Results for 'Stephen David Reicher'

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  1.  21
    Disputing deindividuation: Why negative group behaviours derive from group norms, not group immersion.Stephen David Reicher, Russell Spears, Tom Postmes & Anna Kende - 2016 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 39:e161.
    Strong social identity does not lead to lack of accountability and “bad” behavior in groups and crowds but rather causes group behavior to be driven by group norms. The solution to problematic group behavior is therefore not to individualize the group but rather to change group norms, as underlined by the relational dynamics widely studied in the SIDE tradition.
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  2. Costa, cancer and coronavirus: contractualism as a guide to the ethics of lockdown.Stephen David John & Emma J. Curran - 2022 - Journal of Medical Ethics 48 (9):643-650.
    Lockdown measures in response to the COVID-19 pandemic involve placing huge burdens on some members of society for the sake of benefiting other members of society. How should we decide when these policies are permissible? Many writers propose we should address this question using cost-benefit analysis, a broadly consequentialist approach. We argue for an alternative non-consequentialist approach, grounded in contractualist moral theorising. The first section sets up key issues in the ethics of lockdown, and sketches the apparent appeal of addressing (...)
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  3.  7
    Literature & Philosophy.Stephen David Ross - 1969 - New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts.
  4.  70
    Self Love.Stephen David Ross - 2005 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:129-152.
    The ownership condemned with such rigor by the mystics, and often called impurity, is only the search for one's own solace and one's own interest in the jouissance of the gifts of God, at the expense of the jealousy of the pure love that wants everything for God and nothing for the creature .... Ownership, of course, is nothing but self-love or pride, which is the love of one's own excellence insofar as it is one's own, and which, instead of (...)
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  5.  9
    The Gift of Self: Shattering Emptiness, Betrayal.Stephen David Ross - 2005 - State University of New York Press.
    Explores themes of dispossession, shattering, and fragmentation that arise in contemporary writings from the point of view of the selves whose subjectivities and practices are said to be fragmented, shattered, and dispossessed.
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  6.  44
    Supreme Emergencies, Epistemic Murkiness and Epistemic Transparency.Stephen David John - 2009 - Philosophy of Management 8 (2):3-12.
    Sometimes, states face emergencies: situations where many individuals face an imminent threat of serious harm. Some believe that in such cases certain sorts of actions which are normally morally prohibited might be permissible. In this paper, I discuss this view as it applies in both the contexts of war and of public health policy. I suggest that the deontologist can best understand emergencies by analogy with the distinction between act- and rule consequentialism. In real world cases, we must often make (...)
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  7.  28
    How low can you go? Justified hesitancy and the ethics of childhood vaccination against COVID-19.Stephen David John - 2022 - Journal of Medical Ethics 48 (12):1006-1009.
    This paper explores some of the ethical issues around offering COVID-19 vaccines to children. My main conclusion is rather paradoxical: the younger we go, the stronger the grounds for justified parental hesitancy and, as such, the stronger the arguments for enforcing vaccination. I suggest that this is not thereductio ad absurdumit appears, but does point to difficult questions about the nature of parental authority in vaccination cases. The first section sketches the disagreement over vaccinating teenagers, arguing that the UK policy (...)
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  8.  43
    Introduction.Stephen David Ross - 2010 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:1-20.
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  9. Perspective in Whitehead's Metaphysics.Stephen David Ross - 1983 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 19 (4):416-421.
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  10.  26
    Philosophical Mysteries.Stephen David Ross - 1981 - State University of New York Press.
    “This is my major thesis. Mystery is inherent in both the nature of things and the nature of rationality. I will sustain this thesis by a review of some of the central issues of philosophy to elucidate their mysterious qualities. More important, however, I will develop in detail an explanation of mystery and trace some of its important ramifications.” “I will argue that an ordinal metaphysics, with its associated theory of query, provides an account of mystery that no other theory (...)
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  11.  15
    Calling.Stephen David Ross - 2009 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:197-247.
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  12.  39
    Messy autonomy: Commentary on Patient preference predictors and the problem of naked statistical evidence.Stephen David John - 2018 - Journal of Medical Ethics 44 (12):864-864.
    Like many, I find the idea of relying on patient preference predictors in life-or-death cases ethically troubling. As part of his stimulating discussion, Sharadin1 diagnoses such unease as a worry that using PPPs disrespects patients’ autonomy, by treating their most intimate and significant desires as if they were caused by their demographic traits. I agree entirely with Sharadin’s ‘debunking’ response to this concern: we can use statistical correlations to predict others’ preferences without thereby assuming any causal claim. However, I suspect (...)
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  13. Art and its Significance an Anthology of Aesthetic Theory.Stephen David Ross - 1994
     
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  14.  12
    Perspective in Whitehead's Metaphysics.Stephen David Ross - 1983 - State University of New York Press.
    This book addresses key Whiteheadian texts and secondary interpretations of Whitehead.
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  15.  20
    General Preface to the Project.Stephen David Ross - 2010 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:1-5.
    Sixth volume devoted to the good. Human, natural worlds filled with gifts. Nature, general economy of the good, earth's abundance, beyond measure. Gifts and giving, beyond having. Cherishment, sacrifice, plenishment: exposure to the good. Plato. The good grants authority to knowledge and truth. Anaximander. Injustice, restitution.Beauty, truth, justice gifts from the good. Precedence in Western philosophic tradition to gathering, assembling, and having being. Love of self as having. A self beyond itself, giving beyond having. Ethic responsive to the heterogeneous abundance (...)
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  16.  39
    Pain.Stephen David Ross - 2009 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:303-333.
    Physical pain has no voice, but when it at last finds a voice, it begins to tell a story, and the story that it tells is about the inseparability of these three subjects, their embeddedness in one another. (Scarry, BP, 3).
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  17.  10
    The Gift of Beauty: The Good as Art.Stephen David Ross - 1996 - State University of New York Press.
    Traces the history of the idea of art as an ethical movement, interpreting the good as nature's abundance, giving rise to an ethics of inclusion, expressed in art.
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  18.  64
    The limits of language.Stephen David Ross - 1994 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    The Limits of Language concerns itself with the nature and limits of language at a time when our understanding of the world and of ourselves is intimately related to what we understand of language.
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  19.  7
    The Un-Forgetting: Re-Calling Time Lost.Stephen David Ross - 2009 - Global Academic.
    Introduction: The forgotten -- Re-calling -- Re-membering -- Unremembering -- Enlightenment -- History -- Counter-memory -- Body and image -- Past and future -- Everyday life -- Diachrony -- Inheritance -- Pain -- Disaster.
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  20.  26
    World as Art.Stephen David Ross - 2007 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:107-142.
    According to my entire understanding here, art is itself an emanation of the absolute. The history of art will show us most revealingly its immediate connections to the conditions of the universe and thereby to that absolute identity in which art is preordained. Only in the history of art does the essential and inner unity of all works of art reveal itself, a unity showing that all poetry is of the same spirit, a spirit that even in the antitheses of (...)
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  21.  55
    Abundance.Stephen David Ross - 2009 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:357-468.
    Quantum aesthetics fosters what might be called a general thesis of metaphysical intimacy. There is no place left, even in nature, where uninterpreted events can hide. With regard to the work of Niels Bohr and Heisenberg, this condition of unavoidable interpretation is referred to as the “indivisibility of the quantum action.” Accordingly, talking about any privileged or pristine considerations involves contradictions that, according to advocates of quantum aesthetics, must be overcome. Now, every facet of existence has a voice that has (...)
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  22.  34
    Body Images.Stephen David Ross - 2009 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:55-106.
    Now let us imagine, if you please, a tiny worm living in the blood, . . . . The worm would be living in the blood as we are living in our part of the universe, and it would regard each individual particle as a whole, not a part, and it would have no idea as to how all the parts are controlled by the overall nature of the blood and compelled to mutual adaptation as the overall nature of the (...)
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  23.  5
    (1 other version)Enchanting: Beyond Disenchantment.Stephen David Ross - 2012 - State University of New York Press.
    Explores how we might think and live in the enchantment of the secular, modern world.
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  24.  23
    Inheritance.Stephen David Ross - 2009 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:277-301.
    How does one desire forgetting? How does one desire not to keep?How does one desire mourning (assuming that to mourn, to work at mourning does not amount to keeping . . .)? (Derrida, GT, 36)Jacques Derrida died Friday night, October 8–9, 2004.
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  25.  43
    Re-membering.Stephen David Ross - 2010 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:43-59.
    Memory is, therefore, neither perception nor conception, but a state or affection of one of these, conditioned by lapse of time. As already observed, there is no such thing as memory of the present while present; for the present is object only of perception, and the future, of expectation, but the object of memory is the past. All memory, therefore, implies a time elapsed; consequently only those animals which perceive time remember, and the organ whereby they perceive time is also (...)
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  26.  45
    World of Masks.Stephen David Ross - 2009 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:143-196.
    The word person is Latin: . . . which signifies the face, as persona in Latin signifies the disguise, or outward appearance of a man, counterfeited on the stage; and sometimes more particularly that part of it, which disguiseth the face, as a mask or vizard:. . . . So that a person, is the same that an actor is, both on the stage and in common conversation; and to personate, is to act, or represent himself, or another;. . . (...)
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  27.  19
    "La luz de la naturaleza": Dios y filosofía en la Óptica de Isaac Newton.Stephen David Snobelen - 2007 - Estudios de Filosofía (Universidad de Antioquia) 35:15-54.
    Este artículo discute la cercana relación entre la teología y la filosofía natural de Newton. Tomando como punto de inscripción el ejemplo de la Óptica, se refutarán estas lecturas de Newton. Primero, se examinará la evidencia que muestra que Newton contempló una declaración explícita de filosofía natural para la primera edición de la Óptica. Luego se discutirá el material teológico-natural añadido a la Optice de 1706. Al hacerlo, se señalarán ejemplos de su relación con las afirmaciones hechas en el Escolio (...)
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  28. The sovereignty and utility of the work of art.Stephen David Ross - 1981 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 40 (2):145-154.
  29.  13
    (2 other versions)Art and its Significance: An Anthology of Aesthetic Theory, First Edition.Stephen David Ross (ed.) - 1984 - State University of New York Press.
    This anthology has been significantly expanded for this edition to include a wider range of contemporary issues.
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  30.  28
    A Theory of Art: Inexhaustibility by Contrast.Stephen David Ross - 1982 - State University of New York Press.
    The general theory of art and aesthetic value developed in this book is based on the notions of inexhaustibility and contrast and has important forebears in Kant, Coleridge, and Whitehead.
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  31.  33
    Bibliography.Stephen David Ross - 2007 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:513-565.
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  32.  15
    Belonging to a Philosophic Discourse.Stephen David Ross - 1986 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 19 (3):166 - 177.
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  33.  35
    Counter-History.Stephen David Ross - 2010 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:129-138.
    The fundamental faith of the metaphysicians is the faith in opposite values. . . .For one may doubt, first, whether there are any opposites at all, and secondly whether these popular valuations and opposite values on which the metaphysicians put their seal, are not perhaps merely foreground estimates, only provisional perspectives, perhaps even from some nook, perhaps from below, frog perspectives, as it were, to borrow an expression painters use. For all the value that the true, the truthful, the selfless (...)
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  34.  79
    Counter-Memory.Stephen David Ross - 2010 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:139-158.
    there is something else to which we are witness, and which we might describe as an insurrection of subjugated knowledges. (Foucault, 2L, 81)a whole set of knowledges that have been disqualified as inadequate to their task or insufficiently elaborated: naive knowledges, . . . . (82)What emerges out of this is something one might call a genealogy, or rather a multiplicity of genealogical researches, a painstaking rediscovery of struggles together with the rude memory of their conflicts. (83)Let us give the (...)
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  35.  27
    Diachrony.Stephen David Ross - 2010 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:247-276.
    A giving which gives only its gift, but in the giving holds itself back and withdraws, . . . . (Heidegger, TB, 8)the Forgotten is . . . the Law. (Lyotard, “HJ," 147)how could this thought (Heidegger’s), a thought so devoted to remembering that a forgetting (of Being) takes place in all thought, in all art, in all “representation” of the world, how could it possibly have ignored the thought of [that] which, in a certain sense, thinks, tries to think, (...)
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  36.  17
    Everyday Life.Stephen David Ross - 2009 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:219-245.
    [T]he common character of the mildest, as well as the severest cases, to which the faulty and chance actions contribute, lies in the ability to refer the phenomena to unwelcome, repressed, psychic material, which, though pushed away from consciousness, is nevertheless not robbed of all capacity to express itself. (Freud, PEL, 146).
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  37.  33
    For Giving.Stephen David Ross - 2007 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:469-504.
    The image sees.The image feels.The image acts. (Bennett, CB, 195)The image gives.The image is given.The image proliferates.The image betrays.The image for gives.The image is for giving.The image is for exposition.The image is for beauty.The image is from the good.The image is mother, and is father, is both mother and father, and neither mother nor father; for it is the child. The image is the parent, and the children, both parent and children, and neither parent nor children.
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  38.  65
    Index.Stephen David Ross - 2007 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:567-602.
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  39.  11
    Injustice and Restitution: The Ordinance of Time.Stephen David Ross - 1993 - State University of New York Press.
    This book addresses the nature and injustice of authority, retracing the ideas of reason and law from ancient Greece to the present, pursuing a line of thought begun with Anaximander, who speaks of the ordinance of time as restitution for ...
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  40.  18
    Inexhaustibility in Heidegger’s Thought.Stephen David Ross - 1988 - International Studies in Philosophy 20 (3):73-88.
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  41. in Philosophy.Stephen David Ross - 1998 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 12:74.
     
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  42.  12
    Judgment and the Question of Human Being.Stephen David Ross - 1983 - Philosophy Today 27 (3):258-268.
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  43. Lyotard and" the forgotten.Stephen David Ross - 2002 - In Hugh J. Silverman (ed.), Lyotard: Philosophy, Politics and the Sublime. New York: Routledge. pp. 164.
     
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  44.  33
    Metaphysical Aporia and Philosophical Heresy.Stephen David Ross - 1989 - State University of New York Press.
    Ross (philosophy, SUNY Binghamton) attempts to rethink metaphysical traditions in terms of continental and pragmatist critiques, viewing the major work in the tradition as heretical. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.
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  45.  32
    Notes.Stephen David Ross - 2007 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:505-511.
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  46.  19
    Remembrances.Stephen David Ross & David Schultz - 2004 - International Studies in Philosophy 36 (1):1-5.
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  47.  45
    Re-calling.Stephen David Ross - 2010 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:21-41.
    [T]here is that theory which you have often described to us—that what we call learning is really just recollection (anamnēsis). If that is true, then surely what we recollect now we must have learned at some time before, which is impossible unless our souls existed somewhere before they entered this human shape. So in that way too it seems likely that the soul is immortal. (Plato, Phaedo, 72e–73a)Thus the soul, since it is immortal and has been born many times, and (...)
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  48.  20
    Rorty on Pragmatism.Stephen David Ross - 1983 - International Studies in Philosophy 15 (3):61-64.
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  49.  55
    Self Care.Stephen David Ross - 2005 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:47-73.
    I wish to take up the subject ... in relation to a set of practices in late antiquity. Among the Greeks, these practices took the form of a precept: epimeleisthai sautou, "to take care of yourself," to take "care of the self," "to be concerned, to take care of yourself."The precept of the "care of the self" [souci de soi] was, for the Greeks, one of the main principles of cities, one of the main rules for social and personal conduct (...)
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  50.  35
    Skepticism, Holism, and Inexhaustibility.Stephen David Ross - 1982 - Review of Metaphysics 35 (3):529 - 556.
    IF MODERN philosophy began with Cartesian doubt, it threatens to end not with a resolution of skepticism but with its dissipation. The skeptic's demand for total justification has been replaced by a repudiation of foundations. Such repudiation has been formulated in terms of holism, contextualism, pragmatism, and interpretationism. Yet some of these approaches display significant difficulties even if we accept their denial of foundations. The approach I will examine in particular here is Richard Rorty's version of holism. I will criticize (...)
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