Results for 'Sean Armil'

972 found
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  1. The widening academic achievement gap between the rich and the poor: New evidence and possible explanations.Sean F. Reardon - 2011 - In Greg J. Duncan & Richard J. Murnane (eds.), Whither Opportunity?: Rising Inequality, Schools, and Children's Life Chances. Russell Sage. pp. 91--116.
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  2.  77
    Chinese and Buddhist philosophy in Early Twentieth-Century German thought.Eric Sean Nelson - 2017 - London: Bloomsbury.
    Presenting a comprehensive portrayal of the reading of Chinese and Buddhist philosophy in early 20th-century German thought, Chinese and Buddhist Philosophy in early Twentieth-Century German Thought examines the implications of these readings for contemporary issues in comparative and intercultural philosophy. Through a series of case studies from the late 19th-century and early 20th-century, Eric Nelson focuses on the reception and uses of Confucianism, Daoism, and Buddhism in German philosophy, covering figures as diverse as Buber, Heidegger, and Misch. He argues that (...)
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  3. Virtuous Persons and Social Roles.Sean Cordell - 2011 - Journal of Social Philosophy 42 (3):254-272.
    The article discusses the characteristics of virtuous persons in relation to their social role(s). It explores the key features of the neo-Aristotelian account of right action and some problems for this account in the context of a certain social role. The problem can be characterized as a dilemma. When evaluating an action in some role, one view is that the obligations and requirements of roles could be taken as something already given by social or professional role descriptions, such that the (...)
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  4.  14
    Does the Universe Need God?Sean Carroll - 2012 - In J. B. Stump & Alan G. Padgett (eds.), The Blackwell Companion to Science and Christianity. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 185-197.
    This chapter contains sections titled: * The Universe We Know * Theories of Creation * Why This Universe? * The Multiverse and Fine-Tuning * Accounting for the World * God as a Theory * Note * References * Further Reading.
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  5.  23
    Note on Implying.Sean Cody - 2024 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 89 (1):211-217.
    A short core model induction proof of $\mathsf {AD}^{L(\mathbb {R})}$ from $\mathsf {TD} + \mathsf {DC}_{\mathbb {R}}$.
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  6.  24
    Quotients of strongly proper forcings and guessing models.Sean Cox & John Krueger - 2016 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 81 (1):264-283.
  7.  18
    The Demiurge in Ancient Thought: Secondary Gods and Divine Mediators.Carl Sean O'Brien - 2015 - Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
    How was the world generated and how does matter continue to be ordered so that the world can continue functioning? Questions like these have existed as long as humanity has been capable of rational thought. In antiquity, Plato's Timaeus introduced the concept of the Demiurge, or Craftsman-god, to answer them. This lucid and wide-ranging book argues that the concept of the Demiurge was highly influential on the many discussions operating in Middle Platonist, Gnostic, Hermetic and Christian contexts in the first (...)
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  8.  26
    Transcendent drinking: The symposium at sea reconsidered.Sean Corner - 2010 - Classical Quarterly 60 (2):352-380.
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  9.  13
    The World Underfoot: Mosaics and Metaphor in the Greek Symposium by Hallie M. Franks.Sean Corner - 2020 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 113 (3):366-367.
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  10.  96
    An algorithmic information theory challenge to intelligent design.Sean Devine - 2014 - Zygon 49 (1):42-65.
    William Dembski claims to have established a decision process to determine when highly unlikely events observed in the natural world are due to Intelligent Design. This article argues that, as no implementable randomness test is superior to a universal Martin-Löf test, this test should be used to replace Dembski's decision process. Furthermore, Dembski's decision process is flawed, as natural explanations are eliminated before chance. Dembski also introduces a fourth law of thermodynamics, his “law of conservation of information,” to argue that (...)
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  11. Hegel, Marx and Dialectic: A Debate.Richard Norman & Sean Sayers - 1980 - Philosophy 56 (216):276-277.
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  12.  22
    Celtic Metaphysics and Consciousness.Sean O. Nuallain - 2017 - Cosmos and History 13 (2):6-25.
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  13.  16
    Introduction.Sean O. Nuallain - 2014 - Cosmos and History 10 (1):1-14.
    This is the introduction to the special edition on Foundations of Mind: Cognition and Consciousness and the introduction to the conference at UC University at Berkeley on which the edition is based.
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  14. The impact of end‐of‐course testing in chemistry on curriculum and instruction.P. Sean Smith, Paul B. Hounshell, Cynthia Copolo & Sheila Wilkerson - 1992 - Science Education 76 (5):523-530.
     
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  15. The mathematical realm of nature.Michael Sean Mahoney - 1998 - In Daniel Garber & Michael Ayers (eds.), The Cambridge history of seventeenth-century philosophy. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 702-55.
     
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  16.  35
    PFA and Ideals on $\omega_{2}$ Whose Associated Forcings Are Proper.Sean Cox - 2012 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 53 (3):397-412.
    Given an ideal $I$ , let $\mathbb{P}_{I}$ denote the forcing with $I$ -positive sets. We consider models of forcing axioms $MA(\Gamma)$ which also have a normal ideal $I$ with completeness $\omega_{2}$ such that $\mathbb{P}_{I}\in \Gamma$ . Using a bit more than a superhuge cardinal, we produce a model of PFA (proper forcing axiom) which has many ideals on $\omega_{2}$ whose associated forcings are proper; a similar phenomenon is also observed in the standard model of $MA^{+\omega_{1}}(\sigma\mbox{-closed})$ obtained from a supercompact cardinal. (...)
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  17. Econometrics and Reichenbach's Principle.Sean Muller - unknown
    Reichenbach's 'principle of the common cause' is a foundational assumption of some important recent contributions to quantitative social science methodology but no similar principle appears in econometrics. Reiss (2005) has argued that the principle is necessary for instrumental variables methods in econometrics, and Pearl (2009) builds a framework using it that he proposes as a means of resolving an important methodological dispute among econometricians. We aim to show, through analysis of the main problem instrumental variables methods are used to resolve, (...)
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  18.  8
    Scaling Up: The Institution of Chemical Engineers and the Rise of a New Profession.Colin Divall & Sean F. Johnston - 2000 - Dordrecht, Netherlands: Kluwer Academic.
    Chemical engineering - as a recognised skill in the workplace, as an academic discipline, and as an acknowledged profession - is scarcely a century old. Yet from a contested existence before the First World War, chemical engineering had become one of the 'big four' engineering professions in Britain, and a major contributor to Western economies, by the end of the twentieth century. The subject had distinct national trajectories. In Britain - too long seen as shaped by American experiences - the (...)
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  19. The Kingdom of Matthias.Paul E. Johnson & Sean Wilentz - 1995 - Utopian Studies 6 (2):196-197.
  20.  30
    De Re Explanation of Action in Context, the Problem of ‘Near-Contraries’ and Belief Fragmentation.Sean Crawford - 2021 - In Tadeusz Ciecierski & Paweł Grabarczyk (eds.), Context Dependence in Language, Action, and Cognition. De Gruyter. pp. 155-180.
    Commonsense psychological explanation of action upon objects seems to require not only reference to agents’ demonstrative beliefs about the objects acted upon but also the de re ascription of these demonstrative beliefs. There is an influential objection, however, to the de re component: since de re ascriptions permit the attribution to agents of inconsistent attitudes about the objects acted upon, they cannot explain (or predict) agents’ actions upon those objects. This paper answers the objection by presenting a contextualist theory of (...)
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  21.  28
    Enumerating Photography from Spot Meter to CCD.Sean Cubitt, Daniel Palmer & Les Walkling - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (7-8):245-265.
    The transition from analogue to digital photography was not accomplished in a single step. It required a number of feeder technologies which enabled and structured the nature of digital photography. Among those traced in this article, the most important is the genesis of the raster grid, which is now hard-wired into the design of the most widely employed photographic chip, the charge-coupled device (CCD). In tracing this history from origins in half-tone printing, the authors argue that qualities available to analogue (...)
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  22.  26
    The Critical Care Research Network: a partnership in community‐based research and research transfer.Sean P. Keenan, Claudio M. Martin, Jennifer D. Kossuth Ma, Jeannette Eberhard & William J. Sibbald - 2000 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 6 (1):15-22.
  23.  24
    Inventing engraving in Vasari's Florence.Sean Roberts - 2014 - Intellectual History Review 24 (3):367-388.
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  24. Aesthetics and History: A Study of Lessing, Rousseau, Kant, and Schiller.Timothy Sean Quinn - 1985 - Dissertation, The Catholic University of America
    This dissertation treats two themes crucial for the emergence of modern aesthetics. First, it considers the "aesthetic consciousness," which results from a rejection of the Aristotelian mimesis doctrine, and which seeks to establish art as independent from either morality or nature. Second, it treats the "historical consciousness," required to bring about the aesthetic consciousness, and eventually to raise it to the level of a moral ideal. Thus, the dissertation begins by considering that version of the mimetic argument rejected by the (...)
     
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  25.  51
    En busca de un marco efectivo para los biobancos.Heather Widdows & Sean Cordell - 2010 - Dilemata 4.
    This paper is about the actual and potential development of an ethics that is appropriate to the practices and institutions of biobanking, the question being how best to develop a framework within which the relevant ethical questions are first identified and then addressed in the right ways. It begins with ways in which a standard approach in bioethics – namely upholding a principle of indivi-dual autonomy via the practice of gaining donors’ informed consent – is an inadequate ethical framework for (...)
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  26.  32
    Practices and the rule of recognition.Sean Coyle - 2005 - Law and Philosophy 25 (4):417-452.
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  27.  49
    Marx and Bhaskar on the Dialectics of Freedom.Sean Creaven - 2003 - Journal of Critical Realism 2 (1):63-93.
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  28.  15
    Namba forcing, weak approximation, and guessing.Sean Cox & John Krueger - 2018 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 83 (4):1539-1565.
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  29.  42
    On the universality of the nonstationary ideal.Sean D. Cox - 2018 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 64 (1-2):103-117.
    Burke proved that the generalized nonstationary ideal, denoted by NS, is universal in the following sense: every normal ideal, and every tower of normal ideals of inaccessible height, is a canonical Rudin‐Keisler projection of the restriction of NS to some stationary set. We investigate how far Burke's theorem can be pushed, by analyzing the universality properties of NS with respect to the wider class of ‐systems of filters introduced by Audrito and Steila. First we answer a question of Audrito and (...)
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  30. Hegel, Marx and Dialectic.Richard Norman & Sean Sayers - 1983 - Studies in Soviet Thought 25 (1):67-69.
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  31.  32
    Descartes’s Revised Averroism.Timothy Sean Quinn - 2014 - Review of Metaphysics 67 (4):769-789.
    Descartes’s Discourse on Method proposes a radically democratic goal, science on behalf of the common good of humanity, and an equally radical elitism, wherein strong minds, possessed of true virtue, direct the efforts of weak minds. In this respect the argument of the Discourse entails what we might call a “revised Averroism”: a distinction between the few and the many intended not to protect the faith of the many, but to suborn it on behalf of the new science Descartes proposes. (...)
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  32.  26
    Nonregular ultrafilters on ω2.Sean Cox - 2011 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 76 (3):827-845.
    We obtain lower bounds for the consistency strength of fully nonregular ultrafilters on ω₂.
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  33.  38
    Apropos of A Treatise of Legal Philosophy and General Jurisprudence: Volume 1.Sean Coyle - 2009 - Ratio Juris 22 (1):155-170.
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  34.  28
    Can Natural Laws be Derived from Sociability?Sean Coyle - 2020 - New Blackfriars 101 (1091):46-66.
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  35.  53
    Natural Law in Aquinas and Suarez.Sean Coyle - 2017 - Jurisprudence 8 (2):319-341.
    This article considers the relationship between the philosophies of Thomas Aquinas and Francisco Suarez. It has been said that Suarez made significant departures from the natural law theory of Aquinas, by putting greater emphasis on divine command as the source of natural law precepts, and by replacing Aquinas’s focus on good and bad with a focus on right and wrong. Hence, Suarez appears to replace Aquinas’s eudaimonist account of ethics with one based in deontology. The article argues that the differences (...)
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  36.  41
    Reclaiming the rights of the Hobbesian subject.Sean Coyle - 2009 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 17 (1):210 – 213.
  37.  33
    The Meanings of the Logical Constants in Deontic Logic.Sean Coyle - 1999 - Ratio Juris 12 (1):39-58.
    If deontic logic is to cast light on any of the normative sciences, such as legal reasoning, then certain problems regarding its logical constants must be faced. Recent studies in the area of deontic logic have tended to assume that it is our responses to the “paradoxes” of deontic implication which are fundamental to resolving problems with the use of deontic logic to investigate various branches of normative reasoning. In this paper I wish to show that the paradoxes are of (...)
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  38.  35
    The Possibility of Deontic Logic.Sean Coyle - 2002 - Ratio Juris 15 (3):294-318.
    A recent series of papers, sparked off by a note by Robert Walter (1996), has rekindled the debate over the possibility of creating a logic of normative concepts. The debate correctly centres on ways in which Jørgensen’s dilemma might be resolved (Jørgensen 1937–8), since a means of resolving that dilemma is the only apparently available way in which to establish that a logic of norms is possible. Two separate questions require answers: (i) what is the correct way in which to (...)
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  39.  42
    Recovering Marx for the twenty-first century.Sean Creaven - 2005 - Journal of Critical Realism 4 (1):128-166.
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  40.  20
    Rodophe Gasche, Georges Bataille: Phenomenology and Phantasmatology. Reviewed by.Darin Sean McGinnis - 2015 - Philosophy in Review 35 (5):261-263.
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  41.  22
    Socialism and morality.David McLellan & Sean Sayers (eds.) - 1990 - New York: St. Martin's Press.
    WHAT IS THE ROLE OF MORAL VALUES IN SOCIALISM? CAN SOCIALISM BE 'SCIENTIFIC' OR IS IT ESSENTIALLY AN ETHICAL DOCTRINE? IS THERE ANY PLACE FOR mORALITY IN Marxism? THESE QUESTIONS ARE CENTRAL TO MUCH RECENT CONTROVERSY ON THE LEFT. 'SOCIALISM AND MORALITY' CONTAINS A VARIETY OF ORIGINAL AND IMPORTANT CONTRIBUTIONS TO THESE DEBATES BY A DISTINGUISHED GROUP OF PHILOSOPHERS AND POLITICAL THEORISTS. ALL THE PAPERS WERE SPECIALLY WRITTEN FOR THIS VOLUME AND MAKE A LIVELY, WIDE-RANGING AND VALUABLE CONTRIBUTION TO THE (...)
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  42.  18
    Lampert, Laurence., The Enduring Importance of Leo Strauss. [REVIEW]Sean Noah Walsh - 2014 - Review of Metaphysics 67 (3):642-644.
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  43.  78
    Review of Lin ma, Heidegger on East-West Dialogue: Anticipating the Event[REVIEW]Eric Sean Nelson - 2009 - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2009 (3).
  44.  19
    The Cambridge handbook of natural law and human rights The Cambridge handbook of natural law and human rights, edited by T Angier, I. T. Benson and M. Retter, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2023, xiv + 499 pp., £155 (Hardback) index, ISBN: 9781108939225. [REVIEW]Sean Coyle - 2023 - Jurisprudence 14 (4):571-577.
    This important and intellectually rich collection is a welcome addition to the literature, both on natural law and human rights. Its opening pages, in a reversal of its title, begin with a series o...
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    The Levinas Reader.Sean Hand (ed.) - 2001 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    Emmanuel Levinas has been Professor of Philosophy at the Sorbonne and the director of the Ecole Normale Israelite Orientale. Through such works as "Totality and Infinity" and "Otherwise than Being", he has exerted a profound influence on twentieth-century continental philosophy, providing inspiration for Derrida, Lyotard, Blanchot and Irigaray. "The Levinas Reader" collects, often for the first time in English, essays by Levinas encompassing every aspect of his thought: the early phenomenological studies written under the guidance and inspiration of Husserl and (...)
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  46. Endless Forms Most Beautiful: The New Science of Evo Devo.Sean Carroll - 2007 - Journal of the History of Biology 40 (3):594-597.
  47. Distributing Collective Obligation.Sean Aas - 2015 - Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 9 (3):1-23.
    In this paper I develop an account of member obligation: the obligations that fall on the members of an obligated collective in virtue of that collective obligation. I use this account to argue that unorganized collections of individuals can constitute obligated agents. I argue first that, to know when a collective obligation entails obligations on that collective’s members, we have to know not just what it would take for each member to do their part in satisfying the collective obligation, but (...)
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  48.  21
    Mind and World in Aristotle's de Anima.Sean Kelsey - 2021 - New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
    Why is the human mind able to perceive and understand the truth about reality; that is, why does it seem to be the mind's specific function to know the world? Sean Kelsey argues that both the question itself and the way Aristotle answers it are key to understanding his work De Anima, a systematic philosophical account of the soul and its powers. In this original reading of a familiar but highly compressed text, Kelsey shows how this question underpins Aristotle's (...)
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  49.  41
    Towards a functional anatomy of volition.Sean A. Spence & Chris D. Frith - 1999 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 6 (8-9):8-9.
    In this paper we examine the functional anatomy of volition, as revealed by modern brain imaging techniques, in conjunction with neuropsychological data derived from human and non-human primates using other methodologies. A number of brain regions contribute to the performance of consciously chosen, or ‘willed', actions. Of particular importance is dorsolateral prefrontal cortex , together with those brain regions with which it is connected, via cortico-subcortical and cortico-cortical circuits. That aspect of free will which is concerned with the voluntary selection (...)
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  50.  23
    Quine, New Foundations, and the Philosophy of Set Theory.Sean Morris - 2018 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Quine's set theory, New Foundations, has often been treated as an anomaly in the history and philosophy of set theory. In this book, Sean Morris shows that it is in fact well-motivated, emerging in a natural way from the early development of set theory. Morris introduces and explores the notion of set theory as explication: the view that there is no single correct axiomatization of set theory, but rather that the various axiomatizations all serve to explicate the notion of (...)
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