Results for 'Lawrence Alan Vogel'

942 found
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  1.  62
    The Fragile "We": Ethical Implications of Heidegger's Being and Time.Lawrence Vogel - 1994 - Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
    Critics have charged that Heidegger's account of authenticity is morally nihilistic, that his fundamental ontology is either egocentric or chauvinistic; and many see Heidegger's turn to Nazism in 1933 as following logically from an indifference, and even hostility, to "otherness" in the premises of his early philosophy. In_ The Fragile "We": Ethical Implications of Heidegger's "Being and Time,"_ Lawrence Vogel presents three interpretations of authentic existence--the existentialist, the historicist, and the cosmopolitan--each of which is a plausible version of (...)
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  2.  12
    Monismus.Lawrence Vogel - 2021 - In Michael Bongardt, Holger Burckhart, John-Stewart Gordon & Jürgen Nielsen-Sikora, Hans Jonas-Handbuch: Leben – Werk – Wirkung. J.B. Metzler. pp. 317-320.
    Der Schlüssel zum Verständnis von Jonas’ Philosophie liegt in seinem monistischen Bekenntnis: »Das Sein, oder die Natur, ist eines und legt Zeugnis von sich ab in dem, was es aus sich hervorgehen läßt«. Jonas’ Monismus ist teleologisch, nicht reduktivmaterialistisch, denn die Einheit der Natur wird aus den Beweisen ihrer ›höchsten‹, offensichtlichsten Entwicklungen gewonnen: Sie liegen vor im Lebendigen, der Subjektivität und in deren höchster Entwicklung, dem ›Geist‹. Ihnen kommt entscheidende Bedeutung zu, obwohl diese Ausformungen der Physis spät und selten in (...)
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  3.  19
    The Tangled Bank: Towards an Ecotheological Ethics of Responsible Participation.Lawrence Vogel - 2009 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 30 (2):222-226.
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  4.  31
    Canton under Communism.Alan P. L. Liu & Ezra F. Vogel - 1972 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 92 (2):346.
  5.  28
    Heidegger, Buber and Levinas: Must We Give Priority to Authenticity or Mutuality or Holiness?Lawrence Vogel - 2016 - In Lisa Foran & Rozemund Uljée, Heidegger, Levinas, Derrida: The Question of Difference. Cham: Springer Verlag.
    After considering Buber’s and Levinas’s critiques of Heidegger and of each other, I propose that we should acknowledge authenticity, “essential relations” of love and friendship, and holiness as aspects of a good life, though they pull in different directions. We should resist the temptation to take sides in a battle between different approaches to the complex nature of our social being.
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  6.  48
    (1 other version)Natural Law Judaism?: The Genesis of Bioethics in Hans Jonas, Leo Strauss, and Leon Kass.Lawrence Vogel - 2006 - Hastings Center Report 36 (3):32-44.
    Leon Kass is much misunderstood. He is not simply a Republican ideologue who tailored his ideas to break out of the ivory tower and into the halls of power. Nor does he ook simply to use human nature as a moral guide. When the full range of his writings is considered and set in the tradition of his teachers, Hans Jonas and Leo Strauss, what emerges is a natural law position colored by religious revelation.
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  7. Filling in the scotoma: A study of residual vision after striate cortex lesions in monkeys.Lawrence Weiskrantz & Alan Cowey - 1970 - Progress in Physiological Psychology 3.
     
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  8. The Responsibility of Thinking in Dark Times.Lawrence Vogel - 2008 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 29 (1):253-273.
  9.  51
    Evolution and the meaning of being: Heidegger, Jonas and Nihilism.Lawrence Vogel - 2017 - Continental Philosophy Review 51 (1):65-79.
    Hans Jonas accuses Heidegger of “never bring[ing] his question about Being into correlation with the testimony of our physical and biological evolution.” Neither the early nor later Heidegger has a “philosophy of nature,” Jonas charges, because Naturphilosophie demands a new concept of matter, a monistic account of cosmogony and evolution, and the grounding of ethical responsibility for future generations in an ontological “first principle.” Jonas’s ontological rethinking of Darwinism allows him to overcome the nihilism that a mechanistic interpretation of evolution (...)
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  10.  84
    Hans Jonas's diagnosis of nihilism: The case of Heidegger.Lawrence Vogel - 1995 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 3 (1):55 – 72.
    I show how Hans Jonas, one of Heidegger's most distinguished Jewish students, traces his mentor's susceptibility to Nazism to a moral nihilism at the heart of Heidegger's teaching in "Being and Time". I then demonstrate how Jonas's own "existential interpretation of the biological facts" and metaphysical grounding of "an imperative of responsibility" provide one of the most systematic and challenging rejoinders to the moral failings of Heidegger's thought.
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  11. Charles Taylor, "The Ethics of Authenticity" and "Multiculturalism and 'The Politics of Recognition'".Lawrence Vogel - 1993 - Humana Mente:325.
     
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  12.  17
    Mortality and Morality: A Search for Good After Auschwitz.Lawrence Vogel (ed.) - 1996 - Northwestern University Press.
    Hans Jonas was a German Jew, pupil of Heidegger and Bultmann, lifelong friend and colleague of Hannah Arendt at the New School for Social Research, and one of the most prominent thinkers of his generation. The range of his topics never obscures their unifying thread: that our mortality is at the root of our moral responsibility to safeguard humanity's future. _Mortality and Morality_ both consummates and demonstrates the basic thrust of Jonas's thought: the inseparability of ethics and metaphysics, the reality (...)
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  13.  17
    Thoughts on Mel Woody's Retirement.Lawrence A. Vogel - unknown
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  14.  39
    Does Environmental Ethics Need a Metaphysical Grounding?Lawrence Vogel - 1995 - Hastings Center Report 25 (7):30-39.
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  15. 'The Outcry of Mute Things:'Hans Jonas's Imperative of Responsibility.Lawrence Vogel - 1996 - In David Macauley, Minding nature: the philosophers of ecology. New York: Guilford Press.
     
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  16.  47
    Jewish Philosophies After Heidegger.Lawrence Vogel - 2001 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 23 (1):119-146.
  17. (1 other version)Proofs for the Existence of God.Lawrence Nolan & Alan Nelson - 2006 - In Lawrence Nolan & Alan Nelson, Proofs for the Existence of God. Blackwell. pp. 104--121.
    We argue that Descartes’s theistic proofs in the ’Meditations’ are much simpler and straightforward than they are traditionally taken to be. In particular, we show how the causal argument of the "Third Meditation" depends on the intuitively innocent principle that nothing comes from nothing, and not on the more controversial principle that the objective reality of an idea must have a cause with at least as much formal reality. We also demonstrate that the so-called ontological "argument" of the "Fifth Meditation" (...)
     
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  18.  73
    Understanding and Blaming.Lawrence Vogel - 1993 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 53 (1):129-142.
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  19.  89
    Emmanuel Levinas and the Judaism of the Good Samaritan.Lawrence Vogel - 2008 - Levinas Studies 3:193-208.
    Any thoughtful reading of Levinas must grapple with what is implied by his notion that the Other is “higher” than the self — that the Other is “one for whom I can do all and to whom I owe all”? (EI 89). At least two evident issues arise when we wonder what it would mean to live with and by this notion. Without fail, newcomers to Levinas’s ideas raise these two issues. The first centers on the question: What is my (...)
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  20.  42
    Critical notices.Tim Crane, Lawrence Vogel, Gerardine Meaney & Michael Hampe - 1993 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 1 (2):313 – 353.
    The Rediscovery of the mind By John Searle MIT Press, 1992. Pp. xv + 270. ISBN 0–262–19321–3 £19.95 hbk.The Ethics of Authenticity By Charles Taylor Harvard University Press, 1991. Pp. 152. ISBN 0–674–26863–6. $17.95Multiculturalism and ‘The Politics of Recognition’ By Charles Taylor Princeton University Press, 1992. p. 112. ISBN 0–691–0878–65. $14.95New books on feminismAbjection, Melancholia and Love: The Work of Julia Kristeva By John Fletcher and Andrew Benjamin Routledge, 1990. Pp. 224. ISBN 0–415–04155–4. £35 hbk.Feminist Literary Studies: An Introduction By (...)
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  21.  27
    Review Essay: Jewish Identity in FranceYale French Studies, No 85: Discourses of Jewish Identity in Twentieth-Century FranceAuschwitz and After: Race, Culture and "The Jewish Question" in France.Simon P. Sibelman, Alan Astro & Lawrence D. Kritzman - 1996 - Substance 25 (1):111.
  22. The Bakke Case: The Politics of Inequality.Joel Dreyfuss, Charles Lawrence, Alan H. Goldman, Barry R. Gross, John C. Livingston & Allan P. Sindler - 1980 - Ethics 91 (1):138-150.
     
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  23.  37
    Effect of interstimulus interval on conditioning of voluntary instructed responses.Lawrence C. Perlmuter, Alan M. Fink, Gary A. Taylor & Gregory A. Kimble - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 79 (3p1):403.
  24.  47
    Having Babies at Home: Is It Safe? Is It Ethical?Gerard Alan Hoff & Lawrence J. Schneiderman - 1985 - Hastings Center Report 15 (6):19-27.
    Home births entail a definite small risk, of unknown magnitude. Hospital births entail a wider range of risks, whose magnitude may be large but is also unknown. The morality of home births should be decided on a case‐by‐case basis, according to these priorities: safety of the mother, safety of the fetus, benefit to the fetus, potential benefit to the mother.
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  25.  37
    Gewirth: Critical Essays on Action, Rationality, and Community.Anita Allen, Lawrence C. Becker, Deryck Beyleveld, David Cummiskey, David DeGrazia, David M. Gallagher, Alan Gewirth, Virginia Held, Barbara Koziak, Donald Regan, Jeffrey Reiman, Henry Richardson, Beth J. Singer, Michael Slote, Edward Spence & James P. Sterba - 1998 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    As one of the most important ethicists to emerge since the Second World War, Alan Gewirth continues to influence philosophical debates concerning morality. In this ground-breaking book, Gewirth's neo-Kantianism, and the communitarian problems discussed, form a dialogue on the foundation of moral theory. Themes of agent-centered constraints, the formal structure of theories, and the relationship between freedom and duty are examined along with such new perspectives as feminism, the Stoics, and Sartre. Gewirth offers a picture of the philosopher's theory (...)
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  26.  70
    The accuracy of using integrated electronic health care data to identify patients with undiagnosed diabetes mellitus.Michael L. Ho, Nadine Lawrence, Carl van Walraven, Doug Manuel, Erin Keely, Janine Malcolm, Robert D. Reid & Alan J. Forster - 2012 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 18 (3):606-611.
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  27. To a reader voyaging through the Meditations for the first time, Descartes' proofs for the existence of God can seem daunting, especially the argument of Meditation III, with its appeal to causal principles that seem arcane, and to medieval doctrines about different modes of being and degrees of reality. First-time readers are not alone in feeling bewildered. Many commentators have had the same reaction. In an attempt at charity, some of them have tried to tame the complexity of Descartes' discussion by .. [REVIEW]Lawrence Nolan & Alan Nelson - 2006 - In Stephen Gaukroger, The Blackwell Guide to Descartes' Meditations. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 2--104.
     
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  28. Sklar on methodological conservatism.Jonathan Vogel - 1992 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 52 (1):125-131.
    In an important study, Lawrence Sklar has defended a doctrine of methodological conservatism (very roughly, the principle that a proposition derives some sort of epistemic warrant from being believed). I argue that Sklar's careful formulation of methodological conservatism remains too strong, and that a yet weaker version of the doctrine cannot be successfully defended. I also criticize Sklar's argument that the rejection of methodological conservatism would result in total skepticism. Finally, I turn to a closely related issue, and try (...)
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  29.  78
    Empirical Knowledge. [REVIEW]Jonathan Vogel - 1992 - Philosophical Review 101 (2):428-430.
    This remarkably clear and comprehensive account of empirical knowledge will be valuable to all students of epistemology and philosophy. The author begins from an explanationist analysis of knowing—a belief counts as knowledge if, and only if, its truth enters into the best explanation for its being held. Defending common sense and scientific realism within the explanationist framework, Alan Goldman provides a new foundational approach to justification. The view that emerges is broadly empiricist, counteracting the recently dominant trend that rejects (...)
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  30. Book reviews. [REVIEW]John Bacon, Alan R. White, M. Glouberman, Lawrence H. Davis, Gershon Weiler, Jeffrey Bub, Ilkka Niiniluoto, Yehuda Melzer, Zeev Levy, S. Biderman, Joseph Raz, Irwin C. Lieb & Michael Ruse - 1975 - Philosophia 5 (3):319-384.
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  31.  21
    A Nietzschean Bestiary: Becoming Animal Beyond Docile and Brutal.Babette Babbich, Debra Bergoffen, Thomas H. Brobjer, Daniel Conway, Brian Crowley, Brian Domino, Peter Groff, Jennifer Ham, Lawrence Hatab, Kathleen Marie Higgins, Vanessa Lemm, Paul S. Loeb, Nickolas Pappas, Richard Perkins, Gerd Schank, Alan D. Schrift, Gary Shapiro, Tracey Stark, Charles S. Taylor, Jami Weinstein & Martha Kendal Woodruff - 2003 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Nietzsche's use of metaphor has been widely noted but rarely focused to explore specific images in great detail. A Nietzschean Bestiary gathers essays devoted to the most notorious and celebrated beasts in Nietzsche's work. The essays illustrate Nietzsche's ample use of animal imagery, and link it to the dual philosophical purposes of recovering and revivifying human animality, which plays a significant role in his call for de-deifying nature.
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  32. Is Marx a Moral Consequentialist?Jeffrey S. Vogel - 1994 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 24 (4):541 - 563.
    Derek Allen, Richard Boyd, and Alan Gilbert have suggested that Marx’s normative political views should be reconstructed as a sophisticated version of moral consequentialism. This paper investigates whether Marx’s ostensible anti-moralism differs in any interesting way from Mill’s sophisticated utilitarianism plus some Marxist social science. I present an account of the social meaning and implications of moral language and argument, based on Marx’s description of morality as a social practice based on distinctive motives, emotions and sanctions, to explain why (...)
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  33.  32
    Eloge: Frederic Lawrence Holmes, 6 February 1932–27 March 2003.Alan Rocke & John Warner - 2003 - Isis 94 (4):661-665.
  34. Philosopher's zone.Alan Saunders & Miranda Fricker - unknown
    In London in 1993, a black teenager named Stephen Lawrence was fatally stabbed by a small gang of white teenagers. His friend Duwayne Brooks was a witness but the police failed to take his testimony seriously. When someone speaks but is not heard because of accent, sex, or colour, that person is undermined as a knower. This week, we look at was it means to do justice to someone's status as a knower.
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  35.  78
    Future Generations and Contemporary Ethics.Lawrence E. Johnson - 2003 - Environmental Values 12 (4):471 - 487.
    Future generations do not exist, and are not determinate in their make-up. The moral significance of future generations cannot be accounted for on the basis of a purely individualistic ethic. Yet future generations are morally significant. The Person-Affecting Principle, that (roughly) only acts which are likely to affect particular individuals are morally significant, must be augmented in such a way as to take into account the moral significance of Homo sapiens, a holistic entity which certainly does exist. Recent contributions to (...)
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  36.  45
    Margaret J. Osler and Paul Lawrence Farber, editors, "Religion Science, and Worldview, Essays in Honor of Richard S. Westfall". [REVIEW]Alan Gabbey - 1988 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 26 (1):169.
  37.  47
    Pascal’s Wager.Paul Bartha & Lawrence Pasternack (eds.) - 2018 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In his famous Wager, Blaise Pascal offers the reader an argument that it is rational to strive to believe in God. Philosophical debates about this classic argument have continued until our own times. This volume provides a comprehensive examination of Pascal's Wager, including its theological framework, its place in the history of philosophy, and its importance to contemporary decision theory. The volume starts with a valuable primer on infinity and decision theory for students and non-specialists. A sequence of chapters then (...)
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  38.  90
    Die geschichtlichen Wurzeln des Piatonismus. [REVIEW]Lawrence P. Schrenk - 1989 - Review of Metaphysics 43 (2):401-402.
    Alan Donagan has written frequently on Spinoza's metaphysics over the years but in this recent work he offers the reader "a study of Spinoza's mature philosophy as a whole." His principal intention is "to help philosophers who aspire to work out an adequate naturalism to learn from one of their greatest naturalist predecessors". For Donagan maintains that "Spinoza's seventeenth-century form of naturalism," which is not materialist, "does not fall short philosophically as today's varieties of [materialist] naturalism do". To examine (...)
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  39.  47
    World Hunger and the duty to provide aid.Alan Carter - 1998 - Heythrop Journal 39 (3):319–324.
    Horst Dietrich Preuss, Old Testament TheologyRolf P. Knierim, The Task of Old Testament Theology: Essays, Substance, Method and CasesDaniel Patte, Ethics of Biblical Interpretation: A Re‐evaluationBrian D. Ingraffia, Postmodern Theory and Biblical Theology: Vanquishing God's ShadowJohn Barclay and John Sweet, Early Christian Thought in its Jewish ContextStephen T. Davis, Daniel Kendall and Gerald O'Collins, The Resurrection: An Interdisciplinary Symposium on the Resurrection of JesusMaureen A. Tilley, Donatist Martyr Stories: The Church in Conflict in Roman North AfricaMaureen A. Tilley, The Bible (...)
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  40.  17
    Nietzsche's Hermeneutic Significance.Alan D. Schrift - 1983 - Auslegung. A Journal of Philosophy Lawrence, Kans 10 (1-2):39-47.
  41.  36
    Review of Lawrence Vogel: Mortality and Morality: A Search for Good After Auschwitz[REVIEW]James M. Glass - 1998 - Ethics 108 (3):626-629.
  42.  58
    The Literary Structure of Scientific Argument: Historical Studies. Peter DearThe Rhetoric of Science. Alan G. GrossWriting Biology: Texts in the Social Construction of Scientific Knowledge. Greg MyersA Rhetoric of Science: Inventing Scientific Discourse. Lawrence J. Prelli. [REVIEW]Trevor Melia - 1992 - Isis 83 (1):100-106.
  43. Themes in the Reverse-Discrimination DebateThe Bakke Case: The Politics of Inequality. Joel Dreyfuss, Charles Lawrence IIIJustice and Reverse Discrimination. Alan H. GoldmanDiscrimination in Reverse: Is Turnabout Fair Play?. Barry R. GrossFair Game? Inequality and Affirmative Action. John C. LivingstonBakke, DeFunis, and Minority Admissions: The Quest for Equal Opportunity. Allan P. Sindler. [REVIEW]Irving Thalberg - 1980 - Ethics 91 (1):138-.
  44.  15
    William Barlow and the Determination of Atomic Arrangement in Crystals: Essay in Honour of Alan J. Rocke.Seymour H. Mauskopf - 2015 - Annals of Science 72 (2):206-223.
    SummaryWilliam Barlow was an important if unconventional scientist, known for having developed the ‘closest-packing’ atomic models of crystal structure. He resumed an early nineteenth-century tradition of utilizing crystallographical and chemical data to determine atomic arrangements in crystals. This essay recounts Barlow's career and scientific activity in three parts: His place in the tradition of determining atomic arrangement in context of this earlier tradition and of contemporaneous developments of crystallography and chemistry, his unconventional career, and the ‘success’ of his program to (...)
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  45.  34
    The Ethical Community in Kant’s Pure Rational System of Religion: Comments on Rossi’s The Ethical Commonwealth in History.Lawrence Pasternack - 2021 - Philosophia 49 (5):1901-1916.
    This commentary on Rossi’s The Ethical Commonwealth in History will address three points of interpretation related to Kant’s conception of the ethical community/commonwealth (ethischen gemeinen Wesen). First, I will raise a number of concerns related to Rossi’s use of Kant’s concept of the highest good. Second, I will examine the relevance of the overall project of Kant’s Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason to his discussion of the ethical community, a matter that Rossi does not take up. Third, I (...)
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  46.  17
    Memory and encoding in a letter-matching reaction time task.Lawrence S. Meyers, Don Schoenborn & Gail M. Clark - 1975 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 5 (1):41-42.
  47.  9
    Developing a Center for Teaching Excellence: A Higher Education Case Study Using the Integrated Readiness Matrix.Lawrence A. Tomei, James A. Bernauer & Anthony Moretti - 2016 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Developing a Center for Teaching Excellence: A Case Study Using the Integrated Readiness Matrix builds on the 2015 text, Integrating Pedagogy and Technology: Improving Teaching and Learning in Higher Education with a focus on teaching in higher education. Developing a Center for Teaching Excellence is premised on our contention in the first book that, while individual faculty members can independently begin to use the IRM to improve their pedagogical and technological skills in their content areas, an organizational structure is needed (...)
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  48.  49
    A hierarchy of families of recursively enumerable degrees.Lawrence V. Welch - 1984 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 49 (4):1160-1170.
  49. Morris's retributivism.Lawrence Alexander - 2023 - In Herbert Morris & George P. Fletcher, Herbert Morris: UCLA Professor of Law and Philosophy: in commemoration. [Jerusalem, Israel]: Mazo Publishers.
     
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  50.  32
    (2 other versions)St. Thomas and the Causes of Free Choice.Lawrence Dewan - 1999 - Acta Philosophica 8 (1):87-96.
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