Results for 'Joel Rives'

972 found
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  1.  32
    The Defence of the Ant: Work, Life and Utopia.Joel Rives - 1984 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 14 (4):617 - 629.
    It was the middle of winter now and the Grasshopper was long dead. Skepticus and Prudence, being not quite grasshoppers had retreated into a burrow dug by Prudence and stocked by her for the winter.Unfortunately, Skepticus had taken the Grasshopper far too seriously and had not assisted Prudence in laying up for winter. Thus, by the time January came around, the cupboard was bare and the insects once again had to choose between going the way of the Grasshopper and another (...)
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  2. Autonomy, Vulnerability, Recognition, and Justice.Joel Anderson & Axel Honneth - 2005 - In John Philip Christman & Joel Anderson, Autonomy and the Challenges to Liberalism: New Essays. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 127-149.
    One of liberalism’s core commitments is to safeguarding individuals’ autonomy. And a central aspect of liberal social justice is the commitment to protecting the vulnerable. Taken together, and combined with an understanding of autonomy as an acquired set of capacities to lead one’s own life, these commitments suggest that liberal societies should be especially concerned to address vulnerabilities of individuals regarding the development and maintenance of their autonomy. In this chapter, we develop an account of what it would mean for (...)
     
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  3. The Ways of Desire: New Essays in Philosophical Psychology on the Concept of Wanting.Joel Marks (ed.) - 1986 - Precedent.
    In this way a domain for the theory of desire will be sketched out. One preliminary clarification: In the beginning is the word, "desire. ...
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  4. Sailing Alone: Teenage Autonomy and Regimes of Childhood.Joel Anderson & Rutger Claassen - 2012 - Law and Philosophy 31 (5):495-522.
    Should society intervene to prevent the risky behavior of precocious teenagers even if it would be impermissible to intervene with adults who engage in the same risky behavior? The problem is well illustrated by the legal case of the 13-year-old Dutch girl Laura Dekker, who set out in 2009 to become the youngest person ever to sail around the world alone, succeeding in January 2012. In this paper we use her case as a point of entry for discussing the fundamental (...)
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  5. Regimes of Autonomy.Joel Anderson - 2014 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 17 (3):355-368.
    Like being able to drive a car, being autonomous is a socially attributed, claimed, and contested status. Normative debates about criteria for autonomy (and what autonomy entitles one to) are best understood, not as debates about what autonomy, at core, really is, but rather as debates about the relative merits of various possible packages of thresholds, entitlements, regulations, values, and institutions. Within different “regimes” of autonomy, different criteria for (degrees of) autonomy become authoritative. Neoliberal, solidaristic, and perfectionist regimes entail conflicting (...)
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  6. Ethics without morals: in defence of amorality.Joel Marks - 2013 - London ;: Routledge.
    A defense of amorality as both philosophically justified and practicably livable. While in synch with their underlying aim of grounding human existence in a naturalistic metaphysics, this book takes both the new atheism and the mainstream of modern ethical philosophy to task for maintaining a complacent embrace of morality. It advocates instead replacing the language of morality with a language of desire. The book begins with an analysis of what morality is and then argues that the concept is not instantiated (...)
  7.  70
    Veterinarian, Heal Thy Profession!Joel Marks - 2011 - Philosophy Now 85 (85):47.
    In apparent conflict with the popular conception of veterinarians as animals' best friends, the Veterinarian's Oath, as well as its clarifying Principles of Animal Welfare, imply that animal welfare is entirely derivative from human welfare. This article calls for an explicit alignment of the Oath and Principles with the priority of nonhuman animals.
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  8. Disputing Autonomy: Second-Order Desires and the Dynamics of Ascribing Autonomy.Joel Anderson - 2008 - SATS 9 (1):7-26.
    In this paper, I examine two versions of the so-called “hierarchical” approach to personal autonomy, based on the notion of “second-order desires”. My primary concern will be with the question of whether these approaches provide an adequate basis for understanding the dynamics of autonomy-ascription. I begin by distinguishing two versions of the hierarchical approach, each representing a different response to the oft-discussed “regress” objection. I then argue that both “structural hierarchicalism” (e.g., Frankfurt, Bratman) and “procedural hierarchicalism” (e.g., Dworkin, Christman, Mele) (...)
     
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  9.  28
    The Heart Has Its Reasons.Joel Marks - 2011 - Philosophy Now 83:39-39.
  10. “There’s No Room in the Worksheet” and Other Fallacies about Professional Ethics in the Curriculum.Joel Marks - 2004 - Teaching Ethics 4 (2):77-88.
    Despite the apparently universal recognition of a pervasive "success at any cost" amorality in the professional and business world, and the need to do something about it, attempts to establish a campus-wide professional ethics curriculum continue to encounter resistance at many colleges and universities. The main stumbling block seems to be a purely practical one: How do you fit a course on professional ethics into academic worksheets that are already over-crowded with essential technical courses in every professional discipline? I maintain, (...)
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  11.  12
    Shoulda Woulda Coulda: Wither Morality?Joel Marks - 2011 - Philosophy Now 82:47-47.
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  12. Autonomy gaps as a social pathology: Ideologiekritik beyond paternalism.Joel Anderson - 2009 - In Axel Honneth & Rainer Forst, Sozialphilosophie und Kritik. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp.
    From the outset, critical social theory has sought to diagnose people’s participation in their own oppression, by revealing the roots of irrational and self-undermining choices in the complex interplay between human nature, social structures, and cultural beliefs. As part of this project, Ideologiekritik has aimed to expose faulty conceptions of this interplay, so that the objectively pathological character of what people are “freely” choosing could come more clearly into view. The challenge, however, has always been to find a way of (...)
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  13. Grounding and the luck objection to agent-causal libertarianism.Joel Archer - 2022 - Philosophical Studies 179 (5):1763-1775.
    Many philosophers think there is a luck problem confronting libertarian models of free will. If free actions are undetermined, then it seems to be a matter of chance or luck that they occur—so the objection goes. Agent-causal libertarians have responded to this objection by asserting that free actions, in their essence, involve a direct causal relation between agents and the events they cause. So, free actions are not lucky after all. Not everyone, however, is convinced by this response. Al Mele (...)
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  14. Voting Advice Applications and Political Theory: Citizenship, Participation and Representation.Joel Anderson & Thomas Fossen - 2014 - In Diego Garzia & Stefan Marschall, Matching Voters with Parties and Candidates: Voting Advice Applications in a Comparative Perspective. Ecpr Press. pp. 217-226.
    Voting Advice Applications (VAAs) are interactive online tools designed to assist voters by improving the basis on which they decide how to vote. In recent years, they have been widely adopted, but their design is the subject of ongoing and often heated criticism. Most of these debates focus on whether VAAs accurately measure the standpoints of political parties and the preferences of users and on whether they report valid results while avoiding political bias. It is generally assumed that if their (...)
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  15.  23
    Miracles, Causation, and Critical Biblical Scholarship.Joel Archer - 2023 - Philosophia Christi 25 (2):249-258.
    Most historical Jesus scholars agree that Jesus was regarded by his contemporaries as a great miracle worker. However, many of these same scholars deny that they can pronounce on the truth of the miracle stories as historians. There are at least two arguments for this position. One is based on an alleged empirical constraint on historical practice, which excludes divine causation. The other argument is rooted in the presumption that it is anachronistic to impose modern understandings of miracles on ancient (...)
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  16.  31
    Prediction, Precision, and Practical Experience: the Hippocratics on technē.Joel E. Mann - 2008 - Apeiron 41 (2):89-122.
  17.  26
    Aner Govrin, Ethics and Attachment: How We Make Moral Judgment.Joel Backström - 2021 - Journal of Moral Philosophy 18 (5):527-530.
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  18.  81
    Battling over political and cultural power during the Chinese Cultural Revolution.Joel Andreas - 2002 - Theory and Society 31 (4):463-519.
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  19.  21
    The Passivity of Self-Satisfaction: A Critical Re-appraisal of Harry Frankfurt’s Normatively Thin Ontology of Autonomy.Joel Anderson - 2021 - In James F. Childress & Michael Quante, Thick (Concepts of) Autonomy: Personal Autonomy in Ethics and Bioethics. Springer Verlag. pp. 17-31.
    This chapter attempts to “re-boot” the discussion of Harry Frankfurt’s approach to autonomy, in the service of a new diagnosis of the strengths and weaknesses of his satisfaction-based ontology of the will. Criticisms of Frankfurt’s work have tended to focus on a lack of normative foundations, often missing Frankfurt’s aim of shifting discussions of autonomy towards a focus on avoiding passivity in how one cares about what one cares about, while still acknowledging the central role of volitional necessity and, especially, (...)
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  20.  12
    Philosophy of Mind and/as the Repression of Interpersonal Understanding.Joel Backström - 2019 - In Joel Backström, Hannes Nykänen, Niklas Toivakainen & Thomas Wallgren, Moral Foundations of Philosophy of Mind. Springer Verlag. pp. 231-266.
    This chapter argues that traditional philosophy of mind turns on misrepresenting the I-you-relationship as a subject-object-relationship. This leads to interminable paradox and makes accounting for interpersonal understanding, the heart of human intelligibility, impossible. Detailing the absurdity of inferentialist accounts of understanding others, I show how this understanding is an essentially moral matter, that is, in itself a form of openness to and engaged caring for the other. For example, the very perception of suffering as suffering is already a form of (...)
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  21. Natural law: five views.Michael Pakaluk, Joel D. Biermann, W. Bradford Littlejohn, Melissa Moschella & Peter J. Leithart - 2025 - Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan Academic. Edited by Ryan T. Anderson & Andrew T. Walker.
    The story of "natural law" - the idea that God has written a law on the human heart so that ethical norms derive from human nature - in twentieth-century Protestant ethics is one of rejection and resurgence. For half a century, luminaries like Karl Barth, Carl F. H. Henry, and Cornelius Van Til cast a shadow over natural law moral reflection because of its putative link to natural theology, autonomous reason, associations with Catholic theology, and ethical witness devoid of special (...)
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  22.  13
    Plato’s Rivalry with Medicine: A Struggle and its Dissolution.Joel E. Mann - 2015 - Ancient Philosophy 35 (2):439-446.
  23.  47
    All Things Never Change.Joel E. Mann - 2019 - Philosophical Inquiry 43 (1):72-97.
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  24.  42
    Nietzsche’s Interest and Enthusiasm for the Greek Sophists.Joel E. Mann - 2003 - Nietzsche Studien 32 (1):406-428.
  25.  18
    Production and Consumption of Science in a Global Context.Joel Rolim Mancia & Denise Gastaldo - 2004 - Nursing Inquiry 11 (2):65-66.
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  26. Richard Bett, ed. and trans. Sextus Empiricus: Against the Logicians Reviewed by.Joel E. Mann - 2007 - Philosophy in Review 27 (2):91-93.
     
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  27. An Amoral Manifesto Part II.Joel Marks - 2010 - Philosophy Now (81):23-26.
  28. An Answer to Pilate.Joel Marks - 2014 - Philosophy Now 100:32-33.
     
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  29.  59
    A is for Animal: The Animal User’s Lexicon.Joel Marks - 2015 - Between the Species 18 (1):2-26.
    In Lewis Carroll’s Through the Looking Glass, Humpty Dumpty explains to Alice, “When I use a word … it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.” When Alice questions this license, Humpty Dumpty replies, “The question is … which is to be master — that’s all.” The present article offers a lexicon of words that are used by human beings, however unintentionally or ingenuously, to maintain their mastery or prerogatives over other animals. A motivating (...)
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  30.  83
    Accept No Substitutes: The Ethics of Alternatives.Joel Marks - 2012 - Hastings Center Report 42 (s1):S16-S18.
    It is common to argue that animal experimentation is justified by its essential contribution to the advancement of medical science. But note that this argument actually contains two premises: an empirical claim that animal experimentation is essential to the advancement of medical science and an ethical claim that if research is essential to the advancement of medical science, then it is justified. Both claims are open to challenge, but in the logic of the case, only one of them needs to (...)
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  31.  13
    Bad faith: a philosophical memoir.Joel Marks - 2013 - [Place of publication not identified]: [CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform].
    An autobiographical account of a philosopher's fall from innocence, Bad Faith relates the author's discovery of the God-like nature of morality and his realization that a self-styled atheist such as himself could therefore no longer believe in it. The book describes in detail what the author's life was like both immediately before and immediately after this "anti-epiphany." Proceeding from secular morality to secular amorality, the transformation was every bit as traumatic for this earnest moralist as the loss of belief in (...)
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  32. Confessions of an Ex-Moralist.Joel Marks - 2011 - The New York Times.
  33.  33
    Desire: 30 Years Later.Joel Marks - 2012 - Philosophy Now 93:44-44.
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  34.  11
    Ethical Episodes: World Without Anger.Joel Marks - 2011 - Philosophy Now 84:53-53.
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  35. Innocent and Innocuous: The Case Against Animal Research.Joel Marks - 2010 - Between the Species (10):98-117.
    Animal research is a challenging issue for the animal advocate because of what, besides animal well-being, is considered to be at stake, namely, human health. This article seeks to vindicate the antivivisectionist position. The standard defense of animal research as promoting the overwhelming good of human health is refuted on both factual and logical, or normative-theoretical, grounds. The author then attempts to clinch the case by arguing that animal research violates a deontic principle. However, this principle falls to counterexample. The (...)
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  36.  58
    Idolatry In The New Testament.Joel Marcus - 2006 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 60 (2):152-164.
    The New Testament inherits its attitude toward idolatry from the Old Testament and early Judaism. In all three, idolatry is the primal sin and is connected with sexual immorality and avarice. Both Jesus, in his response to the question about tribute, and Paul,* in his treatment of food sacrificed to idols, reflect the conflict between revulsion against idolatry and the need to survive in an idolatrous world. Moreover, Paul and the Johannine literature respond to the Jewish charge that Christianity itself (...)
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  37.  49
    Integrating Oriental Philosophy into the Introductory Curriculum.Joel Marks - 1989 - Teaching Philosophy 12 (3):221-233.
  38.  34
    Moral Moments: Right by Definition.Joel Marks - 2001 - Philosophy Now 32:45-45.
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  39.  20
    Moral Moments: On the Other Hand.Joel Marks - 2005 - Philosophy Now 51:40-40.
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  40.  6
    Moral Moments.Joel Marks - 2008 - Philosophy Now 69:51-51.
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  41. Moral Moments: Apt Apologies.Joel Marks - 2000 - Philosophy Now 30:45-45.
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  42.  24
    Moral Moments: Am I a Plagiarist?Joel Marks - 2010 - Philosophy Now 78:48-48.
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  43. Moral Moments: Car Seats and the Absurd.Joel Marks - 2002 - Philosophy Now 38:51-51.
     
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  44.  19
    Moral Moments: Eight Years Old and Counting.Joel Marks - 2004 - Philosophy Now 46:45-45.
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  45.  15
    Moral Moments: Forever Now.Joel Marks - 2003 - Philosophy Now 41:49-49.
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  46.  7
    Moral Moments: Iatrogenic Torture.Joel Marks - 2008 - Philosophy Now 68:48-48.
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  47. Moral Moments: Kant By Default.Joel Marks - 2009 - Philosophy Now 73:41-41.
     
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  48. Moral Moments: Mysterious Loss, or Something About a Body.Joel Marks - 2009 - Philosophy Now 71:45-46.
     
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  49.  32
    Moral Moments: Man in the Middle.Joel Marks - 2009 - Philosophy Now 72:20-21.
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  50.  19
    Moral Moments: Philosophical Astronomy.Joel Marks - 2006 - Philosophy Now 58:48-49.
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