Results for 'Peter Purg'

911 found
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  1.  7
    Taming the Forest: Embracing the complexity of art-sci research through microhistory, bioeconomics and intermedia art.Nikita Peresin Meden, Kristina Pranjić & Peter Purg - 2024 - Technoetic Arts 22 (1):57-73.
    An ongoing collaborative project between art and science, Taming the Forest (2022) was implemented by a team of students, artists and researchers charting an interdisciplinary project among bioeconomics, environmental history, policy and artistic practice. In this article, the project acts as a case study for researching the conflicting narratives of history and economics about biodiversity in general, and specifically about forests. It shows how different blends of methodologies in artistic-cum-scientific research can become relevant for both realms, opening new creative pathways (...)
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  2. Reviews : Isaac Deutscher and David King, The Great Purges (Blackwell, 1984) and C.L.R. James, At the Rendezvous of Victory (Allison and Busby, 1984). [REVIEW]Peter Beilharz - 1986 - Thesis Eleven 13 (1):133-134.
    Isaac Deutscher and David King, The Great Purges and C.L.R. James, At the Rendezvous of Victory.
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  3.  13
    Tocqueville’s Aristocratic Christianity.Peter Augustine Lawler - 2012 - Catholic Social Science Review 17:21-32.
    Tocqueville, the educator, employs both Christianity and aristocracy to elevate or give soulful content to the democratic personal identity, and he even presents Christianity as a kind of combination of aristocracy and democracy. The aristocratic dimension of Christianity, he says, is America’s most precious inheritance. He also says that Jesus corrected the prejudice of even the best philosophers of Greece against the possible greatness of ordinary people. Tocqueville seems most attracted to a Catholicism purged of any connection with the prejudices (...)
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  4. The Structure of Defeat: Pollock's Evidentialism, Lackey's Framework, and Prospects for Reliabilism.Peter J. Graham & Jack C. Lyons - 2021 - In Jessica Brown & Mona Simion (eds.), Reasons, Justification, and Defeat. Oxford Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Epistemic defeat is standardly understood in either evidentialist or responsibilist terms. The seminal treatment of defeat is an evidentialist one, due to John Pollock, who famously distinguishes between undercutting and rebutting defeaters. More recently, an orthogonal distinction due to Jennifer Lackey has become widely endorsed, between so-called doxastic (or psychological) and normative defeaters. We think that neither doxastic nor normative defeaters, as Lackey understands them, exist. Both of Lackey’s categories of defeat derive from implausible assumptions about epistemic responsibility. Although Pollock’s (...)
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  5.  30
    Punitive Torture.Peter Brian Barry - 2022 - In Matthew C. Altman (ed.), The Palgrave Handbook on the Philosophy of Punishment. Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 703-724.
    The use of punitive torture was practiced historically and has hardly been purged from our current practices. Fairly little attention has been paid to its justification, perhaps because many theorists of punishment have thought it so obviously unjust. But there is a fairly straightforward retributivist argument that punitive torture is sometimes morally justified: roughly, punitive torture is proportionate to the wrongdoing of some malefactors, such that, in the absence of overriding reasons, torturing them as punishment for their wrongdoing is morally (...)
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  6.  22
    Evolution and the Eucharist: Bishop E. W. Barnes on science and religion in the 1920s and 1930s.Peter J. Bowler - 1998 - British Journal for the History of Science 31 (4):453-467.
    Accounts of the religious debates sparked by the theory of evolution tend, almost inevitably, to focus on the late nineteenth century. Darwinism is treated as a symbol of the scientific naturalism that so traumatized Victorian thought. Modern accounts have shown, however, that religious thinkers were in the end able to take on board an evolutionism purged of its most materialistic tendencies. We tend to assume that in Britain, at least, the arguments had largely died down by the end of the (...)
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  7. Editorial: Rethinking research with methodologies of art practice.Claudia Westermann - 2024 - Technoetic Arts 22 (1):3-7.
    This issue of Technoetic Arts: A Journal of Speculative Research (TA) encompasses eight articles by artists and scholars from around the globe who engage with methodologies of art practice within research that reflects on technological and ecological change, contributing to the discourse on the inclusion of subjective experience in research. The articles by authors Dulmini Perera, Kate Doyle, Nora S. Vaage, Merete Lie, Nikita Peresin Meden, Kristina Pranjić, Peter Purg, Nicolaas H. Jacobs, Marth Munro, Chris Broodryk, Semi Ryu, (...)
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  8.  34
    Ethical Analysis of “Mind Reading” or “Neurotechnological Thought Apprehension”: Keeping Potential Limitations in Mind.Peter Zuk & Gabriel Lázaro-Muñoz - 2019 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 10 (1):32-34.
    We appreciate Meynen’s examination of ethical implications of using neurotechnologies to decode neural data and make inferences about cognitive processes. Here, we address three issues that we beli...
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  9.  40
    Alienation, Quality of Life, and DBS for Depression.Peter Zuk, Amy L. McGuire & Gabriel Lázaro-Muñoz - 2018 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 9 (4):223-225.
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  10.  65
    Kant's critique of teleology in biological explanation: antinomy and teleology.Peter McLaughlin - 1990 - Lewiston: E. Mellen Press.
    Kant's Critique of Teleological Judgment is read as a reflection on philosophical methodological problems that arose through the constitution of an independent science of life - biology. This work presents an example of the interconnections between philosophy and the history of science.
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  11. Log[p(h/eb)/p(h/b)] is the one true measure of confirmation.Peter Milne - 1996 - Philosophy of Science 63 (1):21-26.
    Plausibly, when we adopt a probabilistic standpoint any measure Cb of the degree to which evidence e confirms hypothesis h relative to background knowledge b should meet these five desiderata: Cb > 0 when P > P < 0 when P < P; Cb = 0 when P = P. Cb is some function of the values P and P assume on the at most sixteen truth-functional combinations of e and h. If P < P and P = P then (...)
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  12.  8
    François Rouquet & Fabrice Virgili, Les Françaises, les Français et l’Épuration.Laurent Douzou - 2018 - Clio 48.
    Il y a cinquante ans, l’universitaire américain Peter Novick publiait sous le titre The Resistance versus Vichy: The Purge of Collaborators in Liberated France la thèse qu’il avait consacrée à l’épuration sur le sol français : il y mettait à mal la version alors dominante d’une épuration supposée sauvage, massive et confuse. Dans la mesure où la traduction française, L’Épuration française, 1944-1949, attendit dix-sept ans pour voir le jour, la vision très noire de Robert Aron, distillée dans...
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  13. Two Systems for Mindreading?Peter Carruthers - 2016 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 7 (1):141-162.
    A number of two-systems accounts have been proposed to explain the apparent discrepancy between infants’ early success in nonverbal mindreading tasks, on the one hand, and the failures of children younger than four to pass verbally-mediated false-belief tasks, on the other. Many of these accounts have not been empirically fruitful. This paper focuses, in contrast, on the two-systems proposal put forward by Ian Apperly and colleagues. This has issued in a number of new findings. The present paper shows that the (...)
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  14. Presentism, triviality, and the varieties of tensism.Peter Ludlow - 2004 - Oxford Studies in Metaphysics 1:21-36.
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  15. The Virtues of Inconsistency.Peter Klein - 1985 - The Monist 68 (1):105-135.
    I "argue" that by knowingly accepting a set of propositions which is logically inconsistent, An epistemic agent need not violate any valid epistemic rule. Those types of logically inconsistent sets which it is permissible to accept are distinguished from those which may not be accepted. The results of the discussion are applied to the lottery paradox set of propositions and the preface paradox set. I also "suggest" that it may be an epistemic virtue to accept some inconsistent sets.
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  16.  87
    Experimental philosophy and the origins of empiricism.Peter R. Anstey & Alberto Vanzo - 2023 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Alberto Vanzo.
    The emergence of experimental philosophy was one of the most significant developments in the early modern period. However, it is often overlooked in modern scholarship, despite being associated with leading figures such as Francis Bacon, Robert Boyle, Isaac Newton, Jean Le Rond d'Alembert, David Hume and Christian Wolff. Ranging from the early Royal Society of London in the seventeenth century to the uptake of experimental philosophy in Paris and Berlin in the eighteenth, this book provides new terms of reference for (...)
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  17.  86
    Concepts as Semantic Pointers: A Framework and Computational Model.Peter Blouw, Eugene Solodkin, Paul Thagard & Chris Eliasmith - 2016 - Cognitive Science 40 (5):1128-1162.
    The reconciliation of theories of concepts based on prototypes, exemplars, and theory-like structures is a longstanding problem in cognitive science. In response to this problem, researchers have recently tended to adopt either hybrid theories that combine various kinds of representational structure, or eliminative theories that replace concepts with a more finely grained taxonomy of mental representations. In this paper, we describe an alternative approach involving a single class of mental representations called “semantic pointers.” Semantic pointers are symbol-like representations that result (...)
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  18. Valid Moral Appraisals and Valid Personality Disorders.Peter Zachar & Nancy Nyquist Potter - 2010 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 17 (2):131-142.
    We are thankful for the opportunity to reflect more on the difficult problem of the relationship between moral evaluations and the construct of personality disorders in response to the commentaries by Mike Martin and Louis Charland. We begin by emphasizing to readers that this important problem is complicated by the different perspectives of the various disciplines involved, especially, philosophy, psychiatry, and psychology. Incredulity, anger, and dismay are among the reactions we encountered in discussions of these issues, especially with some mental (...)
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  19.  8
    Disillusioning Reason—Rethinking Faith: Paul, Performative Speech Acts and the Political History of the Occident in Agamben and Foucault.Peter Zeillinger - 2017 - In Antonio Cimino, George Henry van Kooten & Gert Jan van der Heiden (eds.), Saint Paul and Philosophy: The Consonance of Ancient and Modern Thought. De Gruyter. pp. 95-114.
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  20. Perhaps the Impossible, therefore, Will have been Necessary: Reflections before Friendship.Peter Zeillinger - 2009 - In Kailash C. Baral & R. Radhakrishnan (eds.), Theory after Derrida: essays in critical praxis. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 151.
  21.  15
    Die „Interessiertheit der Wahrheit “und die Interessen der Wissenschaftler.Peter Zigman - 2004 - In Steffen Greschonig & Christine S. Sing (eds.), Ideologien zwischen Lüge und Wahrheitsanspruch. Wiesbaden: Deutscher Universitäts-Verlag. pp. 85--102.
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  22.  14
    Adorno als Medienkritiker.Peter V. Zima & Rainer Winter - 2007 - In Peter V. Zima & Rainer Winter (eds.), Kritische Theorie Heute. Transcript Verlag. pp. 115-128.
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  23.  15
    Subjectivity and identity: between modernity and postmodernity.Peter V. Zima - 2015 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    "This book is an augmented and updated translation by the author of Theorie des Subjekts: Subjectiviteat und Identiteat zwischen Moderne und Postmoderne, Teubingen, Francke-UTB, 2010 (3rd ed.)"--Title page verso.
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  24. On the general problem of objective reality.Peter Zinkernagel - 1962 - Mind 71 (281):33-45.
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  25. (2 other versions)Trying to Make Sense.Peter Winch - 1988 - Religious Studies 24 (2):271-273.
     
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  26.  35
    Innate Ideas.Peter Smith - 1976 - Philosophical Quarterly 26 (104):277-279.
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  27. Persons: Human and Divine.Peter van Inwagen and Dean Zimmerman (ed.) - 2007 - Oxford University Press.
  28. What Would Confucius Do? – Confucian Ethics and Self-Regulation in Management.Peter R. Woods & David A. Lamond - 2011 - Journal of Business Ethics 102 (4):669-683.
    We examined Confucian moral philosophy, primarily the Analects, to determine how Confucian ethics could help managers regulate their own behavior (self-regulation) to maintain an ethical standard of practice. We found that some Confucian virtues relevant to self-regulation are common to Western concepts of management ethics such as benevolence, righteousness, wisdom, and trustworthiness. Some are relatively unique, such as ritual propriety and filial piety. We identify seven Confucian principles and discuss how they apply to achieving ethical self-regulation in management. In addition, (...)
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  29.  30
    Anarchism and Chinese Political Culture.Peter Zarrow - 1995 - Philosophy East and West 45 (1):131-133.
  30. Compositionality and context.Peter Pagin - 2005 - In Gerhard Preyer & Georg Peter (eds.), Contextualism in philosophy: knowledge, meaning, and truth. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 303-348.
    This paper contains a discussion of how the concept of compositionality is to be extended from context invariant to context dependent meaning, and of how the compositionality of natural language might conflict with context dependence. Several new distinctions are needed, including a distinction between a weaker (e-) and a stronger (ec-) concept of compositionality for context dependent meaning. The relations between the various notions are investigated. A claim by Jerry Fodor that there is a general conflict between context dependence and (...)
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  31.  23
    All the Way Down to Turtles: A Response to Jessica Frazier.Peter Adamson - 2024 - Neue Zeitschrift für Systematicsche Theologie Und Religionsphilosophie 66 (3):311-315.
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  32. The causal structure of mechanisms.Peter Menzies - 2012 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 43 (4):796-805.
    Recently, a number of philosophers of science have claimed that much explanation in the sciences, especially in the biomedical and social sciences, is mechanistic explanation. I argue the account of mechanistic explanation provided in this tradition has not been entirely satisfactory, as it has neglected to describe in complete detail the crucial causal structure of mechanistic explanation. I show how the interventionist approach to causation, especially within a structural equations framework, provides a simple and elegant account of the causal structure (...)
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  33. Individual differences in patterns of appraisal and anger experience.Peter Kuppens, Iven Van Mechelen, Dirk Jm Smits, Paul De Boeck & Eva Ceulemans - 2007 - Cognition and Emotion 21 (4):689-713.
    Appraisal theories of emotions have gained widespread acceptance in the field of emotion research (for a recent overview, see, e.g., Scherer, Schorr, & Johnstone, 2001). In these theories, it is as...
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  34.  76
    Naturalistic Metaethics, External Reasons, and the Nature of Moral Argument.Peter G. Woolcock - 2006 - Journal of Philosophical Research 31:103-121.
    Desire-based accounts of practical argument about incompatible ends seem limited either to advice about means or to coercive threats. This paper argues that this can be avoided if the parties to the dispute desire its resolution by means other than force more than they desire the satisfaction of any particular ends. In effect, this means they must argue as if in a position of equal power. This leads to an explanation of the apparent objectivity of moral claims and of why (...)
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  35.  19
    Public Health-Consent Health Care Rationing: The Prior Consent Approach.Peter G. Woolcock - 1993 - Bioethics Research Notes 5:1.
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  36.  23
    Skills-Grouping as a Teaching Approach to the "Philosophy for Children" Program.Peter G. Woolcock - 1993 - Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children 10 (3):23-28.
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  37.  17
    The "Disagreements" Approach to Inservicing Philosophy for Children.Peter G. Woolcock - 1991 - Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children 9 (2):43-45.
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  38.  5
    Key Beliefs, Ultimate Questions and Life Issues.Peter Smith & David Worden - 2003 - Heinemann.
    This title is written to match GCSE Religious Studies AQA B, option 2 and can be used as part of a full course or short course. It contains summaries and practise exam questions at the end of each section to help prepare for exams.
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  39.  17
    Models of the Modern World-System.Peter Worsley - 1990 - Theory, Culture and Society 7 (2-3):83-95.
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  40.  7
    Liberale Ethik: Orientierungsversuch im Zeitalter der Globalisierung.Peter A. Wuffli - 2010 - Bern: Stämpfli Verlag.
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  41.  35
    Mental Disorder, Methodology, and Meaning.Peter Zachar - 2017 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 24 (1):45-48.
    In this brief commentary, I would like to discuss two reservations I have about the article by Bergner and Bunford. Before doing so let me make some preliminary remarks.Their hypothesis that the concept of disability unites the various mental disorder constructs that have been proposed over the centuries and across cultures is reasonable and accords well with common sense. The concept of disability does a lot of good work in helping us to understand mental disorders.With respect to the authors’ contrast (...)
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  42. Technological rationality in psychiatry : immanent critique, critical theory, and a pragmatist alternative.Peter Zachar & Scott Bartlett - 2009 - In James Phillips (ed.), Philosophical perspectives on technology and psychiatry. New York: Oxford University Press.
  43.  40
    Why the One and the Many Will Not Go Away.Peter Zachar - 2013 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 20 (2):131-136.
    The Contrast Between the nomothetic versus the idiographic was popularized in psychology by Gordon Allport (1937). In the early 1930s, Allport made his name by advocating for a quantitative, trait-based approach to the study of personality in contrast with the prevailing case study approach. In doing so, he was following the trend toward greater reliance on measurement in psychology as a whole. Allport, however, had grave doubts about the sufficiency of quantitative measurement for developing an understanding of individual psychological functioning. (...)
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  44.  37
    Introduction.Peter Zazzali - 2016 - The European Legacy 21 (7):631-632.
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  45. Revaluation of J. S. Mill's Ethical Proof.Peter Zinkernagel - 1952 - Theoria 18 (1):70.
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  46.  35
    Was Zeno right?Peter Zinkernagel - 1965 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 8 (1-4):292 – 300.
    It is generally agreed that the argument about Achilles and the tortoise was intended to prove that the concept of movement was contradictory or ambiguous and therefore that it did not belong in the foundations of ontology. It is suggested here that the argument stands unless we are prepared to define a standard time by means of dynamical concepts. It would be a premature assumption, however, to suppose that Zeno himself should have been so prepared.
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  47.  51
    The molecule maxim: Guidelines for an evolved enterprise culture in Hungary.Peter Zwack - 1998 - World Futures 52 (2):155-161.
    Problems arising from the transformation of Hungary from a monolithic society into a market economy are addressed. In the past, under communism, the worker was a faceless digit in a mass proletariat. He had no rights, but also no sense of obligation to society and the community. How can the business community instil in its worker a sense of their own unique individuality and role in their company and in society, a psychological awakening that will benefit not only the works (...)
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  48.  46
    The Politics of Time.Peter Osborne - 1994 - Radical Philosophy 68.
  49. Reconstructing Nature: Alienation, Emancipation and the Division of Labour.Peter Dickens - 1998 - Environmental Values 7 (2):247-249.
     
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  50.  89
    A forgotten strand of reception history: understanding pure semantics.Peter Olen - 2017 - Synthese 194 (1):121-141.
    I explore a strand of reception history that follows Rudolf Carnap’s shift from a purely syntactical analysis of constructed languages to his conception of pure semantics. My exploration focuses on Gustav Bergmann’s and Everett Hall’s interpretation of pure semantics, their understanding of what constitutes a ’formal’ investigation of language, and their arguments concerning the relationship between expressions and their extra-linguistic referents. I argue that Bergmann and Hall strongly misread Carnap’s semantic project and, subsequently, their misunderstanding is passed down through colleagues (...)
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