Results for 'Stuart Dawson'

977 found
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  1.  13
    Review Article — George Grote and the Ancient Greeks.Stuart Dawson - 2000 - Polis 17 (1-2):187-198.
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  2.  27
    Ethics In Australian Small Business.Stuart Dawson - 2001 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 20 (1):25-36.
  3.  20
    Corticomotor Excitability is Increased Following an Acute Bout of Blood Flow Restriction Resistance Exercise.Christopher Roy Brandner, Stuart Anthony Warmington & Dawson John Kidgell - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  4.  38
    Business ethics books: A bookshop survey. [REVIEW]Stuart E. Dawson - 2001 - Journal of Business Ethics 30 (4):401 - 404.
    This paper discusses the extent to which books about business ethics are purchased or read outside of tertiary institutions in Australia, whether the subject is commonly perceived as business, philosophy or both, what range of business ethics books is commonly offered for purchase, and what conclusions might be drawn from the above considerations. Investigation shows that the range and availability of business ethics books is quite limited outside of tertiary institutions, and that the general perception is that business ethics is (...)
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  5. The place of democracy in late Stuart England.Hannah Dawson - 2019 - In Cesare Cuttica & Markku Peltonen (eds.), Democracy and anti-democracy in early modern England, 1603-1689. Boston: Brill.
     
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  6.  53
    Sanctifying the World: The Augustinian Life and Mind of Christopher Dawson, by Bradley J. Birzer. [REVIEW]Joseph T. Stuart - 2008 - The Chesterton Review 34 (3/4):630-633.
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  7.  15
    CHRISTOPHER DAWSON: A CULTURAL MIND IN THE AGE OF THE GREAT WAR by Joseph T. Stuart, The Catholic University of America, Washington, D.C., 2022, pp. xv + 454, £ 31.50, pbk. [REVIEW]Fernando Cervantes - 2023 - New Blackfriars 104 (1112):489-492.
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  8.  15
    A World Beyond Physics: The Emergence and Evolution of Life.Stuart A. Kauffman - 2019 - Oup Usa.
    Explores the possiblity and process of evolution beyond the standard and established scientific principles.
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  9.  19
    (1 other version)Justice is Conflict.Stuart Hampshire - 1999 - Princeton University Press.
    This book, which inaugurates the Princeton Monographs in Philosophy series, starts from Plato's analogy in the Republic between conflict in the soul and conflict in the city. Plato's solution required reason to impose agreement and harmony on the warring passions, and this search for harmony and agreement constitutes the main tradition in political philosophy up to and including contemporary liberal theory. Hampshire undermines this tradition by developing a distinction between justice in procedures, which demands that both sides in a conflict (...)
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  10.  79
    Articulation of Parts Explanation in Biology and the Rational Search for Them.Stuart A. Kauffman - 1970 - PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1970:257 - 272.
  11. Herd Protection as a Public Good: Vaccination and Our Obligations to Others.Angus Dawson - 2009 - In Angus Dawson & Marcel Verweij (eds.), Ethics, Prevention, and Public Health. Oxford University Press.
  12. Racing to the precipice: a model of artificial intelligence development.Stuart Armstrong, Nick Bostrom & Carl Shulman - 2016 - AI and Society 31 (2):201-206.
  13.  32
    Concurrent measurement of awareness and electrodermal classical conditioning.Michael E. Dawson & Michael A. Biferno - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 101 (1):55.
  14. How are Moral Foundations Associated with Empathic Traits and Moral Identity?Kelsie J. Dawson, Hyemin Han & YeEun Rachel Choi - forthcoming - Current Psychology.
    We examined the relationship between moral foundations, empathic traits, and moral identity using an online survey via Mechanical Turk. In order to determine how moral foundations contribute to empathic traits and moral identity, we performed classical correlation analysis as well as Bayesian correlation analysis, Bayesian ANCOVA, and Bayesian regression analysis. Results showed that individualizing foundations (harm/care, fairness/reciprocity) and binding foundations (ingroup/loyalty, authority/respect, purity/sanctity) had various different relationships with empathic traits. In addition, the individualizing versus binding foundations showed somewhat reverse relationships (...)
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  15.  67
    The Steward of the Millian State.Angus Dawson & Marcel Verweij - 2008 - Public Health Ethics 1 (3):193-195.
  16.  66
    Cities of the Gods: Communist Utopias in Greek Thought.Doyne Dawson - 1992 - Oup Usa.
    Cities of the Gods is a historical study of the theory of Utopian communism in ancient Greek thought, identifying and assessing its several currents. The author looks at the reason for the decline of the Utopian traditions after c. 150 BC and suggests that the main factor was the Roman conquest of the Greek world, which produced a more conservative intellectual climate. He concludes by looking at the evidence for the survival of utopian traditions, particularly their influence on early Christianity.
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  17.  29
    Dominance relationships: The Cheshire cat's grin?Stuart A. Altmann - 1981 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4 (3):430-431.
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  18.  65
    Locke on Natural Kinds.Matthew Stuart - 1999 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 16 (3):277 - 296.
  19.  74
    Care and the self: biotechnology, reproduction, and the good life.Stuart J. Murray - 2007 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 2:6.
    This paper explores a novel philosophy of ethical care in the face of burgeoning biomedical technologies. I respond to a serious challenge facing traditional bioethics with its roots in analytic philosophy. The hallmarks of these traditional approaches are reason and autonomy, founded on a belief in the liberal humanist subject. In recent years, however, there have been mounting challenges to this view of human subjectivity, emerging from poststructuralist critiques, such as Michel Foucault's, but increasingly also as a result of advances (...)
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  20.  15
    Corporate Social Responsibility Disclosures and Investor Judgments in Difficult Times: The Role of Ethical Culture and Assurance.Andrew C. Stuart, Jean C. Bedard & Cynthia E. Clark - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 171 (3):565-582.
    We conduct an experiment with 459 nonprofessional investors to examine whether they evaluate companies differently based on management’s stated purpose for undertaking corporate social responsibility activities in the presence versus absence of a company-specific negative event. Specifically, we vary whether or not management intends to achieve financial returns from CSR activities in addition to promoting social good. We address investors’ decision processes by investigating whether their judgments are mediated by perceptions of future cash flows and/or the underlying ethical culture of (...)
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  21. Health, disease and the goal of public health.Bengt Brülde & Angus Dawson - forthcoming - Public Health Ethics: Key Concepts and Issues in Policy and Practice:20--47.
     
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  22.  20
    Employees’ Perspectives on the Costs and Benefits of Organizations’ Environmental Initiatives.Stuart Allen - 2023 - Business and Society 62 (4):787-823.
    Employee participation is essential to organizations’ corporate social responsibility (CSR)-related environmental initiatives (EIs). Employees’ attitudes to participating in pro-environmental behaviors are addressed in workplace literature drawing upon the theory of planned behavior. However, antecedents to employees’ attitude formation, including perceptions of the costs and benefits of participating in EIs, have not been adequately researched. Greater understanding of EI attitude formation can support efforts to foster EI participation. This study explores employees’ perceptions of EI costs and benefits to employees personally, to (...)
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  23.  92
    Beyond Reductionism: Reinventing the Sacred.Stuart Kauffman - 2007 - Zygon 42 (4):903-914.
    We have lived under the hegemony of the reductionistic scientific worldview since Galileo, Newton, and Laplace. In this view, the universe is meaningless, as Stephen Weinberg famously said, and organisms and a court of law are "nothing but" particles in morion. This scientific view is inadequate. Physicists are beginning to abandon reductionism in favor of emergence. Emergence, both epistemological and ontological, embraces the emergence of life and of agency. With agency comes meaning, value, and doing, beyond mere happenings. More organisms (...)
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  24. On the subsymbolic nature of a PDP architecture that uses a nonmonotonic activation function.Michael R. W. Dawson & C. Darren Piercey - 2001 - Minds and Machines 11 (2):197-218.
    PDP networks that use nonmonotonic activation functions often produce hidden unit regularities that permit the internal structure of these networks to be interpreted (Berkeley et al., 1995; McCaughan, 1997; Dawson, 1998). In particular, when the responses of hidden units to a set of patterns are graphed using jittered density plots, these plots organize themselves into a set of discrete stripes or bands. In some cases, each band is associated with a local interpretation. On the basis of these observations, Berkeley (...)
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  25.  34
    Philosophical Objectivity and Existential Involvement in the Methodology of Paul Ricoeur.Stuart C. Hackett - 1969 - International Philosophical Quarterly 9 (1):11-39.
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  26. Postmodernism and philosophy.Stuart Sim - 2011 - In The Routledge companion to postmodernism. New York: Routledge.
  27.  36
    Building an Ethics Framework for COVID-19 Resource Allocation: The How and the Why.Angus Dawson - 2020 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 17 (4):757-760.
    This paper expands on “An Ethics Framework for Making Resource Allocation Decisions within Clinical Care: Responding to COVID-19,” which is also published in this special issue of the Journal of Bioethical Inquiry. I first describe and explain the steps we took to develop this framework, drawing on previous experience and literature to explain what frameworks can and cannot do. I distinguish frameworks from other kinds of guidance and justify why our framework takes the form it does. Our key aim was (...)
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  28.  12
    The war against forgetfulness: Sociological lessons from Bauman’s writings on European Jewry.Matt Dawson - 2020 - Thesis Eleven 156 (1):86-101.
    This paper argues against assigning Zygmunt Bauman to the category of a ‘white’, ‘European’ theorist and the tendency to speak of an undifferentiated ‘Eurocentrism’. To argue this, I return to a set of articles by Bauman which reflected on the history of European Jewry. These encourage us to place Bauman in a historical and social context in which he is best identified as emerging from the racialized and classed politics of East European Jewry. Bauman traces how this group were made (...)
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  29.  89
    Applying Stories of the Environment to Business: What Business People Can Learn From the Virtues in Environmental Narratives.David Dawson - 2005 - Journal of Business Ethics 58 (1):37-49.
    . The use of narrative to communicate and convey particular points of view in society has increasingly become the focus of academic attention in recent years. In particular, MacIntyre. (1985, 1988, 1990, 1999) has paid attention to the role of narrative in the conflict between different traditions when developing his virtue approach to ethics. Whilst there has been continued debate about the application of virtue approaches, some arguing that it is incompatible with business, I disagree and have already argued for (...)
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  30. Reflections on the Readings of Sundays and Feasts: June - August.Stuart Moran - 2011 - The Australasian Catholic Record 88 (2):232.
    Moran, Stuart With the solemnity of the Ascension the Year A lectionary returns momentarily to the Gospel according to Matthew and, in fact, to the very end of that Gospel. We might note in the first place that Matthew makes no attempt to describe the mysterious reality that the tradition has come to call the Ascension.
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  31.  40
    The Concept of Egocentrism in Paul’s Theory of Critical Thinking.Stuart Grose - 1992 - Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 9 (4):14-15.
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  32. The Resurrection of Theism: Prolegomena to Christian Apology (; Grand Rapids: Baker, 1982); David Oderberg,“Traversal of the Infinite, the 'Big Bang,'and the Kalam Cosmological Argument,”.Stuart Hackett - 2002 - Philosophia Christi 4:303-34.
     
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  33.  61
    Remembering Richard Lewontin.Stuart A. Newman, Peter Godfrey-Smith, Daniel L. Hartl, Philip Kitcher, Diane B. Paul, John Beatty, Sahotra Sarkar, Elliott Sober & William C. Wimsatt - 2021 - Biological Theory 16 (4):257-267.
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  34. Introduction: Ethics, Prevention, and Public Health.Angus Dawson & Marcel Verweij - 2009 - In Angus Dawson & Marcel Verweij (eds.), Ethics, Prevention, and Public Health. Oxford University Press.
     
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  35.  37
    The Myth of the Reliability of DSM.Stuart Kirk & Herb Kutchins - 1994 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 15 (1-2):71-86.
    When it was published in 1980, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, third edition - universally known as DSM-III - embodied a new method for identifying psychiatric illness. The manual's authors and their supporters claimed that DSM-III's development was guided by scientific principles and evidence and that its innovative approach to diagnosis greatly ameliorated the problem of the unreliability of psychiatric diagnoses. In this paper we challenge the conventional wisdom about the research data used to support this claim. (...)
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  36.  40
    Fertilisation and moral status: a scientific perspective.K. Dawson - 1987 - Journal of Medical Ethics 13 (4):173-178.
    The debate about the moral status of the embryo has gained new impetus because of the advances in reproductive technology that have made early human embryo experimentation a possibility, and because of the public concern that this arouses. Several philosophical arguments claiming that fertilisation is the event that accords moral status to the embryo were initially formulated in the context of the abortion debate. Were they formulated with sufficient precision to account for the scientific facts as we now understand them? (...)
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  37.  56
    Safety Issues In Cell-Based Intervention Trials.Liza Dawson, Alison S. Bateman-House, Dawn Mueller Agnew, Hilary Bok, Dan W. Brock, Aravinda Chakravarti, Mark Greene, Patricia King, Stephen J. O'Brien, David H. Sachs, Kathryn E. Schill, Andrew Siegel & Davor Solter - 2003 - Fertility and Sterility 80 (5):1077-1085.
    We report on the deliberations of an interdisciplinary group of experts in science, law, and philosophy who convened to discuss novel ethical and policy challenges in stem cell research. In this report we discuss the ethical and policy implications of safety concerns in the transition from basic laboratory research to clinical applications of cell-based therapies derived from stem cells. Although many features of this transition from lab to clinic are common to other therapies, three aspects of stem cell biology pose (...)
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  38.  32
    Information for contributors.Stuart Hampshire, John Martin Fischer, Mark Ravizza, Marcel S. Lieberman & James Lindemann - 2001 - Journal of Value Inquiry 35 (3):607-609.
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  39.  66
    Hegel After Derrida.Stuart Barnett (ed.) - 1998 - New York: Routledge.
    _Hegel After Derrida_ provides a much needed insight not only into the importance of Hegel and the importance of Derrida's work on Hegel, but also the very foundations of postmodern and deconstructionist thought. It will be essential reading for all those engaging with the work of Derrida and Hegel today and anyone seeking insight into some of the basic but neglected themes of deconstruction.
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  40.  32
    Method, Morality and the Impossibility of Legal Positivism.Stuart Toddington - 1996 - Ratio Juris 9 (3):283-299.
    The dispute between Legal Positivists (eg, Hart) and Natural Lawyers (e.g., Finnis) concerns the existence or otherwise of a necessary (conceptual) connection between law and morality. Legal Positivists such as Hart deny this connection and assert the merely contingent relationship of law and morals. However, it can be demonstrated that implicit in the valid sociological method of concept formation of post‐Austinian Positivists are interpretative or ideal‐typical models of the practical rationality of the legal enterprise which are not, and cannot possibly (...)
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  41.  29
    Shame in early modern thought: from sin to sociability.Hannah Dawson - 2019 - History of European Ideas 45 (3):377-398.
    ABSTRACTThis article challenges the historiographical narrative that modernity saw a transition from shame to guilt. I argue not only that these two concepts overlapped, but that, if anything, a shift occurred in the opposite direction: from guilt to shame. I identify two concepts of shame: guilt-shame, focused on sinfulness and caused by mere introspection, and reputation-shame, focused on social norms and caused by the gaze of others. Looking primarily at English texts, straying often into the European republic of letters, I (...)
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  42.  18
    GIS as Qualitative Research: Knowledge, Participatory Politics and Cartographies of Affect.Stuart C. Aitken & Mei-Po Kwan - 2010 - In Dydia DeLyser (ed.), The SAGE handbook of qualitative geography. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE. pp. 287.
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  43.  26
    A crisis of recognition: gender, race, and the struggle to be seen in pre-modernity.Hannah Dawson - 2024 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 32 (2):319-351.
    ABSTRACT It used to be said that shame culture waned in early modernity, but there is a growing body of historiography on the vital role that recognition and the opinion of others continued to play. Honour mattered; for some it was the mark and the maker of your true self. While philosophers like Hobbes, Locke, Mandeville, Hume, Smith, and Rousseau disagreed in their evaluations of the phenomenon, they were united in thinking that the great engine of recognition whirred like furious (...)
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  44.  37
    The Moral Truth about Discourse Theory.Stuart Toddington - 2006 - Ratio Juris 19 (2):217-229.
    The fundamental impulse of Discourse Theory is to eschew the moral substantivism of ethical rationalism in favour of a pragmatic, procedural approach to ethical and legal analysis. However, this paper argues that even if the analysis of Communicative Action as reconstructed by Habermas’s “Universal Pragmatics,” and the implied procedural rules of practical discourse advanced by Robert Alexy are accepted, the validation or “redemption” of all authoritative and distributive claims must, in terms of logical priority, encounter the substantively general necessity of (...)
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  45.  28
    The Human Crisis Revisited: Albert Camus and Climate Rebellion.Diana Stuart - 2024 - Critical Horizons 25 (2):111-128.
    Faced with the absurdity of continued climate inaction, more people are becoming morally outraged about the projections of human suffering and loss due to global warming impacts. This article draws from the work of Albert Camus to examine human responses to absurdity through rebellion and how this can be applied to understand the notion of climate rebellion. Focusing on Camus’ works The Rebel and The Plague, as well as his speech “The Human Crisis”, I examine the conditions of climate injustice (...)
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  46.  21
    Ludwig Wittgenstein: Critical Assessments. From the Notebooks to Philosophical Grammar: The Construction and Dismantling of the Tractatus. I.Stuart Shanker (ed.) - 1986 - Routledge.
    Philosophical interest in the writings of Ludwig Wittgenstein is developing at a phenomenal rate. Every year sees a growing number of works devoted to matters pertaining to exegesis or application of Wittgenstein's ideas. Wittgenstein's influence is thus radiating throughout every branch and community of philosophical research. Printed here are over one hundred of the most important and interesting papers dealing with Wittgenstein's writings that have been published, together with a comprehensive bibliography of Wittgenstein's work and the vast corpus of secondary (...)
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  47.  39
    Allegories of the Bioethical: Reading J.M. Coetzee’s Diary of a Bad Year.Stuart J. Murray - 2014 - Journal of Medical Humanities 35 (3):321-334.
    This essay reads J.M. Coetzee’s novel, Diary of a Bad Year, as an occasion to problematize contemporary bioethical paradigms. Coetzee’s rhetorical strategies are analyzed to better understand the “scene of address” within which ethical claims can be voiced. Drawing on Foucault’s Socratic understanding of ethics as the self’s relation to itself, self-relation is explored through the rhetorical figure of catachresis. The essay ultimately argues that the ethical voice emerges when the terms—terms by which I relate to myself, to others, to (...)
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  48.  30
    Justice, the Lorax and the Environment.Stuart Rosenbaum - 2014 - Southwest Philosophy Review 30 (1):151-159.
    Environmental ethicists do not often notice the power of stories to shape attitudes about our environment and its inhabitants. I argue that a pragmatist understanding of morality enables stories—and narratives generally—to shape attitudes and beliefs that have objective moral legitimacy. The Lorax, as well as other stories and narrative accounts, are not just children’s stories, but are essential tools for expressing objective moral concern about our environment. Michael Sandel’s book Justice expresses a pragmatist perspective about justice and the good that (...)
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  49.  19
    The Right to Be Out: Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in America's Public Schools.Stuart Biegel - 2010 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Recognizing the right of LGBT students and educators to be out at school.
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  50.  64
    Carl F. Craver and Lindley Darden: In Search of Mechanisms: Discoveries Across the Life Sciences.Stuart Glennan - 2014 - Science & Education 23 (7):1555-1558.
    Carl Craver and Lindley Darden are two of the foremost proponents of a recent approach to the philosophy of biology that is often called the New Mechanism. In this book they seek to make available to a broader readership insights gained from more than two decades of work on the nature of mechanisms and how they are described and discovered. The book is not primarily aimed at specialists working on the New Mechanism, but rather targets scientists, students and teachers who (...)
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