Results for 'John A. Hunter'

981 found
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  1.  65
    Descartes’ Skepticism.John A. Hunter - 1977 - Southwestern Journal of Philosophy 8 (1):109-117.
  2.  12
    A Longitudinal Study of Mental Wellbeing in Students in Aotearoa New Zealand Who Transitioned Into PhD Study.Taylor Winter, Benjamin C. Riordan, John A. Hunter, Karen Tustin, Megan Gollop, Nicola Taylor, Jesse Kokaua, Richie Poulton & Damian Scarf - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Journal editorials, career features, and the popular press commonly talk of a graduate student mental health crisis. To date, studies on graduate student mental health have employed cross-sectional designs, limiting any causal conclusions regarding the relationship between entry into graduate study and mental health. Here, we draw on data from a longitudinal study of undergraduate students in Aotearoa New Zealand, allowing us to compare participants who did, and did not, transition into PhD study following the completion of their undergraduate degree. (...)
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  3.  29
    Science policy in the United States: The Legacy of John Quincy Adams. [REVIEW]A. Hunter Dupree - 1990 - Minerva 28 (3):259-271.
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  4.  29
    The We Believe of Philosophers: Implicit Epistemologies and Unexamined Psychologies.P. A. Mcgavin & T. A. Hunter - 2014 - International Philosophical Quarterly 54 (3):279-296.
    The ethical theory espoused by a philosopher is often dominated by certain implicit epistemological assumptions. These “ways of knowing” may in turn be dominated by personality preferences that give rise to certain preferred worldviews that undergird various philosophies. Such preferred worldviews are seen in We believe positions, stated or unstated. The meaning of these claims about the interconnections of unexamined assumptions and their philosophical implications may be seen through an example. This paper will examine certain crucial aspects of the thought (...)
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  5.  42
    Short notices.A. C. F. Beales, R. F. Dearden, W. B. Inglis, R. R. Dale, Gordon R. Cross, John Hayes, S. Leslie Hunter, Robert J. Hoare, M. F. Cleugh, T. Desmond Morrow, Dorothy A. Wakeford, W. H. Burston, P. H. J. H. Gosden, Evelyn E. Cowie, Kartick C. Mukherjee, J. M. Wilson, H. C. Barnard & David Johnston - 1968 - British Journal of Educational Studies 16 (1):98-112.
  6.  30
    Book Review Section. [REVIEW]William A. Hunter, Barbara A. Yates, John Harrison, Frederick E. Salzillo, Faustine Childress Jones, Joseph Kirschner, Betty Frankle Kirschner, Christopher J. Lucas, Harvey Neufeldt, Morris L. Bigge, Lois M. R. Louden & Richard W. Saxe - 1976 - Educational Studies 7 (2):201-224.
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  7.  84
    Human Nature in Nineteenth-Century British Novels: Doing the Math.Joseph Carroll, Jonathan Gottschall, John A. Johnson & Daniel J. Kruger - 2009 - Philosophy and Literature 33 (1):50-72.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Human Nature in Nineteenth-Century British Novels:Doing the MathJoseph Carroll, Jonathan Gottschall, John A. Johnson, and Daniel J. KrugerIThree broad ambitions animate this study. Building on research in evolutionary social science, we aimed (1) to construct a model of human nature—of motives, emotions, features of personality, and preferences in marital partners; (2) use that model to analyze some specific body of literary texts and the responses of readers to (...)
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  8.  16
    John Rawls and Christian Social Engagement: Justice as Unfairness.Matthew Arbo, Hunter Baker, Jerome C. Foss, Daniel Kelly, Joseph Knippenberg, Bryan McGraw, Matthew Parks, Karen Taliaferro, John Addison Teevan & Micah Watson (eds.) - 2014 - Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books.
    In this book, leading Christian political thinkers and practitioners critique the Rawlsian concepts of “justice as fairness” and “public reason” from the perspective of Christian political theory and practice. It provides a new level of analysis from Christian perspectives, including implications for such hot topics as the culture war.
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  9.  56
    Visioning Eternity: Aesthetics, Politics, and History in the Early Modern Noh Theater.Thomas D. Looser, John Timothy Wixted, Charlotte von Verschuer, Kristen Lee Hunter, Noel J. Pinnington, Livia Kohn, Eiichi Kawata, A. Robert Lee & Roald Knutsen - 2013 - Philosophy East and West 63 (2).
  10.  39
    A Scholar's Wittgenstein.John F. M. Hunter - 1978 - Philosophical Review 87 (2):259-274.
  11. Rasselas a Tale.Samuel Johnson & John Hunter - 1865 - Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, & Green.
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  12. Civic Apathy, a Sermon.John Hunter - 1905
     
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  13.  28
    Testing significance testing: A flawed defense.John E. Hunter - 1998 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (2):204-204.
    Most psychometricians believe that the significance test is counterproductive. I have read Chow's book to see whether it addresses or rebuts any of the key facts brought out by the psychometricians. The book is empty on this score; it is entirely irrelevant to the current debate. It presents nothing new and is riddled with errors.
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  14.  84
    Consciousness and Conceivability, a critical notice of John Perry's *Knowledge, Possibility and Consciousness*. [REVIEW]David A. Hunter - 2003 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 33 (2):285-304.
    The thesis that anything conceivable is possible plays a central role in philosophical debates about the self. Discussions about free will have focused, at least in the last hundred years, on whether a free yet determined action is conceivable. If it is, and if anything conceivable is possible, then a deterministic physics would by itself pose no obstacle to human freedom. Current debates about the nature and value of personal survival turn on whether it is conceivable for a person to (...)
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  15.  61
    The IKBALS project: Multi-modal reasoning in legal knowledge based systems. [REVIEW]John Zeleznikow, George Vossos & Daniel Hunter - 1993 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 2 (3):169-203.
    In attempting to build intelligent litigation support tools, we have moved beyond first generation, production rule legal expert systems. Our work integrates rule based and case based reasoning with intelligent information retrieval.When using the case based reasoning methodology, or in our case the specialisation of case based retrieval, we need to be aware of how to retrieve relevant experience. Our research, in the legal domain, specifies an approach to the retrieval problem which relies heavily on an extended object oriented/rule based (...)
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  16.  26
    A Disciplined Intelligence.Bruce Hunter & John King-Farlow - 1981 - Philosophical Books 22 (4):211-212.
  17.  28
    Between Philosophy and Social Science: Selected Early Writings.G. Frederick Hunter, Matthew S. Kramer & John Torpey (eds.) - 1993 - MIT Press.
    Max Horkheimer is well known as the director of the Frankfurt Institute for Social Research and as a sometime collaborator with Theodor Adorno, especially on their classic Dialectic of Enlightenment. These essays reveal another side of Horkheimer, focusing on his remarkable contributions to critical theory in the 1930s.Included are Horkheimer's inaugural address as director of the Institute, in which he outlines the interdisciplinary research program that would dominate the initial phase of the Frankfurt School, his first full monograph, and a (...)
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  18.  43
    Compliant Rebellion: The Vanguard in American Art: Essay ReviewThe Painted WordSocial Realism: Art as a WeaponThe New York School: A Cultural ReckoningMarxism and ArtTopics in Recent American Art since 1945Good Old ModernFrench Painting 1774-1830: The Age of RevolutionAesthetics and the Theory of CriticismThe Academy and French Painting in the Nineteenth Century. [REVIEW]John Adkins Richardson, Tom Wolfe, David Shapiro, Dore Ashton, Berel Lang, Forrest Williams, Lawrence Alloway, Russell Lynes, Pierre Rosenberg, Frederick Cummings, Anoine Schnapper, Robert Rosenblum, Arnold Isenberg, Albert Boime, Renato Poggioli, John Jacobus, Sam Hunter & Barbara Rose - 1976 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 10 (3/4):225.
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  19.  24
    The motley Forms of Life in the later Wittgenstein.John F. M. Hunter - 1993 - ProtoSociology 5:59-71.
    In this paper; having somewhat arbitrarily adopted a general line of interpretation of Wittgenstein on forms of life in which the word ’life' is taken in a biological sense, I try to work out ways of being more specific than that, which (a) are philosophically interesting, (b) are consistent with Wittgenstein's uses of the expression form of life' and with other remarks of his that seem closely connected, and (c) that take seriously both his disavowal of THESES in philosophy and (...)
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  20.  28
    Wittgenstein on Inner Processes and Outward Criteria.John Hunter - 1977 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 7 (4):805 - 817.
    Wittgenstein's dictum in 580 of Philosophical Investigations, ‘An “inner process” stands in need of outward criteria’, is one of his most frequently mentioned remarks, and is largely treated as a particularly clear and unproblematic statement, at least as Wittgenstein's sayings go. When anyone finds it unproblematic, he naturally does not say what he takes it to mean; but if it is as mystifying as I will claim, and if its meaning is as well concealed as I will suggest, it is (...)
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  21.  18
    Defining area at risk and its effect in catastrophe loss estimation: a dasymetric mapping approach.Keping Chen, John McAneney, Russell Blong, Roy Leigh, Laraine Hunter & Christina Magill - 2004 - In Antoine Bailly & Lay James Gibson (eds.), Applied Geography: A World Perspective. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 97-117.
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  22.  23
    Philosophy and the Darwinian Legacy.A. Richard Hunter - 1997 - Review of Metaphysics 51 (1):144-145.
    The philosophers who first confronted Darwin’s revolutionary ideas actively explored their philosophical implications. Darwin himself led off, in particular, by claiming that humans’ mental abilities evolved and that they have adaptive survival value for us. From Marx to Spencer, Bergson, William James, and on to John Dewey, diverse thinkers responded, pro and con. One might expect that this ferment would lead, among other things, to new insights in the fields of perception and of mind. Surely Darwin’s ideas would become (...)
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  23.  26
    The long-term effectiveness of cognitive behavior therapy for psychosis within a routine psychological therapies service.Emmanuelle Peters, Tessa Crombie, Deborah Agbedjro, Louise C. Johns, Daniel Stahl, Kathryn Greenwood, Nadine Keen, Juliana Onwumere, Elaine Hunter, Laura Smith & Elizabeth Kuipers - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  24.  42
    Science and Social Passion: The Case of Seventeenth-Century EnglandScience and Society in Restoration England.John Evelyn and His World. A BiographyWitch-Hunting, Magic and the New Philosophy. An Introduction to Debates of the Scientific Revolution, 1450-1750.The Reenchantment of the World.The Death of Nature. Women, Ecology, and the Scientific Revolution. [REVIEW]Margaret Jacob, Michael Hunter, John Bowle, Brian Easlea, Morris Berman & Carolyn Merchant - 1982 - Journal of the History of Ideas 43 (2):331.
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  25.  89
    Crime scene investigation and distributed cognition.Chris Baber, Paul Smith, James Cross, John E. Hunter & Richard McMaster - 2006 - Pragmatics and Cognition 14 (2):357-386.
    Crime scene investigation is a form of Distributed Cognition. The principal concept we explore in this paper is that of `resource for action'. It is proposed that crime scene investigation employs four primary resources-for-action: the environment, or scene itself, which affords particular forms of search and object retrieval; the retrieved objects, which afford translation into evidence; the procedures that guide investigation, which both constrain the search activity and also provide opportunity for additional activity; the narratives that different agents within the (...)
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  26. Are we jingling modern hunter-gatherers and early Homo sapiens?John Protzko - 2025 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 48:e15.
    Using modern hunter-gatherers to infer about early Homo sapiens only works if at least (a) modern hunter-gatherers represent an unbiased sample of humanity, and (b) modern hunter-gatherers act in ways similar to the behavior of early Homo sapiens. Both of these are false, leading to the problem of whether we can draw conclusions about early Homo sapiens from modern hunter-gatherers.
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  27.  20
    Concepts and interests in twentieth-century health policy: George Weisz: Chronic disease in the twentieth century: A history. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 2014, 328pp, $29.95 PB.Cecily Hunter - 2015 - Metascience 25 (1):71-74.
  28.  47
    Ambrosio, Franci J. Dante and Derrida Face to Face. Albany: SUNY Press, 2007. $75.00 Baggett, David and William A. Drrumin, eds. Hitchock and Philosophy: Dail M for Metaphysics. Chicago: Open Court, 2007. $17.95 pb. Bird, Colin. An Introduction to Political Philosophy. Cambridge Introductions to Philosophy. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2007. $24.99 pb. [REVIEW]Peg Birmingham, James Campbell, Maria C. Cimitile, Elian P. Miller, Conal Condren, Stephen Gaukroger, Ian Hunter, John W. Cooper & M. I. Ada - forthcoming - Philosophy Today.
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  29.  16
    John hunter and John Dolittle.László A. Magyar - 1994 - Journal of Medical Humanities 15 (4):217-220.
  30.  39
    Whither editing?Michael Hunter - 2003 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 34 (4):805-820.
    Eric G. Forbes, Lesley Murdin, & Frances Willmoth, volume 2, 1682–1703, volume 3, 1703–1719; Institute of Physics Publishing, Bristol & Philadephia, 1997, 2002, pp. xlvii+1095, lxvi+1038, Price £199 each hardback, ISBN 0-7503-0391-3, 0-7503-0763-3The correspondence of John Wallis, volume 1 Philip Beeley, & Christoph J. Scriba, with the assistance of Uwe Mayer and Siegmund Probst; Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2003, pp. xlvii+651, Price £120 hardback, ISBN 0-19-851066-7 The Hartlib Papers. Second edition. A complete text and image database of the papers (...)
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  31.  21
    Constructive Agents Under Duress: Alternatives to the Structural, Political, and Agential Inadequacies of Past Theologies of Nonviolent Peacebuilding Efforts.Janna L. Hunter-Bowman - 2018 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 38 (2):149-168.
    This essay explores the viability of theologies of nonviolent peacebuilding through reflection on constructive agents under duress. John Howard Yoder’s messianic theology was once a default model of peacebuilding in Christian ethics, but he mixes eschatologies, with problematic results. This essay extends insights from participant observation in Colombia to suggest that if we relate distinct accounts of messianic and gradual eschatologies without mixing them, we articulate a relationship between church and state that is fruitful for theological peacebuilding. This relationship (...)
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  32.  46
    Essay review The editor in the republic of letters Eric G. Forbes, Lesley Murdin and Francis Willmoth(eds.), The Correspondence of John Flamsteed, First Astronomer Royal. Volume 1: 1666–1682. Bristol and Philadelphia: Institute of Physics Publishing, 1995. Pp. xlix+955. ISBN 0-7503-0147-3. £140.00, $280.00. Heinz-Jurgen Hess, James G. O'Hara and Herbert Breger(eds.), Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz: Sämtliche Schriften und Briefe. Dritte Reihe, Mathematischer, naturwissenschaftlicher und technischer Briefwechsel: Volume 3, 1680–1683; Volume 4, 1683–1690. Berlin: Akademie Verlag, 1991, 1995. Pp. lxx+895; lxvi+747. ISBN 3-05-000766-4, DM 490.00 (Volume 3); 3-05-002602-2, DM 490.00 (Volume 4) (series ISBN: 3-05-000075-9). Wilhelm Schmidt-Biggemann(ed.), Samuel Pufendorf. Gesammelte Werke, Band 1: Briefwechsel(ed. Detlef Döring). Berlin: Akademie Verlag, 1996. Pp. xxix+453. ISBN 3-05-001920-4. DM 298.00. [REVIEW]Michael Hunter & Malcolm De Mowbray - 1997 - British Journal for the History of Science 30 (2):221-225.
    The editing of the correspondence of major figures in intellectual history is an essential scholarly activity. Yet in this country in recent years it has neither been the priority it should be, nor has it received the support that it deserves. Of course there have been exceptions to this, perhaps notably – for the early modern period – the epic one-man effort of Esmond de Beer in his later years in producing The Correspondence of John Locke (though this regrettably, (...)
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  33.  6
    A Study in Social Economics: The Hunter River Valley. [REVIEW]John Anderson - 1927 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 5 (3):233.
  34.  26
    Michael Hunter , Letters and Papers of Robert Boyle: A Guide to the Manuscripts and Microfilm. Collections from the Royal Society. Bethesda, Maryland: University Publications of America, 1992. Pp. xlix + 90. ISBN 1-55655-217-3. No price given. - Peter Jones , Sir Isaac Newton: A Catalogue of Manuscripts and Papers Collected and Published on Microfilm by Chadwyck-Healey. Cambridge: Chadwyck-Healey, 1991. Pp. xi + 148. ISBN 0-85964-226-7. £50.00. [REVIEW]John Henry - 1994 - British Journal for the History of Science 27 (1):115-116.
  35.  67
    Seeing dimensionally.J. F. M. Hunter - 1987 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 17 (3):553-566.
    John Locke:When we set before our eyes a round globe of uniform colour, v.g. gold, alabaster or jet, it is certain that the idea thereby imprinted in our mind is of a flat circle, variously shadowed, with several degrees of light and brightness coming to our eyes. But we having, by use, been accustomed to perceive what kind of appearance convex bodies are wont to make in us, what alterations are made in the reflections of light by the difference (...)
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  36.  42
    ‘Breast is Best’: Catullus 64.18.Richard Hunter - 1991 - Classical Quarterly 41 (1):254-255.
    Catullus' use of nutrices for the Nereids' breasts in line 18 of Poem 64 is not perhaps the most important problem in the poem, but it is not without interest and may have significance beyond its narrow context. This ‘weird preciosity’ has been integrated into a wider reading by Francis Cairns, who interestingly drew attention to Artemidorus 2.37–8 where to dream of Aphrodite emerging from the sea and naked as far as the ζώνη is a good omen for sea-travellers because (...)
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  37.  29
    Darwin’s missing links.John S. Warren - 2017 - History of European Ideas 43 (8):929-1001.
    ABSTRACTThe historical process underlying Darwin’s Origin of Species did not play a significant role in the early editions of the book, in spite of the particular inductivist scientific methodology it espoused. Darwin’s masterpiece did not adequately provide his sources or the historical perspective many contemporary critics expected. Later editions yielded the ‘Historical Sketch’ lacking in the earlier editions, but only under critical pressure. Notwithstanding the sources he provided, Darwin presented the Origin as an ‘abstract’ in order to avoid giving sources; (...)
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  38.  43
    Intensification, Tipping Points, and Social Change in a Coupled Forager-Resource System.Jacob Freeman & John M. Anderies - 2012 - Human Nature 23 (4):419-446.
    This paper presents a stylized bioeconomic model of hunter-gatherer foraging effort designed to study the process of intensification on open-access resources. A critical insight derived from the model is that the very success of an adaptation at the level of an individual forager group can create system-level vulnerabilities that subsequently feed back to cause emergent social change. The model illustrates how the intensification of harvest time by individuals within a habitat creates a forager-resource system that becomes vulnerable to perturbations. (...)
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  39.  44
    Schleiermacher as 'catholic': A charge in the rhetoric of modern theology.John E. Thiel - 1996 - Heythrop Journal 37 (1):61–82.
    Books reviewed in this article: The Bible and Postmodern Imagination: Texts Under Negotiation. By Walter Brueggemann. In the Throe of Wonder: Intimations of the Sacred in a Post‐Modern World. By Jerome A. Miller. Interpreting Hebrew Poetry. By David L. Petersen and Kent Harold Richards. Exegetical Dictionary of the New Testament, Volume I: Aαρωυ‐Eυωχ. Edited by Horst Balz and Gerhard Schneiders. The Secretary in the Letters of Paul. By E. Randolph Richards. Revelation. By Wilfrid J. Harrington. Conversion to Christianity: Historical and (...)
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  40.  26
    An Evolutionary Perspective on Sedentary Behavior.John R. Speakman - 2020 - Bioessays 42 (1):1900156.
    Most people are aware of the health benefits of being physically active. The question arises then why people so easily fall into sedentary habits. The idea developed here is that sedentary behavior is part of a suite of behaviors to reduce levels of physical activity that were strongly selected in the evolutionary past, likely because high levels of physical activity had direct negative consequences for survival. However, hunter‐gatherer populations could not reduce activity indefinitely because of the need to be (...)
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  41.  14
    The Salmanticenses, On the Motive of the Incarnation by Dylan Schrader (review). [REVIEW]Justus Hunter - 2024 - Franciscan Studies 81 (1):241-243.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Salmanticenses, On the Motive of the Incarnation by Dylan SchraderJustus HunterThe Salmanticenses, On the Motive of the Incarnation, trans. Dylan Schrader. Early Modern Catholic Sources 1. Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2019. Pp. xlix + 203. $65.00. ISBN: 978-0-813-23179-2. This is the first volume in the much-anticipated Early Modern Catholic Sources Series edited by Ulrich Lehner and Trent Pomplun. Fr. Dylan Schrader has done (...)
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  42.  28
    Philosophers and Sophists.John Rist - 2014 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 88:17-25.
    I attempt here to draw parallels between ancient and modern sophistry —and ancient and modern philosophy. Plato at one point identified a sophist as a paid hunter of rich young men who ‘lurks’ in non-being: that is, has no concern for truth. In more modern times Elizabeth Anscombe, when asked what her philosophical colleagues did, remarked that they spend most of their time corrupting the youth. And the present situation in many liberal universities encourages them to do so—and in (...)
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  43.  34
    Food sharing at meals.John Ziker & Michael Schnegg - 2005 - Human Nature 16 (2):178-210.
    The presence of a kinship link between nuclear families is the strongest predictor of interhousehold sharing in an indigenous, predominantly Dolgan food-sharing network in northern Russia. Attributes such as the summed number of hunters in paired households also account for much of the variation in sharing between nuclear families. Differences in the number of hunters in partner households, as well as proximity and producer/consumer ratios of households, were investigated with regard to cost-benefit models. The subset of households involved in reciprocal (...)
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  44. The genealogy of the moral modules.John Bolender - 2003 - Minds and Machines 13 (2):233-255.
    This paper defends a cognitive theory of those emotional reactions which motivate and constrain moral judgment. On this theory, moral emotions result from mental faculties specialized for automatically producing feelings of approval or disapproval in response to mental representations of various social situations and actions. These faculties are modules in Fodor's sense, since they are informationally encapsulated, specialized, and contain innate information about social situations. The paper also tries to shed light on which moral modules there are, which of these (...)
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  45.  8
    Wittgenstein's Intentions (Routledge Revivals).Stuart Shanker & Canfield John (eds.) - 1993 - New York: Routledge.
    Wittgenstein’s Intentions , first published in 1993, presents a series of essays dedicated to the great Wittgenstein exegete John Hunter. The problematic topics discussed are identified not only by Wittgenstein’s own philosophical writings, but also by contemporary scholarship: areas of ambiguity, perhaps even confusion, as well as issues which the father of analytic philosophy did not himself address. The difficulties involved in speaking cogently about religious belief, suspicion, consciousness, the nature of the will, the coincidence of our thoughts (...)
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  46. The Varieties of Intrinsic Value.John O’Neill - 1992 - The Monist 75 (2):119-137.
    To hold an environmental ethic is to hold that non-human beings and states of affairs in the natural world have intrinsic value. This seemingly straightforward claim has been the focus of much recent philosophical discussion of environmental issues. Its clarity is, however, illusory. The term ‘intrinsic value’ has a variety of senses and many arguments on environmental ethics suffer from a conflation of these different senses: specimen hunters for the fallacy of equivocation will find rich pickings in the area. This (...)
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  47. How did you feel when the Crocodile Hunter died?’: voicing and silencing in conversation.Celia Harris, Amanda Barnier, John Sutton & Paul Keil - 2010 - Memory 18 (2):170-184.
    Conversations about the past can involve voicing and silencing; processes of validation and invalidation that shape recall. In this experiment we examined the products and processes of remembering a significant autobiographical event in conversation with others. Following the death of Australian celebrity Steve Irwin, in an adapted version of the collaborative recall paradigm, 69 participants described and rated their memories for hearing of his death. Participants then completed a free recall phase where they either discussed the event in groups of (...)
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  48.  12
    John Hunter, A. A. Berthold and the Origins of Endocrinology by C. Barker Jørgensen. [REVIEW]Mary Brazier - 1973 - Isis 64:563-565.
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  49. Music in everyday life: The role of emotions.John A. Sloboda - 2011 - In Patrik N. Juslin & John Sloboda (eds.), Handbook of Music and Emotion: Theory, Research, Applications. Oxford University Press.
     
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  50.  13
    A Cross-Disciplinary Survey of Beliefs about Human Nature, Culture, and Science.Joseph Carroll, John A. Johnson, Catherine Salmon, Jens Kjeldgaard-Christiansen, Mathias Clasen & Emelie Jonsson - 2017 - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture 1 (1):1-32.
    How far has the Darwinian revolution come? To what extent have evolutionary ideas penetrated into the social sciences and humanities? Are the “science wars” over? Or do whole blocs of disciplines face off over an unbridgeable epistemic gap? To answer questions like these, contributors to top journals in 22 disciplines were surveyed on their beliefs about human nature, culture, and science. More than 600 respondents completed the survey. Scoring patterns divided into two main sets of disciplines. Genetic influences were emphasized (...)
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