Results for 'Peter Harms'

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  1.  5
    La epiqueya de Aristóteles en tiempos de crisis económica.Harm Peter Westermann - 2020 - Anales de la Cátedra Francisco Suárez 54:383-401.
    Documento: La epiqueya de Aristóteles en tiempos de crisis económica.
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  2.  41
    Does it take two to Tangle? Subordinates’ Perceptions of and Reactions to Abusive Supervision.Gang Wang, Peter D. Harms & Jeremy D. Mackey - 2015 - Journal of Business Ethics 131 (2):487-503.
    Research on abusive supervision is imbalanced in two ways. First, with most research attention focused on the destructive consequences of abusive supervision, there has been relatively little work on subordinate-related predictors of perceptions of abusive supervision. Second, with most research on abusive supervision centered on its main effects and the moderating effects of supervisor-related factors, there is little understanding of how subordinate factors can moderate the main effects of perceptions of abusive supervision on workplace outcomes. The current study aims to (...)
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  3.  1
    A Mixed Blessing? Explaining the Double-Edged Effects of Leader Leniency on Employee Task Performance.Xin Liu, Bo Lv, Liyuan Li, Peter Harms, Jiawei Zheng & Xiaoming Zheng - forthcoming - Journal of Business Ethics:1-23.
    Leaders are often faced with the dilemma as to how to respond to employee misconduct. However, scholarly accounts of leader actions in such situations have primarily focused on punishment as a mechanism for dealing with employee misconduct. Leader leniency, an alternative response that is often adopted in practice, has been largely overlooked. Consequently, in order to provide a more complete account of leader responses to employee misconduct and to clarify whether leader leniency is effective, we investigate the potential double-edged influences (...)
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  4. Avoidable Harm.Peter A. Graham - 2020 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 101 (1):175-199.
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, EarlyView.
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  5.  89
    The costs of guideline‐concordant care and of care according to patients' needs in anxiety and depression.Marijn Prins, Judith Bosmans, Peter Verhaak, Klaas van der Meer, Maurits van Tulder, Harm van Marwijk, Miranda Laurant, Mirrian Smolders, Brenda Penninx & Jozien Bensing - 2011 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 17 (4):537-546.
  6.  16
    After Harm: Medical Error and the Ethics of Forgiveness.Peter Browning - 2008 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 28 (1):243-245.
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  7.  26
    VIII—Can a Good Man be Harmed?Peter Winch - 1966 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 66 (1):55-70.
    Peter Winch; VIII—Can a Good Man be Harmed?, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 66, Issue 1, 1 June 1966, Pages 55–70, https://doi.org/10.1093/aris.
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  8. The harm that religion does free inquiry , 24, no. 4 (june-july, 2004), P. 17.Peter Singer - manuscript
    Ever since August 2001, when President Bush announced his shaky compromise policy on federal funding for research on stem cells, American scientists have been charging that the policy severely impedes progress in this promising new area. Bush's policy allowed federal funding only for research using stem cell lines that were in existence on the date of his speech. Thus, he maintained, such funding would not encourage anyone to destroy human embryos to obtain stem cells, because if they did so, the (...)
     
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  9. The Harm That Religion Does.Peter Singer - 2004 - Free Inquiry 24.
    Ever since August 2001, when President Bush announced his shaky compromise policy on federal funding for research on stem cells, American scientists have been charging that the policy severely impedes progress in this promising new area. Bush's policy allowed federal funding only for research using stem cell lines that were in existence on the date of his speech. Thus, he maintained, such funding would not encourage anyone to destroy human embryos to obtain stem cells, because if they did so, the (...)
     
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  10.  81
    DTC Advertising Harms Patients and Should Be Tightly Regulated.Peter Lurie - 2009 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 37 (3):444-450.
    Like all interventions in health care, direct-to-consumer advertising should be evaluated by comparing its risks to its benefits, in the context of the available or potentially available alternatives. The objective, of course, is to realize any unique benefits while minimizing the risks. On balance, the adverse effects of DTC advertising outweigh the still-undemonstrated benefits of the advertising.DTC advertising must be seen in the context of overall pharmaceutical company expenditures on advertising. In 2005, the industry spent $29.9 billion dollars on promotions, (...)
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  11. Systems Perspective of Amazon Mechanical Turk for Organizational Research: Review and Recommendations.Melissa G. Keith, Louis Tay & Peter D. Harms - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  12.  80
    “Secondary Permissibility” and the Ethics of Harming.Peter A. Graham - 2020 - Journal of Moral Philosophy 18 (2):156-177.
    There is a moral phenomenon of “Secondary Permissibility” in which an otherwise morally impermissible option is made morally permissible by the presence of another option. In this paper I explain how this phenomenon works and argue that understanding how it works suggests a new model for the structure of the ethics of harming.
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  13.  4
    Happy meat, humane animal research and other myths: how people harm animals and still live with themselves.Peter Marsh - 2025 - Woodstock, NY: Lantern Publishing & Media.
    Albert Bandura's ideas about the methods people use to avoid feeling guilty about harming others have led to valuable insights about many forms of mass violence, from wartime atrocities to terrorism and genocide. Happy Meat, Humane Animal Research, and Other Myths applies these insights to another form of mass violence: the many ways people harm animals. Each of the first eight chapters discusses how people use a particular method of moral disengagement to feel better about harming animals. The last two (...)
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  14. A basis for morality: The principle of harm-minimisation.Hotchin Peter - 2016 - Australian Humanist, The 124:19.
    Hotchin, Peter Around the middle of the 20th century the UK philosopher Elizabeth Anscombe had become critical of ethical doctrines that have no reference to the good. She was concerned that the notions of moral duty and obligation had been rendered anchorless because of an attenuation in our understanding of what the good consists in. Bereft of an anchor, ethical doctrines had, in her view, lost contact with human needs and desires. Anscombe's concern was that of someone from a (...)
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  15.  15
    Ethics considered harmful.Peter Froelich - 2008 - Acm Sigcas Computers and Society 38 (2):21-23.
    Pardon the title, but I wanted to both grab your attention and get straight to the point. To clarify: I am referring to textbooks and courses on computer ethics, not to the field of ethics as taught to philosophy majors. I am also speaking only for myself, not for anyone else.
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  16.  47
    Fiona Woollard, Doing and Allowing Harm , pp. 239.Peter A. Graham - 2017 - Utilitas 29 (3):369-373.
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  17.  65
    Delusions, Harmful Dysfunctions, and Treatable Conditions.Peter Clutton & Stephen Gadsby - 2017 - Neuroethics 11 (2):167-181.
    It has recently been suggested that delusions be conceived of as symptoms on the harmful dysfunction account of disorder: delusions sometimes arise from dysfunction, but can also arise through normal cognition. Much attention has thus been payed to the question of how we can determine whether a delusion arises from dysfunction as opposed to normal cognition. In this paper, we consider another question, one that remains under-explored: which delusions warrant treatment? On the harmful dysfunction account, this question dissociates from the (...)
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  18. Music : Human rights and harms.Eleanor Peters - 2023 - In Music in crime, resistance, and identity. New York, NY: Routledge.
  19. Music : Human rights and harms.Eleanor Peters - 2023 - In Music in crime, resistance, and identity. New York, NY: Routledge.
  20.  18
    Buddhist Motivation to Support Ihl, From Concern to Minimise Harms Inflicted by Military Action to Both Those Who Suffer Them and Those Who Inflict Them.Peter Harvey - 2021 - Contemporary Buddhism 22 (1-2):52-72.
    ABSTRACT This article focuses on how Buddhist ethics contains ideas and principles that would urge those in a combat situation to minimise the harm they do to others, within the requirements of their military goal. This international humanitarian law principle is in line with both compassion for others and a concern to limit the bad karmic results to the combatant of their intentional killing and maiming. The motive for an act of killing can worsen or lessen its karmic results, and (...)
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  21.  16
    What’s the Harm in Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation?Peter M. Koch - 2023 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 48 (6):603-612.
    In clinical ethics, there remains a great deal of uncertainty regarding the appropriateness of attempting cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) for certain patients. Although the issue continues to receive ample attention and various frameworks have been proposed for navigating such cases, most discussions draw heavily on the notion of harm as a central consideration. In the following, I use emerging philosophical literature on the notion of harm to argue that the ambiguities and disagreement about harm create important and oft-overlooked challenges for the (...)
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  22.  42
    Can a Good Man Be Harmed?Peter Winch - 1966 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 66:55 - 70.
    Peter Winch; VIII—Can a Good Man be Harmed?, Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society, Volume 66, Issue 1, 1 June 1966, Pages 55–70, https://doi.org/10.1093/aris.
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  23.  13
    Our Politics, Our Selves?: Liberalism, Identity, and Harm.Peter Digeser - 1995 - Princeton University Press.
    Is statecraft soulcraft? Should we look to our souls and selves in assessing the quality of our politics? Is it the business of politics to cultivate, shape, or structure our internal lives? Summarizing and answering the major theoretical positions on these issues, Peter Digeser formulates a qualified permission to protect or encourage particular forms of human identity. Public discourse on politics should not preclude talk about the role of reason in our souls or the importance of wholeness and community (...)
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  24. Taking Law Seriously: Starting Points of the Hart/Devlin Debate.Peter Cane - 2006 - The Journal of Ethics 10 (1-2):21-51.
    The famous mid-20th century debate between Patrick Devlin and Herbert Hart about the relationship between law and morality addressed the limits of the criminal law in the context of a proposal by the Wolfenden Committee to decriminalize male homosexual activity in private. The original exchanges and subsequent contributions to the debate have been significantly constrained by the terms in which the debate was framed: a focus on criminal law in general and sexual offences in particular; a preoccupation with the so-called (...)
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  25.  39
    Harm is not enough.Peter Murphy - 2008 - American Journal of Bioethics 8 (10):54 – 56.
  26. Toleration, harm, and moral effect.Peter Jones - 1985 - In John P. Horton & Susan Mendus, Aspects of toleration: philosophical studies. New York: Methuen.
  27.  23
    The Co-occurrence of Self-Harm and Aggression: A Cognitive-Emotional Model of Dual-Harm.Matina Shafti, Peter James Taylor, Andrew Forrester & Daniel Pratt - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12:586135.
    There is growing evidence that some individuals engage in both self-harm and aggression during the course of their lifetime. The co-occurrence of self-harm and aggression is termed dual-harm. Individuals who engage in dual-harm may represent a high-risk group with unique characteristics and pattern of harmful behaviours. Nevertheless, there is an absence of clinical guidelines for the treatment and prevention of dual-harm and a lack of agreed theoretical framework that accounts for why people may engage in this behaviour. The present work (...)
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  28.  25
    The Irony of the Self Harm Principle.Peter C. Dalton - 1982 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 63 (4):381-391.
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  29.  35
    (1 other version)Dignity, Hate and Harm. [REVIEW]Peter Jones - 2015 - Political Theory 43 (5):678-686.
  30. Causing and preventing serious harm.Peter Unger - 1992 - Philosophical Studies 65 (3):227 - 255.
  31.  40
    Resulting Harms and Objective Risks as Constraints on Punishment.Peter Westen - 2010 - Law and Philosophy 29 (4):401-418.
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  32. Eva van Baarle and Peter Olsthoorn (2023) Resilience : a care ethical Perspective. Ethics and Armed Forces.Peter Olsthoorn - 2023 - Ethics and Armed Forces 2023 (1):30-35.
    Not only the direct physical experiences of deployment can severely harm soldiers’ mental health. Witnessing violations of their moral principles by the enemy, or by their fellow soldiers and superiors, can also have a devastating impact. It can cause soldiers’ moral disorientation, increasing feelings of shame, guilt, or hate, and the need for general answers on questions of right and wrong. Various attempts have been made to keep soldiers mentally sane. One is to provide convincing causes for their deployment, which (...)
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  33.  26
    Modern ethics in 77 arguments: a Stone reader.Peter Catapano & Simon Critchley (eds.) - 2017 - New York: Liveright Publishing Corporation.
    A necessary companion to the acclaimed Stone Reader, Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments is a landmark collection for contemporary ethical thought. Since 2010, The Stone—the immensely popular, award-winning philosophy series in The New York Times—has revived and reinterpreted age-old inquires to speak to our modern condition. This new collection of essays from the series does for modern ethics what The Stone Reader did for modern philosophy. New York Times editor Peter Catapano and best-selling author and philosopher Simon Critchley have (...)
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  34. AI Rights for Human Safety.Peter Salib & Simon Goldstein - manuscript
    AI companies are racing to create artificial general intelligence, or “AGI.” If they succeed, the result will be human-level AI systems that can independently pursue high-level goals by formulating and executing long-term plans in the real world. Leading AI researchers agree that some of these systems will likely be “misaligned”–pursuing goals that humans do not desire. This goal mismatch will put misaligned AIs and humans into strategic competition with one another. As with present-day strategic competition between nations with incompatible goals, (...)
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  35. Narrative and the Phenomenology of Personal Identity in Merleau-Ponty.Peter Antich - 2018 - Life Writing 15 (3):431-445.
    Self-narrative plays an important role in the constitution of the self, but it is unclear what role exactly. Some argue that personal identity is constituted by narrative, while others hold that narrative is a significant factor in shaping the self, but itself depends on the prior possession of a self. In this article, I provide an account of self-narrative that accommodates the best insights of both sides by drawing on Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s distinction between personal and pre-personal existence. This distinction allows (...)
     
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  36.  12
    Yahooism or Internet Fraud in the Nigerian Higher Education System.Peter Eshioke Egielewa - 2022 - Journal of Ethics in Higher Education 1:75-101.
    This study interrogates narrow-mindedness and laziness leading many of the Nigerian undergraduates to be tempted to cheat and fraud on Internet instead of working hard for their studies. The author proposes a contextual survey around a tendency also called “yahooism”, “yahoo-yahooism”, as most of the first attempted cybercrimes were realized by sending yahoo emails. This harmful tendency is contrasted with Prof Obiora Ike’s teaching on the value of hard work as the road to wealth. The study used the quantitative survey (...)
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  37.  50
    Lost in publication: how measurement harms science.Peter A. Lawrence - 2008 - Ethics in Science and Environmental Politics 8 (1):9-11.
    Measurement of scientific productivity is difficult. The measures used (impact factor of the journal, citations to the paper being measured) are crude. But these measures are now so universally adopted that they determine most things that matter: tenure or unemployment, a postdoctoral grant or none, success or failure. As a result, scientists have been forced to downgrade their primary aim from making discoveries to publishing as many papers as possible—and trying to work them into high impact factor journals. Consequently, scientific (...)
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  38. Why criminal harms matter: Plato’s abiding insight in the Laws. [REVIEW]Peter Westen - 2007 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 1 (3):307-326.
    Commentators have contested the role of resulting harm in criminal law since the time of Plato. Unfortunately, they have neglected what may be not only the best discussion of the issue, but also the first - namely, Plato's one-paragraph discussion in the "Laws." Plato's discussion succeeds in reconciling two, seemingly irreconcilable viewpoints that till now have been in stalemate. Thus, Plato reconciles the view, that an offender's desert is solely a function of his subjective willingness to act in disregard of (...)
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  39. Artificial intelligence and responsibility gaps: what is the problem?Peter Königs - 2022 - Ethics and Information Technology 24 (3):1-11.
    Recent decades have witnessed tremendous progress in artificial intelligence and in the development of autonomous systems that rely on artificial intelligence. Critics, however, have pointed to the difficulty of allocating responsibility for the actions of an autonomous system, especially when the autonomous system causes harm or damage. The highly autonomous behavior of such systems, for which neither the programmer, the manufacturer, nor the operator seems to be responsible, has been suspected to generate responsibility gaps. This has been the cause of (...)
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  40. Three Hypotheses for Explaining the So-Called Oppression of Men.Peter Higgins - 2019 - Feminist Philosophy Quarterly 5 (2).
    Are men oppressed as men? The evidence given in support of affirmative responses to this question usually consists in examples of harms, limitations, or requirements masculinity imposes on men: men are expected to pay on dates, men must be breadwinners for their families, men can be drafted for war, and so forth. This article explicates three hypotheses that account for the harms, limitations, and requirements masculinity imposes on men and, drawing on the work of Alison Jaggar, seeks to (...)
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  41. Ethical and Technical Challenges in Compensating for Harm Due to Solar Radiation Management Geoengineering.Toby Svoboda & Peter Irvine - 2014 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 17 (2):157-174.
    As a response to climate change, geoengineering with solar radiation management has the potential to result in unjust harm. Potentially, this injustice could be ameliorated by providing compensation to victims of SRM. However, establishing a just SRM compensation system faces severe challenges. First, there is scientific uncertainty in detecting particular harmful impacts and causally attributing them to SRM. Second, there is ethical uncertainty regarding what principles should be used to determine responsibility and eligibility for compensation, as well as determining how (...)
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  42.  42
    Climate Justice. A Contractualist Perspective.Peter Rinderle - 2010 - Analyse & Kritik 32 (1):39-61.
    The aim of this paper is to question the utilitarian hegemony in recent discussions about global climate change by defending the possibility of a contractualist alternative. More particularly, I will raise and try to answer two questions. First: How can we justify principles of climate justice? As opposed to the utilitarian concern with maximizing general welfare, a contractualist will look at the question whether certain principles are generally acceptable or could not reasonably be rejected. Second: What do we owe to (...)
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  43.  37
    Religious Upbringing and the Costs of Freedom: Personal and Philosophical Essays.Peter Caws & Stefani Jones (eds.) - 2010 - University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University Press.
    The essays in Religious Upbringing and the Costs of Freedom are the personal stories of philosophers who were brought up religiously and have broken free, in one way or another, from restraint and oppression. As trained philosophers, they are well equipped to reflect on and analyze their experiences. In this book, they offer not only stories of stress and liberation but ruminations on the moral issues that arise when parents and other caregivers, in seeking to do good by their children, (...)
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  44.  20
    Zur Pflicht, sich gegen Covid-19 impfen zu lassen.Peter Schaber - 2021 - Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie 107 (1):42-51.
    Many will refuse to be vaccinated against Covid-19 once the vaccine will be available. Many think that there are good reasons to refuse to do so. I will argue in this paper that there is a moral duty to be vaccinated against Covid-19. It is something we do not owe ourselves it is something we owe others. In addition, it is also argued that the state should enforce this duty. The reason for this being that the state has an obligation (...)
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  45.  73
    In Defense of the Lenient View.Peter Https://Orcidorg629X Schaber - 2021 - Philosophia 49 (4):1695-1702.
    This paper deals with the wrongness of having sex with someone without her valid consent. There are good reasons to think that deception about deal-breakers invalidate consent to sex and that acting without valid consent wrongs the consenter. Tom Dougherty argues that it is always seriously wrong to deceive another person into sex by deceiving her. We should on his view therefore reject the view that doing so is in certain cases only a minor wrong. It will be argued here (...)
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  46.  17
    Albert the Great Among the Pygmies: Explaining Animal Intelligence in the Thirteenth Century.Peter G. Sobol - 2023 - In Joshua P. Hochschild, Metaphysics Through Semantics: The Philosophical Recovery of the Medieval Mind. Springer. pp. 63-75.
    Aristotle’s restriction of intellect to humans raised the problem of how animals are able to react to and learn from their environment if they lack the ability to recognize classes of objects, an ability supposedly conferred by intellect. Aristotle’s delineation of the internal senses into the common sense, imagination, and memory did not include a locus for the cleverness or prudence that he found animals to possess in varying degrees. Avicenna supplemented Aristotle’s internal senses by adding the estimative power, which (...)
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  47. D E B at E.Peter Singer - unknown
    An d rew Ku per begins his cri ti que of my vi ews on poverty by accepti n g the crux of my moral argument: The interests of all persons ought to count equally, and geographic location and citizenship m a ke no intrinsic differen ce to the ri gh t s and obl i ga ti ons of i n d ivi du a l s . Ku per also sets out some key facts about global poverty, for (...)
     
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  48. Law Reform, or DIY Suicide.Peter Singer - 2005 - Free Inquiry 25.
    John Stuart Mill argued in On Liberty that the sole purpose for which the state can rightly exercise power over an individual is to prevent harm to others. "His own good, either physical or moral," Mill wrote, "is not a sufficient warrant." A century and a half later, although many people think a limited amount of state paternalism is reasonable-for example, to require people to wear seat belts when in a car and motorcycle helmets when riding a motorbike-we tend to (...)
     
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  49.  42
    Forum: Kuhn's structure at fifty introduction.Peter E. Gordon - 2012 - Modern Intellectual History 9 (1):73-76.
    When did historians begin to put quotation marks around the wordreal? There are many examples of this habit and some of them will be set forth as evidence in what follows. But before doing so we might ask a preliminary question: What are the quotation marksthemselvessupposed to mean? Today we find them so familiar they hardly need to be written and they are more frequently consigned to the everyday repertoire of silent gesture: two fingers on either hand clutch at the (...)
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  50.  9
    References.Peter Digeser - 1995 - In Our Politics, Our Selves?: Liberalism, Identity, and Harm. Princeton University Press. pp. 257-271.
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