Results for 'Kevin Lawrence Stoehr'

944 found
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  1. Ciphers of transcendence in 2001: a space odyssey.Kevin Leaves Stoehr - 2019 - In David P. Nichols (ed.), Transcendence and Film: Cinematic Encounters with the Real. Lanham: Lexington Books.
     
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  2.  15
    The Dialectical Approach to the Art of the Moving Image.Kevin L. Stoehr - 2006 - Film and Philosophy 10:99-115.
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  3. Michael Haneke and the consequences of radical freedom.Kevin L. Stoehr - 2011 - In Jean-Pierre Boulé & Enda McCaffrey (eds.), Existentialism and contemporary cinema: a Sartrean perspective. New York: Berghahn Books.
     
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  4.  27
    Kubrick and Ricoeur on Nihilistic Horror and the Symbolism of Evil.Kevin L. Stoehr - 2001 - Film and Philosophy 4:89-102.
  5.  39
    Krytyczna historia ucieleśniania jako paragydmatu badawczego nauk o poznaniu:(Lawrence Shapiro, Embodied Cognitive)/Kevin Ryan.Lawrence Shapiro & Kevin Ryan - 2012 - Avant: Trends in Interdisciplinary Studies 3 (1):386 - 389.
  6.  15
    Nihilism and Noir.Kevin Stoehr - 2004 - Film and Philosophy 8:112-121.
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  7.  5
    The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy.Kevin A. Stoehr (ed.) - 1999 - Philosophy Documentation Center.
  8.  52
    The Virtues of Circular Reasoning.Kevin L. Stoehr - 2000 - The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 5:159-171.
    This paper examines Hegel’s chief paradigm for interpreting his dialectical method, which is that of circularity. The position that Hegel’s Logic (whether Greater or Lesser) begins without presuppositions loses validity upon clarification of this model of reasoning. Philosophy must begin necessarily with presuppositions, according to Hegel, and can only be justified adequately by explaining those presuppositions while also reflecting upon its own immanent method of explanation. Philosophy must therefore be self-reflexive, immanent, and systematic (or holistic). Such a view of philosophy (...)
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  9.  27
    Love's Litany: The Writing of Modern Homoerotics.Lawrence R. Schehr & Kevin Kopelson - 1995 - Substance 24 (3):135.
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  10.  12
    Making the World Safer and Fairer in Pandemics.Lawrence O. Gostin, Kevin A. Klock & Alexandra Finch - 2023 - Hastings Center Report 53 (6):3-10.
    Global health has long been characterized by injustice, with certain populations marginalized and made vulnerable by social, economic, and health disparities within and among countries. The pandemic only amplified inequalities. In response to it, the World Health Organization and the United Nations have embarked on transformative normative and financial reforms that could reimagine pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response (PPPR). These reforms include a new strategy to sustainably finance the WHO, a UN political declaration on PPPR, a fundamental revision to the (...)
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  11.  88
    Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Deep Brain Stimulation Think Tank: Advances in Cutting Edge Technologies, Artificial Intelligence, Neuromodulation, Neuroethics, Pain, Interventional Psychiatry, Epilepsy, and Traumatic Brain Injury.Joshua K. Wong, Günther Deuschl, Robin Wolke, Hagai Bergman, Muthuraman Muthuraman, Sergiu Groppa, Sameer A. Sheth, Helen M. Bronte-Stewart, Kevin B. Wilkins, Matthew N. Petrucci, Emilia Lambert, Yasmine Kehnemouyi, Philip A. Starr, Simon Little, Juan Anso, Ro’ee Gilron, Lawrence Poree, Giridhar P. Kalamangalam, Gregory A. Worrell, Kai J. Miller, Nicholas D. Schiff, Christopher R. Butson, Jaimie M. Henderson, Jack W. Judy, Adolfo Ramirez-Zamora, Kelly D. Foote, Peter A. Silburn, Luming Li, Genko Oyama, Hikaru Kamo, Satoko Sekimoto, Nobutaka Hattori, James J. Giordano, Diane DiEuliis, John R. Shook, Darin D. Doughtery, Alik S. Widge, Helen S. Mayberg, Jungho Cha, Kisueng Choi, Stephen Heisig, Mosadolu Obatusin, Enrico Opri, Scott B. Kaufman, Prasad Shirvalkar, Christopher J. Rozell, Sankaraleengam Alagapan, Robert S. Raike, Hemant Bokil, David Green & Michael S. Okun - 2022 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 16.
    DBS Think Tank IX was held on August 25–27, 2021 in Orlando FL with US based participants largely in person and overseas participants joining by video conferencing technology. The DBS Think Tank was founded in 2012 and provides an open platform where clinicians, engineers and researchers can freely discuss current and emerging deep brain stimulation technologies as well as the logistical and ethical issues facing the field. The consensus among the DBS Think Tank IX speakers was that DBS expanded in (...)
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  12.  1
    Ethics in digital phenotyping: considerations regarding Alzheimer’s disease, speech and artificial intelligence.Francesca Rose Dino, Peter Scott Pressman, Kevin Bretonnel Cohen, Veljko Dubljevic, William Jarrold, Peter W. Foltz, Matt DeCamp, Mohammad H. Mahoor & Lawrence E. Hunter - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Ethics.
    Artificial intelligence (AI)-based digital phenotyping, including computational speech analysis, increasingly allows for the collection of diagnostically relevant information from an ever-expanding number of sources. Such information usually assesses human behaviour, which is a consequence of the nervous system, and so digital phenotyping may be particularly helpful in diagnosing neurological illnesses such as Alzheimer’s disease. As illustrated by the use of computational speech analysis of Alzheimer’s disease, however, neurological illness also introduces ethical considerations beyond commonly recognised concerns regarding machine learning and (...)
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  13. Acts Amid Precepts: The Aristotelian Logical Structure of Thomas Aquinas’s Moral Theory by Kevin Flannery, S.J.Lawrence Dewan - 2007 - Nova et Vetera 5:431-444.
     
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  14.  55
    Review: Kevin Morgan, The Webbs and Soviet Communism (Volume 2 of Bolshevism and the British Left) (Lawrence and Wishart, 2006). [REVIEW]Logie Barrow - 2007 - Thesis Eleven 90 (1):112-116.
  15.  20
    (1 other version)Kevin C. Armitage. The Nature Study Movement: The Forgotten Popularizer of America's Conservation Ethic. viii + 291 pp., index. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2009. $34.95. [REVIEW]Emily K. Brock - 2010 - Isis 101 (4):890-891.
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  16.  60
    Understanding Hermeneutics. By Lawrence K. Schmidt
Naturalistic Hermeneutics. By C. Mantzavinos
Hermeneutics at the Crossroads. Edited by Kevin J. Vanhoozer, James K.A. Smith & Bruce Ellis Benson
Issues in Interpretation Theory (Marquette Studies in Philosophy 49). Edited by Pol Vandevelde. [REVIEW]Richard S. Briggs - 2009 - Heythrop Journal 50 (1):117-118.
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  17. (2 other versions)A New Stoicism.Lawrence C. Becker - 1998 - Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Edited by Lawrence C. Becker.
    The question addressed by this book is what, if anything, stoic ethics would be like today if stoicism had had a continuous history to the present day as a plausible and coherent set of philosophical commitments and methods. The book answers that question by arguing that most of the ancient doctrines of Stoic ethics remain defensible today, at least when ancient Stoicism's cosmological commitments are replaced by modern scientific ones.
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  18.  73
    Exploring Inductive Risk: Case Studies of Values in Science.Kevin Christopher Elliott & Ted Richards (eds.) - 2017 - New York: Oup Usa.
    This book brings together eleven case studies of inductive risk-the chance that scientific inference is incorrect-that range over a wide variety of scientific contexts and fields. The chapters are designed to illustrate the pervasiveness of inductive risk, assist scientists and policymakers in responding to it, and productively move theoretical discussions of the topic forward.
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  19. Education for justice: a modern statement of the Platonic view.Lawrence Kohlberg - 1970 - In N. Sizer & T. Sizer (eds.), Moral education. Harvard University Press.
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  20. Do the evolutionary origins of our moral beliefs undermine moral knowledge?Kevin Brosnan - 2011 - Biology and Philosophy 26 (1):51-64.
    According to some recent arguments, if our moral beliefs are products of natural selection, then we do not have moral knowledge. In defense of this inference, its proponents argue that natural selection is a process that fails to track moral facts. In this paper, I argue that our having moral knowledge is consistent with, the hypothesis that our moral beliefs are products of natural selection, and the claim that natural selection fails to track moral facts. I also argue that natural (...)
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  21.  35
    Cognitive Disabilities, Forms of Exclusion, and the Ethics of Social Interactions.Kevin Timpe - 2022 - Journal of Philosophy of Disability 2:157-184.
    Cognitively disabled individuals have been marginalized by our larger culture; they’ve also been marginalized in philosophical discussions. This paper seeks to begin correcting this situation by examining how assumptions which shape our social interactions and expectations disadvantage individuals with a range of cognitive disabilities. After considering Rubella syndrome and autism in detail, I argue that we have a moral obligation to change how we approach social interactions with cognitively disabled individuals.
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  22. Attitudes of UK librarians and librarianship students to ethical issues.Kevin Ball & Charles Oppenheim - 2005 - International Review of Information Ethics 3 (6):54-61.
    There have been a number of studies examining the attitudes of librarians to ethical dilemmas, but few examining them in comparison with Library and Information Science students as we did in our study. According to that UK librarians and students in general hold surprisingly similar ethical attitudes. We expected the students to be more liberal, more willing to uphold idealistic principles, and given their student status, with attitudes balanced in favour of other students' and patrons' rights in terms of fees, (...)
     
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  23.  48
    The Corpus and the Courts.Kevin Tobia - 2021 - University of Chicago Law Review Online 2021.
    The legal corpus linguistics movement is one of the most exciting recent developments in legal theory. Justice Thomas R. Lee and Stephen C. Mouritsen are its pioneers, and their new article thoughtfully responds to critics. Here, Part I applauds their response as a cautious account of how those methods might, in some circumstances, provide relevant evidence about ordinary meaning in legal interpretation. Some disagreements persist, but The Corpus and the Critics makes significant progress in academic debates about legal interpretation. Part (...)
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  24.  65
    Political authority and resistance to injustice: A Confucian perspective.Kevin K. W. Ip - 2023 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 49 (1):81-101.
    Those who bear the burdens of injustice and oppression are entitled to act in ways contrary to existing laws and institutions to secure their own entitlements and those of others. This article aims to articulate a Confucian perspective on resistance against injustice. There are reasons for thinking that the notion of resistance is fundamentally at odds with Confucian political thought. In this article, I move beyond this simple conflict/compatibility model and explore the complex relationships between resistance and Confucianism. On one (...)
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  25.  31
    Habilitation, Health, and Agency: a Framework for Basic Justice.Lawrence C. Becker - 2012 - New York, US: Oxford University Press.
    This book argues for adopting a new account of the circumstances of justice ("the habilitation framework") for philosophical theories of basic justice. It proposes a concept of basic health as a metric for such theories, and healthy agency as a target for them. It does not, however, propose a specific distributive rule or set of distributive principles. Nor does it propose a specific type of theory to pursue (e.g., utilitarian, contractarian, etc.). The book is thus meant to be largely theory-independent (...)
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  26.  15
    St. Thomas and form as something divine in things.Lawrence Dewan - 2007 - Milwaukee, Wis.: Marquette University Press.
  27.  76
    Human being: The boundaries of the concept.Lawrence C. Becker - 1975 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 4 (4):334-359.
  28.  54
    Between Ecological Psychology and Enactivism: Is There Resonance?Kevin J. Ryan & Shaun Gallagher - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Ecological psychologists and enactivists agree that the best explanation for a large share of cognition is nonrepresentational in kind. In both ecological psychology and enactivist philosophy, then, the task is to offer an explanans that does not rely on representations. Different theorists within these camps have contrasting notions of what the best kind of nonrepresentational explanation will look like, yet they agree on one central point: instead of focusing solely on factors interior to an agent, an important aspect of cognition (...)
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  29.  51
    MicroRNAs and metazoan macroevolution: insights into canalization, complexity, and the Cambrian explosion.Kevin J. Peterson, Michael R. Dietrich & Mark A. McPeek - 2009 - Bioessays 31 (7):736-747.
    One of the most interesting challenges facing paleobiologists is explaining the Cambrian explosion, the dramatic appearance of most metazoan animal phyla in the Early Cambrian, and the subsequent stability of these body plans over the ensuing 530 million years. We propose that because phenotypic variation decreases through geologic time, because microRNAs (miRNAs) increase genic precision, by turning an imprecise number of mRNA transcripts into a more precise number of protein molecules, and because miRNAs are continuously being added to metazoan genomes (...)
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  30. Explanation and evidence.Kevin McCain & Ted Poston - 2023 - In Maria Lasonen-Aarnio & Clayton Littlejohn (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of the Philosophy of Evidence. New York, NY: Routledge.
    Explanation and evidence are related in one way that is uncontroversial: evidence can confirm or disconfirm explanations. One explanation of Sally’s cold is that she has a virus; another is that she has a bacterial infection. The available evidence confirms the virus explanation because the evidence supports that colds are caused by viruses, not bacteria. A more interesting question concerns whether explanatory facts themselves provide evidence. That is to say, do we get evidence for p simply by realizing that p, (...)
     
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  31.  29
    Toward an Africanized Bioethics Curriculum.Kevin G. Behrens & C. S. Wareham - 2021 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 30 (1):103-113.
    Although many bioethicists have given attention to the special health issues of Africa and to the ethics of research on the continent, only a handful have considered these issues through the lens of African moral thought. The question has been for the most part neglected as to what a distinctively African moral perspective would be for the analysis and teaching of bioethics issues. To address the oversight, the authors of this paper describe embarking on a project aimed at incorporating African (...)
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  32.  77
    The case for ad hominem arguments.Lawrence M. Hinman - 1982 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 60 (4):338 – 345.
  33.  8
    Phenomenology of the Political.Kevin Thompson & Lester Embree - 2000 - Springer Verlag.
    This volume is a collection of phenomenological investigations of the political domain. The essays analyze basic concepts such as action, community, and the relation of the political to the ethical, investigate fundamental issues such as the nation-state, leadership, sovereignty, and responsibility, and they examine the convergence of these matters as exemplified in racial discrimination. The volume also includes discussions of the often-neglected work of such important contributors to this field as Alfred Schutz and Paul Ricoeur.
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  34. Animal innovation: an introduction.Kevin N. Laland & Simon M. Reader - 2003 - In Simon M. Reader & Kevin N. Laland (eds.), Animal Innovation. Oxford University Press.
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  35. Newton's laws beyond the classroom walls.Kevin J. Pugh - 2004 - Science Education 88 (2):182-196.
     
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  36. Real quantities and their sensible measures.Lawrence Sklar - 1990 - In Phillip Bricker & R. I. G. Hughes (eds.), Philosophical Perspectives on Newtonian Science. MIT Press. pp. 57--76.
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  37.  13
    Imagined Sovereignties: The Power of the People and Other Myths of the Modern Age.Kevin Olson - 2016 - Cambridge University Press.
    Movements like the Arab Spring, Occupy Wall Street, and the Tea Party embody some of our deepest intuitions about popular politics and 'the power of the people'. They also expose tensions and shortcomings in our understanding of these ideals. We typically see 'the people' as having a special, sovereign power. Despite the centrality of this idea in our thinking, we have little understanding of why it has such importance. Imagined Sovereignties probes the considerable force that 'the people' exercises on our (...)
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  38.  39
    Harnessing rhetorical figures for argument mining.John Lawrence, Jacky Visser & Chris Reed - 2017 - Argument and Computation 8 (3):289-310.
  39.  49
    Hiearchies of Boolean algebras.Lawrence Feiner - 1970 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 35 (3):365-374.
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  40.  32
    Is there a Competition between Functional and Situational Affordances during Action Initiation with Everyday Tools?Roche Kévin & Chainay Hanna - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  41. A brief history of the khazars.Kevin A. Brook - 1998 - In Yehuda Halevi & Judah (eds.), The Kuzari: In Defense of the Despised Faith. Feldheim Publishers.
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  42.  22
    The City-State of the Soul: Constituting the Self in Plato's Republic.Kevin Crotty - 2016 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    The City-State of the Soul: Self-Constitution in Plato’s Republic offers a reinterpretation of Plato’s philosophical masterpiece, which presents the moral life as consisting, most deeply, in the constituting or “founding” of one’s own soul. Plato wants to persuade the brightest and most ambitious that the life of justice and, in particular, of just governance puts their talents and ambitions to their best possible use.
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  43.  25
    Theory Discovery and Hypothesis Language.Kevin T. Kelly - unknown
    This paper develops a framework in which to compare the discovery problems determined by a wide range of distinct hypothesis languages. Twelve theorems are presented which provide a comprehensive picture of the solvability of these problems according to four intuitively motivated criteria of scientific success.
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  44. Sleuthing the Divine: The Nexus of Science and Spirit.Kevin Sharpe - 2000
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  45.  55
    The Myth of Conductive Arguments.Kevin Possin - 2012 - Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 27 (3):29-33.
    The topic of conductive arguments, as a separate category of reasoning, is experiencing a revival. In 2010, the University of Windsor’s Centre for Research in Reasoning, Argumentation, and Rhetoric dedicated a two-day symposium to the topic and recently published the proceedings. In this article, I argue against the existence of conductive arguments as a distinct type and argue against a popular analysis of the structure of conductive arguments.
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  46.  20
    Value Magnetism: Why Conceptual Engineering Requires Objective Values.Kevin Richardson - 2024 - Global Philosophy 34 (1):1-21.
    Conceptual ethics concerns the question: what concepts ought we use? The goal of this paper is to answer a related foundational question: what determines what concepts we ought to use? According to one view, it is our values — our goals, interests, purposes, etc. — that determinate what concepts we ought to use. Call this the _subjective value determinacy thesis_ (SVT). In this paper, I take a critical look at SVT. While SVT is intuitive, it cannot make sense of conceptual (...)
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  47. Moral Ecology, Disabilities, and Human Agency špace 1pc 2018 Wade Memorial Lecture.Kevin Timpe - 2019 - Res Philosophica 96 (1):17-41.
    This paper argues that human agency is not simply a function of intrinsic properties about the agent, but that agency instead depends on the ecology that the agent is in. In particular, the paper examines ways that disabilities affect agency and shows how, by paying deliberate attention to structuring the social environment around people with disabilities, we can mitigate some of the agential impact of those disabilities. The paper then argues that the impact of one’s social environment on agency isn’t (...)
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  48. From Modernism to Postmodernism.Lawrence E. Cahoone (ed.) - 1996 - Cambridge, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell.
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  49.  56
    Situated Cognition: The Perspect Model.Lawrence Lengbeyer - 2007 - In David Spurrett, Don Ross, Harold Kincaid & Lynn Stephens (eds.), Distributed Cognition and the Will: Individual Volition and Social Context. MIT Press. pp. 227.
    The standard philosophical and folk-psychological accounts of cognition and action credit us with too much spontaneity in our activities and projects. We are taken to be fundamentally active rather than reactive, to project our needs and aims and deploy our full supporting arsenal of cognitive instruments upon an essentially passive environment. The corrected point of view presented here balances this image of active agency with an appreciation of how we are also continually responding to the world, that is, to the (...)
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  50.  39
    Can Animals be Moral Agents?Lawrence E. Johnson - 1983 - Ethics and Animals 4 (2).
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