Results for 'Michael P. Etgen'

972 found
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  1.  37
    Cognitive dissonance: Physiological arousal in the performance expectancy paradigm.Michael P. Etgen & Ellen F. Rosen - 1993 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 31 (3):229-231.
  2. ReWrighting Pluralism.Michael P. Lynch - 2006 - The Monist 89 (1):63–84.
  3. (1 other version)True to Life: Why Truth Matters.Michael P. Lynch - 2004 - Philosophy 80 (314):601-604.
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  4.  58
    The primacy model: A new model of immediate serial recall.Michael P. A. Page & Dennis Norris - 1998 - Psychological Review 105 (4):761-781.
  5.  11
    Against Liberation: Putting Animals in Perspective.Michael P. T. Leahy - 1992 - Environmental Values 1 (1):81-83.
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  6. A Functionalist Theory of Truth.Michael P. Lynch - 2001 - In The Nature of Truth: Classic and Contemporary Perspectives. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. pp. 723--750.
  7. True to Life: Why Truth Matters.Michael P. Lynch - 2004 - Cambridge: MIT Press.
    In this engaging and spirited text, Michael Lynch argues that truth does matter, in both our personal and political lives. He explains that the growing cynicism over truth stems in large part from our confusion over what truth is.
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  8. The Nature of Truth.Michael P. Lynch - 2005 - Human Studies 28 (1):95-100.
     
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  9.  27
    Teaching and assessing the nature of science: An introduction.Michael P. Clough & Joanne K. Olson - 2008 - Science & Education 17 (2-3):143-145.
  10.  69
    Racism in Mind: Philosophical Explanations of Racism and Its Implications.Michael P. Levine & Tamas Pataki (eds.) - 2004 - Cornell UP.
    Michael P. Levine, Tamas Pataki. the case of racism. If one understands racism to be rooted in some underlying psychological structure, then while what is ordinarily called racist behavior may well be indicative of such an underlying structure, ...
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  11.  5
    Rectifying or Reinforcing? The (In)Equity Implications of Recontacting Practices in Genomic Medicine.Michael P. Mackley, Hanna Faghfoury & Lauren Chad - 2024 - Hastings Center Report 54 (S2):22-30.
    The practice of recontact in genomic medicine has the power to help rectify long‐standing inequities in genetic testing. However, if not delivered systematically, recontacting practices also have the potential to reinforce these same inequities. Recontact, which occurs when contact between a clinician and patient is reinitiated after a relationship has ended, is often in search of or in response to updated interpretation or results. Currently, recontact is happening in a patient‐driven and ad hoc manner, undermining its potential to benefit all (...)
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  12.  57
    Internet of Us: Knowing More and Understanding Less in the Age of Big Data.Michael P. Lynch - 2016 - New York, NY, USA: WW Norton.
    An investigation into the way in which information technology has shaped how and what we know, from "Google-knowing" to privacy and social media.
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  13.  38
    Natural Rights and the New Republicanism.Michael P. Zuckert - 1998 - Princeton University Press.
    In Natural Rights and the New Republicanism, Michael Zuckert proposes a new view of the political philosophy that lay behind the founding of the United States.
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  14. Against Liberation: Putting Animals in Perspective.Michael P. T. Leahy - 1991 - New York: Routledge.
    The Western world is currently gripped by an obsessive concern for the rights of animals - their uses and abuses. In this book, Leahy argues that this is a movement based upon a series of fundamental misconceptions about the basic nature of animals. This is a radical philosophical questioning of prevailing views on animal rights, which credit animals with a self-consciousness like ours. Leahy's conclusions have implications for issues such as bloodsports, meat eating and fur trading.
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  15.  64
    The curious role of natural kind terms.Michael P. Wolf - 2002 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 83 (1):81–101.
    The semantics of natural kind terms has recently been seen as a problem of reference. Kripke and Putnam have suggested that their meaning begins with rigid designation, with any further implications emerging after empirical study. I part ways with this approach and instead offer an account that focuses on the contribution that these terms make to the inferential roles of different sorts of sentences. I note that natural kind terms play an odd array of grammatical roles, both as subject and (...)
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  16.  20
    Educational Reflections on the “Ecological Crisis”: EcoJustice, Environmentalism, and Sustainability.Michael P. Mueller - 2009 - Science & Education 18 (8):1031-1056.
  17.  51
    Potentiality, political protest and constituent power: A response to the special issue.Michael P. A. Murphy - 2019 - Journal of International Political Theory 16 (3):361-380.
    Emergent forms of political protest and constitution often provide limit cases for their contemporary theoretical models, and transnational protest movements from Occupy to Democracy in Europe 2025...
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  18.  79
    Know-it-All Society: Truth and Arrogance in Political Culture.Michael P. Lynch - 2020 - New York, NY, USA: WW Norton.
    Know-it-All Society is about how we form and maintain our political convictions, and the ways in which political ideologies, human psychology and technology conspire to make our society more dogmatic, less intellectually humble and ultimately less democratic.
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  19.  64
    Grounding Unlawful Discrimination.Michael P. Foran - 2022 - Legal Theory 28 (1):3-34.
    This article explores the necessary and jointly sufficient conditions for the recognition of a ground of unlawful discrimination. It is important not only to have a coherent understanding of the currently enumerated grounds, but also to have a theoretical framework that can assist in enumerating new grounds through the open-ended “other status” aspect of many legal frameworks. To that end, this article argues that personal characteristics that are generally morally irrelevant, and that are socially salient in that they carry with (...)
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  20. The Natural Rights Republic: Studies in the Foundation of the American Political Tradition.Michael P. Zuckert - 1996
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  21.  15
    Fundamental concepts of qualitative probabilistic networks.Michael P. Wellman - 1990 - Artificial Intelligence 44 (3):257-303.
  22. The impossibility of superdupervenience.Michael P. Lynch & Joshua Glasgow - 2003 - Philosophical Studies 113 (3):201-221.
    Supervenience has provided a way for nonreductive materialists to explain how the mental can be physically irreducible but still physically respectable. In recent years, doubts about this research program have emerged from a number of quarters. Consequently, Terence Horgan has argued that nonreductive materialists must appeal to an upgraded "superdupervenience," if supervenience is to do any materialist work. We argue that nonreductive materialism cannot meet this challenge. Superdupervenience is impossible.
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  23.  16
    Prologue.Michael P. Zuckert - 1998 - In Natural Rights and the New Republicanism. Princeton University Press. pp. 1-26.
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  24.  84
    Hume and the Limits of Reason.Michael P. Lynch - 1996 - Hume Studies 22 (1):89-104.
    The purpose of this paper is to explain Hume's account of the way both the scope and the degree of benevolent motivation is limited. I argue that Hume consistently affirms, both in the _Treatise<D> and in the second _Enquiry<D>, (i) that the scope of benevolent motivation is very broad, such that it includes any creature that is conscious and capable of thought, and (ii) that the degree of benevolent motivation is limited, such that a person is naturally inclined to feel (...)
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  25. After the Spade Turns: Disagreement, First Principles and Epistemic Contractarianism.Michael P. Lynch - 2016 - International Journal for the Study of Skepticism 6 (2-3):248-259.
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  26. (1 other version)The Nature of Truth: Classic and Contemporary Perspectives.Michael P. Lynch (ed.) - 2001 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
  27.  96
    The Ordinary Language Case for Contextualism and the Relevance of Radical Doubt.Michael P. Wolf & Jeremy Randel Koons - 2018 - Contemporary Pragmatism 15 (1):66-94.
    Many contextualist accounts in epistemology appeal to ordinary language and everyday practice as grounds for positing a low-standards knowledge (knowledgeL) that contrasts with high-standards prevalent in epistemology (knowledgeH). We compare these arguments to arguments from the height of “ordinary language” philosophy in the mid 20th century and find that all such arguments face great difficulties. We find a powerful argument for the legitimacy and necessity of knowledgeL (but not of knowledgeH). These appeals to practice leave us with reasons to accept (...)
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  28.  61
    Perception of motion affects language processing.Michael P. Kaschak, Carol J. Madden, David J. Therriault, Richard H. Yaxley, Mark Aveyard, Adrienne A. Blanchard & Rolf A. Zwaan - 2005 - Cognition 94 (3):B79-B89.
  29. Truth and multiple realizability.Michael P. Lynch - 2004 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 82 (3):384 – 408.
    Pluralism about truth is the view that there is more than one way for a proposition to be true. When taken to imply that there is more than one concept and property of truth, this position faces a number of troubling objections. I argue that we can overcome these objections, and yet retain pluralism's key insight, by taking truth to be a multiply realizable property of propositions.
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  30.  37
    Transcendence and Wittgenstein's Tractatus.Michael P. Hodges - 1990 - Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
    1 INTRODUCTION The Historical and Cultural Background Ludwig Wittgenstein has been and continues to be one of the most enigmatic figures in ...
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  31.  66
    Boundaries, Reasons, and Relativism.Michael P. Wolf - 2012 - Journal of Philosophical Research 37:205-220.
    During the latter half of the twentieth century, many philosophers in Europe and America turned towards social pragmatist and holistic accounts of concepts and theories. In this paper, I make the case that many forms of relativism—moral and otherwise—that emerge from this turn are misguided. While we must always operate from some framework of practices in which things may serve as reasons for us, most forms of relativism in recent decades have more boldly granted us immunity from external rational scrutiny. (...)
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  32. Relativity of Fact and Content.Michael P. Lynch - 1999 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 37 (4):579-595.
    A common strategy amongst realists grants relativism at the level of language or thought but denies it at the level of fact. Their point is that even if our concept of an object is relative to a conceptual scheme, it doesn't follow that objects themselves are relative to conceptual schemes. This is a sensible point. But in this paper I present a simple argument for the conclusion that it is false. According to what I call the T-argument, relativism about content (...)
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  33.  30
    Perception of Auditory Motion Affects Language Processing.Michael P. Kaschak, Rolf A. Zwaan, Mark Aveyard & Richard H. Yaxley - 2006 - Cognitive Science 30 (4):733-744.
    Previous reports have demonstrated that the comprehension of sentences describing motion in a particular direction (toward, away, up, or down) is affected by concurrently viewing a stimulus that depicts motion in the same or opposite direction. We report 3 experiments that extend our understanding of the relation between perception and language processing in 2 ways. First, whereas most previous studies of the relation between perception and language processing have focused on visual perception, our data show that sentence processing can be (...)
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  34.  99
    On doing helpful philosophy.Michael P. Nelson - 2008 - Science and Engineering Ethics 14 (4):611-614.
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  35. Truth, value and epistemic expressivism.Michael P. Lynch - 2009 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 79 (1):76-97.
  36. At the Heart of the World [Book Review].Michael P. Cullen - 2006 - The Australasian Catholic Record 83 (1):124.
     
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  37. Rigid Designation and Natural Kind Terms, Pittsburgh Style.Michael P. Wolf - 2012 - Normative Functionalism and the Pittsburgh School.
    This paper addresses recent literature on rigid designation and natural kind terms that draws on the inferentialist approaches of Sellars and Brandom, among others. Much of the orthodox literature on rigidity may be seen as appealing, more or less explicitly, to a semantic form of “the given” in Sellars’s terms. However, the important insights of that literature may be reconstructed and articulated in terms more congenial to the Pittsburgh school of normative functionalism.
     
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  38. Matthew D. mendham.Michael P. Zuckert - 2002 - International Philosophical Quarterly 42:285-86.
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  39.  86
    Pantheism, substance and unity.Michael P. Levine - 1992 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 32 (1):1 - 23.
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  40.  13
    Truth Relativism and Truth Pluralism.Michael P. Lynch - 2010 - In Steven D. Hales, A Companion to Relativism. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 85–101.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Abstract Introduction Truth Relativism Metaphysics of Truth Relativism Truth Relativism and the Scope Problem Truth Pluralism Example: Relative Moral Truth Conclusion References.
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  41.  13
    The Academic Man: A Study in the Sociology of a Profession (Book).Michael P. Lempert - 1996 - Educational Studies 27 (3):236-241.
  42.  69
    Deep Structure and the Comparative Philosophy of Religion.Michael P. Levine - 1992 - Religious Studies 28 (3):387 - 399.
    Through various applications of the ‘deep structure’ of moral and religious reasoning, I have sought to illustrate the value of a morally informed approach in helping us to understand the complexity of religious thought and practice…religions are primarily moved by rational moral concerns and…ethical theory provides the single most powerful methodology for understanding religious belief. Ronald Green, Religion and Moral Reason.
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  43.  70
    Historical Anti-Realism.Michael P. Levine - 1991 - The Monist 74 (2):230-239.
    In “Narrative Explanations: The Case of History,” Paul A. Roth attempts to defend the legitimacy of narrative explanation in history against two central objections—the “methodological” and the “metaphysical.” Like Roth, I find the category of narrative explanation acceptable even if it is problematic, and even if the notions of “narrative,” “explanation,” and “narrative explanation” are not altogether clear. The philosophically grounded “methodological” objections to narrative explanation are often, though not invariably, based on an acceptance of some form of positivism and (...)
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  44.  58
    Introduction: Ethics and architecture.Michael P. Levine, Kristine Miller & William Taylor - 2004 - Philosophical Forum 35 (2):103–115.
  45.  8
    I6 Philosophers on miracles.Michael P. Levine - 2011 - In Graham H. Twelftree, The Cambridge Companion to Miracles. Cambridge University Press. pp. 291.
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  46.  79
    If There Is a God, Any Experience Which Seems to Be of God, Will Be Genuine.Michael P. Levine - 1990 - Religious Studies 26 (2):207 - 217.
    In The Existence of God Richard Swinburne argues that ‘if there is a God, any experience which seems to be of God, will be genuine – will be of God.’ On the face of it this claim of the essential veridicality of any religious experience, given the existence of God, is incredible. Consider what is being claimed by looking at a particularly dramatic example – but one that is well within the purview of Swinburne's claim. The ‘Yorkshire Ripper’ who murdered (...)
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  47.  24
    Madden's account of necessity in causation.Michael P. Levine - 1988 - Philosophia 18 (1):75-96.
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  48.  84
    Monism and pantheism.Michael P. Levine - 1992 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 30 (4):95-110.
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  49.  9
    The Libertarians and Education.Michael P. Smith - 1983 - London ; Boston : Allen & Unwin.
  50. Memes, Misinformation, and Political Meaning.Michael P. Lynch - 2022 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 60 (1):38-56.
    Are most people sincere when they share misinformation and conspiracies online? This question, while natural and important, is difficult to answer for obvious reasons. But it also applies poorly to one of the main vehicles for misinformation—memes. And it can be ambiguous; as a result, we should be mindful of two distinctions. First, a distinction between belief and a related propositional attitude, commitment. And second, the distinction between the propositional content of an attitude and what I will call its political (...)
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