Results for 'Wesley Fisk'

954 found
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  1.  22
    The Dubious Practice of Sensationalizing Anatomical Dissection (and Death) in the Humanities Literature.Carl N. Stephan & Wesley Fisk - 2021 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 18 (2):221-228.
    Past anatomical dissection practice has received recent attention in the humanities and social science literature, especially in a number of popular format books. In these works, past ethically dubious dissection practices are again revisited, including stealing the dead for dissection. There are extremely simple, yet very important, lessons to be had in these analyses, including: do not exploit the dead and treat the dead with dignity, respect, and reverence. In this paper, we highlight that these principles apply not just to (...)
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  2.  38
    An historical anticipation of John Fiske's theory regarding the value of infancy.Wesley Raymond Wells - 1922 - Journal of Philosophy 19 (8):208-210.
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  3.  55
    George Washington Williams and the Beginnings of Afro-American Historiography.John Hope Franklin - 1978 - Critical Inquiry 4 (4):657-672.
    But Williams had created a field of historical study, where his white counterparts had not. Single-handedly and without the blessing or approval of the academic community, Williams had called attention to the importance of including Afro-Americans in any acceptable and comprehensive history of the nation long before the historians of various groups of European-Americans or Asian-Americans had begun to advocate a similar treatment for their groups. And if Williams did not impress the white professional historians, he gave heart and encouragement (...)
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  4.  18
    What? Where? When? Why? Essays on Induction, Space and Time, Explanation : Inspired by the Work of Wesley C. Salmon and Celebrating His First Visit to Australia, September-December 1978.Wesley Charles Salmon & Robert McLaughlin (eds.) - 1982 - Dordrecht, London, and Boston: Reidel.
  5.  30
    Rights in social context.Milton Fisk - 1992 - Journal of Social Philosophy 23 (2):65-74.
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  6. (1 other version)Scientific Explanation and the Causal Structure of the World.Wesley C. Salmon - 1984 - Princeton University Press.
    The philosophical theory of scientific explanation proposed here involves a radically new treatment of causality that accords with the pervasively statistical character of contemporary science. Wesley C. Salmon describes three fundamental conceptions of scientific explanation--the epistemic, modal, and ontic. He argues that the prevailing view is untenable and that the modal conception is scientifically out-dated. Significantly revising aspects of his earlier work, he defends a causal/mechanical theory that is a version of the ontic conception. Professor Salmon's theory furnishes a (...)
  7.  94
    Social Choice Should Guide AI Alignment in Dealing with Diverse Human Feedback.Vincent Conitzer, Rachel Freedman, Jobst Heitzig, Wesley H. Holliday, Bob M. Jacobs, Nathan Lambert, Milan Mosse, Eric Pacuit, Stuart Russell, Hailey Schoelkopf, Emanuel Tewolde & William S. Zwicker - forthcoming - Proceedings of the Forty-First International Conference on Machine Learning.
    Foundation models such as GPT-4 are fine-tuned to avoid unsafe or otherwise problematic behavior, such as helping to commit crimes or producing racist text. One approach to fine-tuning, called reinforcement learning from human feedback, learns from humans' expressed preferences over multiple outputs. Another approach is constitutional AI, in which the input from humans is a list of high-level principles. But how do we deal with potentially diverging input from humans? How can we aggregate the input into consistent data about "collective" (...)
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  8.  89
    Algebraic and topological semantics for inquisitive logic via choice-free duality.Nick Bezhanishvili, Gianluca Grilletti & Wesley H. Holliday - 2019 - In Rosalie Iemhoff, Michael Moortgat & Ruy de Queiroz, Logic, Language, Information, and Computation. WoLLIC 2019. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Vol. 11541. Springer. pp. 35-52.
    We introduce new algebraic and topological semantics for inquisitive logic. The algebraic semantics is based on special Heyting algebras, which we call inquisitive algebras, with propositional valuations ranging over only the ¬¬-fixpoints of the algebra. We show how inquisitive algebras arise from Boolean algebras: for a given Boolean algebra B, we define its inquisitive extension H(B) and prove that H(B) is the unique inquisitive algebra having B as its algebra of ¬¬-fixpoints. We also show that inquisitive algebras determine Medvedev’s logic (...)
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  9.  32
    From Past and Present Editorial Board Members, Associate Editors, and Advisory Editors: Anniversary Reflections.John Boatright, Norman Bowie, Archie Carroll, Gerald Cavanagh, Joanne B. Ciulla, Wesley Cragg, Richard De George, Joseph Desjardins, John Dienhart & Thomas Donaldson - 2010 - Business Ethics Quarterly 20 (4):711.
    EDITOR’S NOTE: Business Ethics Quarterly invited a number of scholars involved with BEQ over its first twenty years (especially in its early years, as editors or editorial board members) to offer their reflections on the past, present, and future of business ethics. The resulting comments, which appear below, are as diverse and eclectic as the group of scholars who have given their energies to BEQ over the years.
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  10.  18
    Language and the having of concepts. I.Milton Fisk - 1961 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 2 (1):41-57.
  11.  14
    Language and the having of concepts. II.Milton Fisk - 1961 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 2 (3):177-192.
  12. Building Sustainable Values in Organizations with the Support of Human Resource Management: Evidence from One Firm Considered as the ‘Best Place to Work’ in Brazil.Jorge Henrique Caldeira de Oliveira, Walter Leal Filho, Leandro Luis Mangili, Charbel José Chiappetta Jabbour & Wesley Ricardo de Souza Freitas - 2012 - Journal of Human Values 18 (2):147-159.
    Researchers and other professionals unanimously agree that companies should become more sustainable, but this will not happen without the support of human resource management. Paradoxically, there is a lack of information on the support human resource management offers to organizational sustainability applied to real cases. Therefore, this research presents a case study on this topic that was carried out in a leading Brazilian company, which is considered as a model and has been selected as ‘the best place to work in (...)
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  13. Statistical explanation & statistical relevance.Wesley C. Salmon - 1971 - [Pittsburgh]: University of Pittsburgh Press. Edited by Richard C. Jeffrey & James G. Greeno.
    Through his S–R model of statistical relevance, Wesley Salmon offers a solution to the scientific explanation of objectively improbable events.
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  14.  24
    Instructional control of serial-learning strategies.Wesley A. Kayson & Wilma A. Winnick - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 102 (4):670.
  15. The creation of the rococo.Fiske Kimball - 1941 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 4 (3/4):119-123.
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  16. Possibility Semantics.Wesley H. Holliday - 2021 - In Melvin Fitting, Selected Topics From Contemporary Logics. College Publications. pp. 363-476.
    In traditional semantics for classical logic and its extensions, such as modal logic, propositions are interpreted as subsets of a set, as in discrete duality, or as clopen sets of a Stone space, as in topological duality. A point in such a set can be viewed as a "possible world," with the key property of a world being primeness—a world makes a disjunction true only if it makes one of the disjuncts true—which classically implies totality—for each proposition, a world either (...)
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  17.  67
    On Markar Melkonian's Richard Rorty's Politics: Liberalism at the End of the American Century.Milton Fisk - 2002 - Historical Materialism 10 (2):229-246.
  18.  41
    The State and the Economy.Milton Fisk - 1982 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 7 (1):287-300.
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  19.  18
    Educating the Total Jurist?Wesley Pue - 2005 - Legal Ethics 8 (2):208-221.
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  20.  33
    The Figure of the Earth in Isidore's "De natura rerum".Wesley Stevens - 1980 - Isis 71 (2):268-277.
  21.  29
    Categories of models of R-mingle.Wesley Fussner & Nick Galatos - 2019 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 170 (10):1188-1242.
    We give a new Esakia-style duality for the category of Sugihara monoids based on the Davey-Werner natural duality for lattices with involution, and use this duality to greatly simplify a construction due to Galatos-Raftery of Sugihara monoids from certain enrichments of their negative cones. Our method of obtaining this simplification is to transport the functors of the Galatos-Raftery construction across our duality, obtaining a vastly more transparent presentation on duals. Because our duality extends Dunn's relational semantics for the logic R-mingle (...)
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  22.  67
    The four elementary forms of sociality: Framework for a unified theory of social relations.Alan P. Fiske - 1992 - Psychological Review 99 (4):689-723.
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  23.  59
    Health care as a public good.Milton Fisk - 1996 - Journal of Social Philosophy 27 (3):14-40.
    Some see health care as primarily an individual responsibility. Others see it as a public responsibility. Behind these approaches are strong conflicting beliefs about ethical matters, specifically about the kind of good that health care is. On the one side the underlying belief is that health care is no more than an individual good and hence calls for a distributive policy based on the market. On the other side the underlying belief is that it is a public good and hence (...)
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  24.  56
    Effective categoricity of equivalence structures.Wesley Calvert, Douglas Cenzer, Valentina Harizanov & Andrei Morozov - 2006 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 141 (1):61-78.
    We investigate effective categoricity of computable equivalence structures . We show that is computably categorical if and only if has only finitely many finite equivalence classes, or has only finitely many infinite classes, bounded character, and at most one finite k such that there are infinitely many classes of size k. We also prove that all computably categorical structures are relatively computably categorical, that is, have computably enumerable Scott families of existential formulas. Since all computable equivalence structures are relatively categorical, (...)
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  25.  70
    Moral psychology is relationship regulation: Moral motives for unity, hierarchy, equality, and proportionality.Tage Shakti Rai & Alan Page Fiske - 2011 - Psychological Review 118 (1):57-75.
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  26.  17
    O diálogo entre Ferry e Sponville sobre o ateísmo.Wesley Barbosa - 2023 - ARGUMENTOS - Revista de Filosofia 30:97-110.
    O presente artigo buscará investigar como é possível uma espiritualidade sem Deus em Ferry e Sponville. Passando pelos humanismos renascentistas e iluministas, até a fase da desconstrução com Nietzsche, chegaremos numa terra devastada, sem quaisquer ídolos a se prostrar de joelhos. Em meio aos escombros da terra devastada ainda haveria um algo a se agarrar como profusão de uma experiência com o sagrado: o amor. Não mais um amor abstrato, mas um amor prático, do cotidiano, amor ao próximo, amor aos (...)
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  27.  66
    Critical Notice.Wesley Cooper - 1993 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 23 (3):433-451.
  28. Daniel Little, Varieties of Social Explanation: An Introduction to the Philosophy of Social Science Reviewed by.Wesley E. Cooper - 1994 - Philosophy in Review 14 (3):186-189.
  29.  69
    Critical Notice.Wesley Cragg - 1989 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 19 (2):289-298.
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  30.  29
    Sartre's Eighteenth Century: A Model for Engagement?Wesley Gunter - 2014 - Sartre Studies International 20 (1):57-68.
    Sartre's thoughts on the eighteenth century are ambiguous and schematic at best but they do contain an interesting analysis of materialism that continues from this period through to the early 1940s. Even though Sartre refers to the eighteenth-century as a paradise soon-to-be lost, it is argued here that his condemnation of atomistic materialism as it was conceived during this period is directly linked to his rejection of the dialectical materialism of the Communist Party and bourgeois ideology. This article examines the (...)
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  31.  14
    Correlating the Nevius Method with Church Planting Movements: Early Korean Revivals as a Case Study.Wesley L. Handy - 2012 - Eleutheria: A Graduate Student Journal 2 (1):3.
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  32.  27
    Onset versus termination of a stimulus as the CS in eyelid conditioning.Wesley J. Hansche & David A. Grant - 1960 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 59 (1):19.
  33.  30
    A Study of Classical Japanese Tense and Aspect.Wesley M. Jacobsen & Lone Takeuchi - 1990 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 110 (3):561.
  34.  11
    Chapter VIII. Roy Harvey Pearce: The Revitalizing of Historicism.Wesley Morris - 1972 - In Toward a New Historicism. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 145-166.
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  35.  3
    Index.Wesley Morris - 1972 - In Toward a New Historicism. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 257-265.
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  36.  21
    The Tibet Journal, Volume 1, Number 1, July/September 1975.Wesley E. Needham - 1976 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 96 (3):446.
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  37.  30
    Contradictions of the Welfare State.Milton Fisk - 1987 - Noûs 21 (4):609-611.
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  38. The Chronology of 432/1.Wesley E. Thompson - 1968 - Hermes 96 (2):216-232.
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  39.  43
    The Errors in Plutarch, Nikias 6.Wesley E. Thompson - 1969 - Classical Quarterly 19 (01):160-.
    Twice in this chapter, according to the commentators, Plutarch has confused a pair of military engagements, Spartolos with Poteidaia and Nikias' campaign in the Megarid during 427 with that of Demosthenes in 424. In both instances this view seems to me to be of doubtful validity. In one case I would propose that instead of confusing two campaigns Plutarch simply misunderstood a very difficult passage in Thucydides, while in the second there is only flimsy evidence for rejecting Plutarch's version. His (...)
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  40. The foundations of scientific inference.Wesley C. Salmon - 1967 - [Pittsburgh]: University of Pittsburgh Press.
    Not since Ernest Nagel’s 1939 monograph on the theory of probability has there been a comprehensive elementary survey of the philosophical problems of probablity and induction. This is an authoritative and up-to-date treatment of the subject, and yet it is relatively brief and nontechnical. Hume’s skeptical arguments regarding the justification of induction are taken as a point of departure, and a variety of traditional and contemporary ways of dealing with this problem are considered. The author then sets forth his own (...)
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  41.  8
    Found in the Middle!: Theology and Ethics for Christians Who Are Both Liberal and Evangelical.Wesley J. Wildman - 2008 - Alban Institute. Edited by Stephen Chapin Garner.
    There exists a deep and broad population of Christians who feel the labels of 'liberal' and 'evangelical' both describe their faith and limit their expression of it. By working to reclaim the traditional, historical meanings of these terms, and showing how they complement rather than oppose each other, Wesley Wildman and Stephen Chapin Gardner stake a claim for the moderate Christian voice in today's polarized society. Found in the Middle! offers a foundational approach to the theology and ethics that (...)
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  42.  27
    Poset Products as Relational Models.Wesley Fussner - 2021 - Studia Logica 110 (1):95-120.
    We introduce a relational semantics based on poset products, and provide sufficient conditions guaranteeing its soundness and completeness for various substructural logics. We also demonstrate that our relational semantics unifies and generalizes two semantics already appearing in the literature: Aguzzoli, Bianchi, and Marra’s temporal flow semantics for Hájek’s basic logic, and Lewis-Smith, Oliva, and Robinson’s semantics for intuitionistic Łukasiewicz logic. As a consequence of our general theory, we recover the soundness and completeness results of these prior studies in a uniform (...)
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  43.  67
    The lexical fallacy in emotion research: Mistaking vernacular words for psychological entities.Alan Page Fiske - 2020 - Psychological Review 127 (1):95-113.
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  44.  25
    The Nature and Development of Animal Intelligence.Wesley Mills - 1899 - Philosophical Review 8 (2):215-216.
  45.  11
    Ethics and Social Survival.Milton Fisk - 2016 - New York: Routledge.
    When speaking of society’s role in ethics, one tends to think of society as regimenting people through its customs. _Ethics and Social Survival_ rejects theories that treat ethics as having justification within itself and contends that ethics can have a grip on humans only if it serves their deep-seated need to live together. It takes a social-survival view of ethical life and its norms by arguing that ethics looks to society not for regimentation by customs, but rather for the viability (...)
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  46.  80
    Probability and the Logic of Rational Belief. Henry E. Kyburg, Jr.Wesley C. Salmon - 1967 - Philosophy of Science 34 (3):283-285.
  47.  10
    The Unity of William James's Thought.Wesley Cooper - 2002 - Vanderbilt University Press.
    Wesley Cooper opposes the traditional view of William Jamesís philosophy which dismissed it as fragmented or merely popular, arguing instead that there is a systematic philosophy to be found in James's writings. His doctrine of pure experience is the binding thread that links his earlier psychological theorizing to his later epistemological, religious, and pragmatic concerns.
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  48.  6
    Visualizing The Whole Family.Wesley Beal - 2016 - Intertexts 20 (1):45-64.
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  49.  16
    A Christian Perspective on the Major Issues in the Arab-Israeli Conflict.Wesley H. Brown - 1985 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 2 (4):26-31.
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  50. Doubting Deference.Wesley Buckwalter - manuscript
    Deference is a belief formation process that occurs when one believes something in virtue of the fact that someone else believes it. Many philosophers have argued that we react differently to beliefs formed through deference in virtue of whether they are moral or non-moral, and that this psychological reaction is evidence for distinct features of the moral domain. This paper presents six worries concerning the use of this evidence in metaethics for drawing conclusions about distinct features of morality. A theory (...)
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