journal of Global Ethics 15 (1):1-5.
    In what sense must global ethics be global? In one sense, it must deal with global issues. In another, it must not be parochial but inclusive of normative views from around the world. So far, global ethics has met the first standard much better than the second. Authors based in the global South contribute approximately 5% of the internationally published research on global ethics. With this in mind, the co-editors of this special issue sought to bring more perspectives, experiences, and (...)
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  39.  4
    Desire and reason.Kenneth Jay Spalding - 1922 - London,: K. Paul, Trench, Trubner & co., ltd.;.
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  40.  15
    Functional Differential Geometry.Gerald Jay Sussman, Jack Wisdom & Will Farr - 2013 - MIT Press.
    An explanation of the mathematics needed as a foundation for a deep understanding of general relativity or quantum field theory.
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  41.  60
    Lemmon-style bases for the systems s1⚬ - s4⚬.J. Jay Zeman - 1968 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 33 (3):458 - 461.
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  42.  72
    The semisubstitutivity of strict implication.J. Jay Zeman - 1968 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 33 (3):462-464.
  43. Spiritual Care.Dietrich Bonhoeffer & Jay C. Rochelle - 1985
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  44. Approaches to the philosophy of religion.Daniel Jay Bronstein & Harold M. Schulweis - 1954 - New York,: Prentice-Hall. Edited by Harold M. Schulweis.
  45. Chapter Fifteen.W. Jay Dowling - 2001 - In E. Bruce Goldstein (ed.), Blackwell Handbook of Perception. Blackwell. pp. 469.
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  46. Junla: The First Woman Apostle.Eldon Jay Epp - 2005
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  47. The New Testament and Its Modern Interpreters.Eldon Jay Epp & George W. MacRae - 1989
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  48. Time Scales and the Year 2000.Stephen Jay Gould - 2000 - In Umberto Eco, Catherine David, Frédéric Lenoir & Jean-Philippe de Tonnac (eds.), Conversations About the End of Time: Umberto Eco, Stephen Jay Gould, Jean-Claude Carriere, Jean Delumeau. Fromm International.
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  49.  97
    Brandom's making it explicit: A first encounter.Review author[S.]: Jay F. Rosenberg - 1997 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 57 (1):179-187.
  50.  15
    African Philosophy, Search for Identity of.Jay M. Van Hook - 2021 - In V. Y. Mudimbe & Kasereka Kavwahirehi (eds.), Encyclopedia of African Religions and Philosophy. Springer Verlag. pp. 23-24.
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