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Martin A. Bertman [100]Martin Bertman [21]Ma Bertman [2]MartinA Bertman [1]
Martin Allen Bertman [1]Martln A. Bertman [1]
  1. Hobbes on Language and Reality.Martin A. Bertman - 1978 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 32 (126):536.
  2.  86
    Conatus in Hobbes' De Corpore.Martin A. Bertman - 2001 - Hobbes Studies 14 (1):25-39.
  3.  39
    Hobbes and Performatives.Martin A. Bertman - 1978 - Critica 10 (30):41-53.
  4.  55
    Semantics and Political Theory in Hobbes.Martin A. Bertman - 1988 - Hobbes Studies 1 (1):134-143.
  5. Gabriel Marcel On Hope.Martin A. Bertman - 1970 - Philosophy Today 14 (2):101-105.
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  6. Hobbes.Martin A. Bertman - 1978 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 26:146-158.
  7.  6
    URAM Colloquium on Politics: The Individual and the State. A Comment.Martin A. Bertman - 1985 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 8 (1):61-63.
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  8.  57
    Hobbes’ Homo Lupus Covenanted.Martin A. Bertman - 1977 - International Studies in Philosophy 9:23-42.
  9.  68
    Hobbes on ‘Good’.Martin A. Bertman - 1975 - Southwestern Journal of Philosophy 6 (2):59-74.
  10.  78
    Justice and contra-natural dissolution.Martin A. Bertman - 1997 - Hobbes Studies 10 (1):23-37.
  11. Plato on Tyranny, Philosophy, and Pleasure.Martin A. Bertman - 1985 - Apeiron 19 (2):152 - 160.
  12. Rules, Games, and Society.Martin A. Bertman - 2008 - Abstracta 4 (2):96-122.
    ‘Game’ means ‘play within the construction of rules’. The sub-category ‘sport’ considers play as competition where the rules are known to the audience, under the following divide: fundamental constructive rules about the game's structure and less important or flexible rules facilitating and monitoring play. These provide athletes and audience with stable knowledge. The excitement of play comes from the vagaries of the actual engagement of the rules in the action of play. The social order can use this as a metaphor (...)
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  13. Brill Online Books and Journals.Martin A. Bertman, Gary B. Herbert, Giuseppe Duso, Juhana Lemetti & Jani Hakkarainen - 2009 - Hobbes Studies 22 (2).
  14. Berlin, Dewey and Rawls. Relativism and Liberalism.Martin A. Bertman - 2008 - Philosophical Frontiers 1 (2008):27-39.
     
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  15. Pleasure and the Two Happinesses in Aristotle.Martin A. Bertman - 1972 - Apeiron 6 (2):30 - 36.
  16.  13
    Hobbes: War Among Nations.Timo Airaksinen & Martin A. Bertman - 1989 - Gower Publishing Company.
  17. A defense of legal positivism.Martin A. Bertman - 1984 - Journal of Value Inquiry 18 (3):219-226.
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  18.  18
    Anachronistic Inauthenticity in Art.Martin A. Bertman - 1984 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 18 (3):115.
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  19.  18
    (2 other versions)A Note from the Editor.Martin Bertman - 2008 - Hobbes Studies 21 (1):1.
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  20. Augustine on time, with reference to Kant.Martin A. Bertman - 1986 - Journal of Value Inquiry 20 (3):223-234.
  21.  15
    Body and cause in Hobbes: natural and political.Martin A. Bertman - 1991 - Wakefield, N.H.: Longman Academic.
  22. Beauty : Kant’s Discussion.Martin Bertman - 2001 - Indian Philosophical Quarterly 28 (4):463.
     
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  23.  61
    (1 other version)Basic particulars and the identity thesis.Martin A. Bertman - 1972 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 3 (1):1-8.
    This paper begins with a discussion of the logical apparatus of Frege, where his use of Sinn suggests a modification of Leibniz's Principle of the Identity of Indiscernibles. Then, it turns to Strawson's basic particulars with its essentially Kantian orientation. This brings forward the logical ground upon which the Identity Thesis rests. Finally, following Frege with some modifications, the paper suggests that an ontological list where concepts can be treated as objective (materially dependent) subsistent entities would be necessary in order (...)
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  24.  35
    Criterion and Defining Criterion.Martin A. Bertman - 1975 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 24:118-130.
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  25. Der Computer als Mittel zum Zweck.Ma Bertman - 1980 - Conceptus: Zeitschrift Fur Philosophie 14 (33):24-27.
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  26. Evil: a shining in blackness.Martin A. Bertman - 1997 - In Sirkku Hellsten, Marjaana Kopperi & Olli Loukola, Taking the Liberal Challenge Seriously: Essays on Contemporary Liberalism at the Turn of the 21st Century. Ashgate. pp. 295.
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  27.  55
    Editor's comments.Martin Bertman - 2007 - Hobbes Studies 20 (1):1-1.
  28.  42
    (2 other versions)Editors comment.Martin Bertman - 2004 - Hobbes Studies 17 (1):2.
  29.  67
    Editor's Review.Martin Bertman - 2009 - Hobbes Studies 22 (1):105-110.
  30.  30
    Europe’s walls and human rights.Martin Bertman - 2004 - Human Rights Review 6 (1):106-113.
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  31.  66
    God and Man: Action and Reference in Hobbes.Martin A. Bertman - 1990 - Hobbes Studies 3 (1):18-34.
  32.  62
    Hobbes and Hume in relation to Kant.Martin Bertman - 2004 - History of European Ideas 30 (3):295-314.
    Hobbes and Hume on the imagination can initiate a discussion of empiricism in the 17th and 18th centuries: here, however, it provides the opportunity to focus on Kant's attempt to overcome the limits of their sense originating, naturalist ethics. I argue the general point that Kant's response to his predecessors, both empiricist and non-empiricists, is to modify their focus on nature without falling into skepticism; indeed, his speculative metaphysics also is a response to classical ontological metaphysics. Kant by providing two (...)
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  33. Hobbes and Hume on Promising.Martin Bertman - 2002 - Vera Lex 3 (1/2):63-90.
  34. Hobbes and sociology.Martin Bertman - 1999 - Hobbes Studies 12:91.
     
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  35. Hobbes and the Man.Martin A. Bertman - 1976 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 30 (1/2=115/116):167.
     
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  36.  18
    Hobbes and Xenophon's Tyrannicus.Martin A. Bertman - 1989 - History of European Ideas 10 (5):507-517.
  37.  50
    Hermeneutic in Nietzsche.MartinA Bertman - 1973 - Journal of Value Inquiry 7 (4):254-260.
  38. Heidegger on Hobbes.Martin A. Bertman - 1989 - Hobbes Studies 2 (1):104-125.
  39.  64
    Hobbes on Miracles (and God).Martin Bertman - 2007 - Hobbes Studies 20 (1):40-62.
    Hobbes accepts only one proof for God's existence: God as first cause of nature. Thus, the laws of nature express God's will, nothing else is knowable about God. The state projects God's will because it responds to the deepest natural -- security and prosperity -- by opposing anti-social tendencies. Thus, the sovereign, by right reason, is the public measurer of religion. In private, religion is a matter of faith. Christianity is based on the sole proposition that salvation comes by Christ. (...)
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  40.  20
    Introduction.Martin A. Bertman - 1989 - History of European Ideas 10 (5):505-506.
  41.  9
    Il cuore puro ei diritti dell¿ uomo: Rousseau.Martin A. Bertman - 2003 - Giornale di Metafisica 25 (3):609-624.
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  42.  30
    Introduction: special issue on Kant.Martin Bertman - 2004 - History of European Ideas 30 (3):265-266.
  43.  15
    John Dewey and Liberalism.Martin A. Bertman - 2003 - SATS 4 (2):147-164.
    Dewey provides a useful analysis of what he calls historic liberalism and an interesting version of liberalism. A doctrine that he believes is useful for his time. This is a reconstituted liberalism with a holistic approach to society and nature. Dewey's “transactional” approach sees the fault of traditional liberalism as separating the individual as an entity outside an evolving social and natural context. This doctrine, while attending to greater individual freedom like all liberalism, emphasizes cooperation in a constantly evolving context (...)
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  44.  40
    Kierkegaard and/or philosophy.Martin A. Bertman - 1990 - History of European Ideas 12 (1):117-126.
  45.  26
    Kierkegaard: A Sole Possibility For Individual Unity.Martin A. Bertman - 1972 - Philosophy Today 16 (4):306-311.
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  46. kant Contra Herder: Almost Against Nature.Martin Bertman - 2006 - Florida Philosophical Review 6 (1):53-63.
    Since Kant limits knowledge to phenomena and espouses a Newtonian model for science, he came into conflict with a biological or organic model of nature that animated the aesthetic attitude of romanticism. The focus of the opposition was his former pupil Herder – “the father of German historicism” – who lived in the Weimar of Goethe and Schiller. Kant's speculations go beyond nature to the noumenal to ground ethics. He justifies this "rational faith" by assuming God has a teleological program (...)
     
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  47.  34
    Kant's orientation.Martin A. Bertman - 2002 - History of European Ideas 28 (4):263-280.
    Kant's ethics demand suppositions where a noumenal freedom does not contradict natural causality. A rational faith in God makes this possible, through a progressive program in nature, including history, through strife, culminating in the doctrine that the republican form of government represents man's essential ethical essence. This captures many traditional religious views but Kant asserts them as a rational exposition in response to modern and contemporary intellectual currents, especially Hume, Rousseau and Herder.
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  48.  4
    Kant's Theology and Teleology.Martin Bertman - 2006 - Res Cogitans 3 (1).
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  49.  84
    Logical Fatalism and the Excluded Middle.Martin A. Bertman - 1976 - New Scholasticism 50 (4):481-489.
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  50. La ley de la gente de Rawls.Martin A. Bertman - 2003 - Revista de Filosofía (México) 35 (108):47-68.
     
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