Results for 'Matt Gibbs'

974 found
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  1.  23
    The Acta Alexandrinorum (A.) Harker Loyalty and Dissidence in Roman Egypt. The Case of the Acta Alexandrinorum. Pp. vi + 256. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008. Cased, £55, US$99. ISBN: 978-0-521-88789-. [REVIEW]Matt Gibbs - 2010 - The Classical Review 60 (2):507-509.
  2.  31
    More michigan papyri. P.j. †sijpesteijn, K.A. Worp a transportation archive from fourth-century oxyrhynchus . With the assistance of †traianos gagos and Arthur verhoogt. Pp. 235. Durham, nc: The american society of papyrologists, 2011. Cased, £30. Isbn: 978-0-9799758-3-7. [REVIEW]Matt Gibbs - 2016 - The Classical Review 66 (1):96-98.
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  3. Egalitarianism Reconsidered.Daniel M. Hausman & Matt Sensat Waldren - 2011 - Journal of Moral Philosophy 8 (4):567-586.
    This paper argues that egalitarian theories should be judged by the degree to which they meet four different challenges. Fundamentalist egalitarianism, which contends that certain inequalities are intrinsically bad or unjust regardless of their consequences, fails to meet these challenges. Building on discussions by T.M. Scanlon and David Miller, we argue that egalitarianism is better understood in terms of commitments to six egalitarian objectives. A consequence of our view, in contrast to Martin O'Neill's “non-intrinsic egalitarianism,“ is that egalitarianism is better (...)
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  4. Murdoch's Ontological Argument.Cathy Mason & Matt Dougherty - 2023 - European Journal of Philosophy 31 (3):769-784.
    Anselm’s ontological argument is an argument for the existence of God. This paper presents Iris Murdoch’s ontological argument for the existence of the Good. It discusses her interpretation of Anselm’s argument, her distinctive appropriation of it, as well as some of the merits of her version of the argument. In doing so, it also shows how the argument integrates some key Murdochian ideas: morality’s wide scope, the basicness of vision to morality, moral realism, and Platonism.
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  5. (1 other version)Exploitation.Alan Wertheimer & Matt Zwolinski - 1996 - Mind.
    What is the basis for arguing that a volunteer army exploits citizens who lack civilian career opportunities? How do we determine that a doctor who has sex with his patients is exploiting them? In this book, Alan Wertheimer seeks to identify when a transaction or relationship can be properly regarded as exploitative--and not oppressive, manipulative, or morally deficient in some other way--and explores the moral weight of taking unfair advantage. Among the first political philosophers to examine this important topic from (...)
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  6.  58
    Why many concepts are metaphorical.Raymond W. Gibbs - 1996 - Cognition 61 (3):309-319.
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  7.  29
    (1 other version)Essays in Social Theory.Benjamin Gibbs & Steven Lukes - 1978 - Philosophical Quarterly 28 (113):374.
  8.  32
    Street Level Bureaucracy, Casework and Justice in advance.Daniel Engster & Matt Edge - forthcoming - Social Theory and Practice.
  9.  20
    Leadership for the Sustainability Transition.William Throop & Matt Mayberry - 2017 - Business and Society Review 122 (2):221-250.
    Society is looking to business to help solve our most complex environmental and social challenges as we transition to a more sustainable economic model. However, without a fundamental shift in the dominant virtues that have influenced business decision making for the past 150 years to a new set of dominant virtues that better fit today's environment, it will be more natural for companies to resist the necessary changes than to find the opportunities within them. We use the term “virtues” quite (...)
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  10.  21
    Metaphors in the flesh: Metaphorical pantomimes in sports celebrations.Raymond W. Gibbs - 2021 - Cognitive Linguistics 32 (1):67-96.
    When athletes make significant plays in sporting competitions, such as scoring a goal in soccer, a touchdown in American football, they often immediately express their joy by performing some bodily action for others to see and understand. Many sports celebrations are staged pantomimes that express metaphorical meanings as a part of athletes’ pretending to perform certain source-path-goal sequences of action from other competitive events. This article examines the possible metaphoricity in different sports celebrations and whether casual observers may understand these (...)
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  11.  25
    The activation parameters for dislocation glide.G. B. Gibbs - 1967 - Philosophical Magazine 16 (139):97-102.
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  12.  36
    Environmental Ethics in the Midwest: Interdisciplinary Approaches.Ian Smith & Matt Ferkany (eds.) - 2022 - Michigan State University Press.
    This volume brings scholarly attention to the Midwest and to how broader concerns of environmental ethics manifest. Consisting of eight essays, a wide range of topics is covered, such as agrarian ethics and Stoicism, the Dakota access pipeline and Indigenous women's activism, philosophy of law and species classification, environmental justice and the Flint water crisis, hog farming and anti-microbial drug resistance, science education standards and climate change education, virtue ethics and ecological restoration, and environmental pragmatism and the Clear Water Act; (...)
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  13. What does it mean to occupy?Tim Gilman & Matt Statler - 2012 - Continent 2 (1):36-39.
    Place mouse over image continent. 2.1 (2012): 36–39. From an ethical and political perspective, people and property can hardly be separated. Indeed, the modern political subject – that is, the individual, the person, the self, the autonomous actor, the rational self-interest maximizer, etc. – has taken shape in and through the elaboration, institutionalization, and enactment of that which rightfully belongs to it. This thread can be traced back perhaps most directly to Locke’s notion that the origin of the political state (...)
     
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  14.  45
    Striving for optimal relevance when answering questions.Raymond W. Gibbs & Gregory A. Bryant - 2008 - Cognition 106 (1):345-369.
    When people are asked “Do you have the time?” they can answer in a variety of ways, such as “It is almost 3”, “Yeah, it is quarter past two”, or more precisely as in “It is now 1:43”. We present the results of four experiments that examined people’s real-life answers to questions about the time. Our hypothesis, following previous research findings, was that people strive to make their answers optimally relevant for the addressee, which in many cases allows people to (...)
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  15.  49
    (1 other version)Marketing and the notion of well-being.Paul Gibbs - 2004 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 13 (1):5–13.
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  16.  72
    The Power of One: Dissent and Organizational Life.Nasrin Shahinpoor & Bernard F. Matt - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 74 (1):37-48.
    Over the last 20 years, organizations have attempted numerous innovations to create more openness and to increase ethical practice. However, adult students in business classes report that managers are generally bureaucratically oriented and averse to constructive criticism or principled dissent. When organizations oppose dissent, they suffer the consequences of mistakes that could be prevented and they create an unethical and toxic environment for individual employees. By distinguishing principled dissent from other forms of criticism and opposition, managers and leaders can perceive (...)
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  17.  36
    Academic freedom in international higher education: right or responsibility?Alexis Gibbs - 2016 - Ethics and Education 11 (2):175-185.
    This paper explores the conceptual history of academic freedom and its emergence as a substantive right that pertains to either the academic or the university. It is suggested that historical reconceptualisations necessitated by contingent circumstance may have led to academic freedom being seen as a form of protection for those working within universities whose national legislation recognises the right to teach and research without external interference, rather than as a responsibility to the wider society or to peers in other parts (...)
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  18. Attention and reinforcement learning: Constructing representations from indirect feedback.Fabián Canas & Matt Jones - 2010 - In S. Ohlsson & R. Catrambone (eds.), Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. Cognitive Science Society.
  19.  32
    Negotiating Meaning Systems in Multi-stakeholder Partnerships Addressing Grand Challenges: Homelessness in Western Canada.Sarah Easter, Matt Murphy & Mary Yoko Brannen - 2022 - Journal of Business Ethics 183 (1):31-52.
    While multi-stakeholder partnerships are emerging as an increasingly popular approach to address grand challenges, they are not well studied or understood. Such partnerships are rife with difficulties arising from the fact that actors in the partnership have different understandings of the grand challenge based on meaning systems which have distinct and often opposing assumptions, values, and practices. Each partnership actor brings with them their individual values as well as the values and work practices of their home organization’s culture, alongside the (...)
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  20.  31
    The Foundations of Constitutional Democracy: The Kelsen-Natural Law Controversy.Nathan Gibbs - 2024 - Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 37 (1):79-107.
    In the immediate post-war period, a set of thinkers, most notably Jacques Maritain, developed influential natural law theories of constitutional democracy. The central tenet of the natural law approach to the post-war settlement was that, without the type of foundational understanding of the constitutional system it was proposing, the new democratic political institutions would relapse into totalitarianism. In response to this natural law challenge, Hans Kelsen sought to explicate and defend a self-consciously secular and relativistic understanding of the basis of (...)
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  21.  15
    The permittivity of hydrostatically stressed dielectrics.D. F. Gibbs & M. Jarman - 1962 - Philosophical Magazine 7 (76):663-670.
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  22.  28
    Craig Fox & Britt Harrison, editors, Philosophy of Film Without Theory.Alexis Gibbs - 2024 - Film and Philosophy 28:135-139.
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  23.  56
    A Heideggerian Phenomenology Approach to Higher Education as Workplace: A Consideration of Academic Professionalism.Paul Gibbs - 2010 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 29 (3):275-285.
    Heidegger’s early works provide his most important contribution to our understanding of being, while his discussion of the effects of technology on that being in his later works is one of his best known contributions. I use his phenomenological approach to understanding the workplace and then, from a range of potential applications, choose to describe the functioning of higher education as a workplace for academic professionals. Heidegger seemingly fails to offer a subtle approach to what is labouring, or to whether (...)
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  24.  37
    “Take My Organs, Please”: A Section of My Living Will.Thomas Cochrane & Matt T. Bianchi - 2011 - American Journal of Bioethics 11 (8):56-58.
    The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 11, Issue 8, Page 56-58, August 2011.
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  25.  48
    Fourier transforms of the electroencephalogram during sleep.J. R. Knott, F. A. Gibbs & C. E. Henry - 1942 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 31 (6):465.
  26.  20
    Relationship of Event-Related Potentials to the Vigilance Decrement.Ashley Haubert, Matt Walsh, Rachel Boyd, Megan Morris, Megan Wiedbusch, Mike Krusmark & Glenn Gunzelmann - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  27.  14
    (1 other version)‘What Makes My Image of Him into an Image of Him?’: Philosophers on Film and the Question of Educational Meaning.Alexis Gibbs - 2016 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 50 (4).
    This paper proceeds from the premise that film can be educational in a broader sense than its current use in classrooms for illustrative purposes, and explores the idea that film might function as a form of education in itself. To investigate the phenomenon of film as education, it is necessary to first address a number of assumptions about film, the most important of which is its objective character under study. The objective study of film holds that the meaning of film (...)
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  28.  27
    Should Kohlberg's cognitive developmental approach to morality be replaced with a more pragmatic approach? Comment on Krebs and Denton (2005).John C. Gibbs - 2006 - Psychological Review 113 (3):666-671.
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  29.  55
    Mimesis as a mode of knowing.Anna Gibbs - 2015 - Angelaki 20 (3):43-54.
    :This paper explores a form of corporeal copying which it terms mimetic communication, and explores the way it is not limited to human communication but can and does operates across species. Focusing on the way movement and vision can be seen to be at work in this kind of mimetic communication, the paper argues that it constitutes an important form of affective knowledge about both human and non-human others. Taking the work of early twentieth-century documentary filmmaker Jean Painlevé, who worked (...)
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  30.  29
    Stability and variability in linguistic pragmatics.Raymond W. Gibbs - 1999 - Pragmatics and Society 1 (1):32-49.
    The study of linguistic pragmatics is always caught in the wonderful tension between seeking broad human pragmatic abilities and showing the subtle ways that communication is dependent on specific people and social situations. These different foci on areas of stability and variability in linguistic and nonlinguistic behavior are often accompanied by very different theoretical accounts of how and why people act, speak, and understand in the ways they do. Within contemporary research in experimental pragmatics, there are always instances of some (...)
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  31.  61
    Substitution.Robert B. Gibbs - 1989 - Philosophy and Theology 4 (2):171-185.
    The subject is under siege. In many disciplines the self that modem thought established and fortified has fallen to critique. But while many explore the implications for epistemology, for literary theory, for psychology, or for history and social thought, few writers have pondered the question in terms of ethics. After all, ethics must rest on a subject, a person who makes choices and decides for various reasons to commit acts in one’s own name. l suggest that ethics can survive the (...)
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  32.  12
    Heidegger From Metaphysics to Thought.Dominique Janicaud & Jean-Fran?Cois Matt?Ei - 1994 - State University of New York Press.
    Janicaud clarifies the project of “overcoming” metaphysics, a project that Heidegger himself recognized as open to innumerable misunderstandings, and Mattei inquires into the major Heideggerian texts produced between 1935 and 1969 to detect the cosmic figure of the Geviert, the initial Fourfold where “earth and sky, the divine ones and the mortals” gather.
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  33. Putnam on brains and behaviour.Benjamin Gibbs - 1969 - Analysis 30 (December):53-55.
  34. Cosmology: No Dogs or Philosophers Allowed.Ken Knisely, Matt Hunter, Natasha Kyburg & Farzad Mahootian - forthcoming - DVD.
    Do the results of scientific study of the physical world give us any inkling about the value of doing metaphysics? Or is the construction of a philosophy of everything upon the insights of science building on sinking sand? With Matt Hunter, Natasha Kyburg, and Farzad Mahootian.
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  35. Introduction.Benjamin Ferguson & Matt Zwolinski - 2024 - In Benjamin Ferguson & Matt Zwolinski (eds.), Exploitation: perspectives from philosophy, politics, and economics. New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press. pp. 1-9.
    Exploitation: Perspectives from Philosophy, Politics, and Economics brings together recent work on the topic of exploitation from philosophy, political science, and economics in one volume, organized around three main questions: What is exploitation? Why is exploitation wrong? What should we do about it? These questions are increasingly relevant in public policy discussions. The past decade has witnessed the rise of populism and an increasing sense that politics is a game rigged to benefit certain classes of persons at the expense of (...)
     
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  36.  6
    Acknowledgments.Robert Gibbs - 1994 - In Correlations in Rosenzweig and Levinas. Princeton University Press.
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  37.  52
    Abbreviations and Citations.Robert Gibbs - 1994 - In Correlations in Rosenzweig and Levinas. Princeton University Press. pp. xi-2.
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  38. Asymmetry and mutuality: Habermas and Levinas.Robert Gibbs - 1997 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 23 (6):51-63.
  39.  44
    Abbreviations and Notes on Citations.Robert Gibbs - 2000 - In Why Ethics?: Signs of Responsibilities. Princeton University Press.
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  40.  23
    A transcending a single reality.Paul Gibbs - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (14):1392-1393.
  41.  37
    Biometrics: body odor authentication perception and acceptance.Martin D. Gibbs - 2010 - Acm Sigcas Computers and Society 40 (4):16-24.
    Odor detection and identification by machines is currently being done to evaluate perfumes, wine, olive, oil, and even find people buried in rubble. Extending body odor detection to authentication may seem far-fetched and unrealistic. Yet such an application is plausible, given that like a fingerprint or iris, the human body odor is unique. Although such technology still has strides to make before being applicable as either a stand-alone or supplemental technology to existing biometric tools, it still warrants research, especially in (...)
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  42.  14
    CHAPTER 1. Correlations, Adaptation.Robert Gibbs - 1994 - In Correlations in Rosenzweig and Levinas. Princeton University Press. pp. 17-33.
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  43.  7
    CHAPTER 6. Eternity and Society : Politics vs. Aesthetics.Robert Gibbs - 1994 - In Correlations in Rosenzweig and Levinas. Princeton University Press. pp. 129-154.
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  44.  12
    CHAPTER 10. Marx and Levinas: Liberation in Society.Robert Gibbs - 1994 - In Correlations in Rosenzweig and Levinas. Princeton University Press. pp. 229-254.
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  45.  7
    CHAPTER 9. Substitution: Marcel and Levinas.Robert Gibbs - 1994 - In Correlations in Rosenzweig and Levinas. Princeton University Press. pp. 192-228.
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  46.  7
    CHAPTER 8. The Unique Other: Hermann Cohen and Emmanuel Levinas.Robert Gibbs - 1994 - In Correlations in Rosenzweig and Levinas. Princeton University Press. pp. 176-191.
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  47.  27
    Conjunction, translation, transliteration.Robert Gibbs - 2007 - Modern Theology 23 (2):279-284.
  48.  5
    Chapter 10. Why Verify?Robert Gibbs - 2000 - In Why Ethics?: Signs of Responsibilities. Princeton University Press. pp. 227-245.
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  49.  8
    Chapter 13. Why Translate?Robert Gibbs - 2000 - In Why Ethics?: Signs of Responsibilities. Princeton University Press. pp. 278-304.
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  50.  8
    Chapter 14. Why Repent?Robert Gibbs - 2000 - In Why Ethics?: Signs of Responsibilities. Princeton University Press. pp. 307-324.
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