Results for 'Worth J. Hadley'

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  1.  18
    Some Influences in Modern Philosophic Thought.J. E. C. & Arthur Twining Hadley - 1914 - Philosophical Review 23 (1):89.
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  2.  18
    A preliminary neurophysiological investigation of the behavioral concept of stimulus trace.J. R. Knott, E. B. Platt & H. D. Hadley - 1944 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 34 (2):104.
  3.  28
    Brain potentials during sleep: a comparative study of the dominant and non-dominant alpha groups.J. R. Knott, C. E. Henry & J. M. Hadley - 1939 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 24 (2):157.
  4.  22
    Religiosity and Public Reason: The Case of Direct Action Animal Rights Advocacy.J. Hadley - 2017 - Res Publica 23 (3):299-312.
    Recent social science research indicates that animal rights philosophy plays the functional role of a religion in the lives of the most committed animal rights advocates. In this paper, I apply the functional religion thesis to the recent debate over the place of direct action animal rights advocacy in democratic theory. I outline the usefulness of the functional religion thesis and explain its implications for theorists that call for deliberative theories to be more inclusive of coercive forms of activism.
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  5.  17
    Some relationships between electrical signs of central and peripheral activity: I. During rest.J. M. Hadley - 1940 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 27 (6):640.
  6.  10
    Some relationships between electrical signs of central and peripheral activity: II. During 'mental work.'.J. M. Hadley - 1941 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 28 (1):53.
  7.  36
    The Issue of Abortion in America: An Exploration of Social Controversy.J. Hadley - 1999 - Journal of Medical Ethics 25 (4):355-356.
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  8.  8
    Dents et m'choires dans les représentations religieuses et la pratique médicale de l'Égypte ancienne. Thierry Bardinet.J. Worth Estes - 1992 - Isis 83 (1):117-118.
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  9. Dictionary of Protopharmacology-Therapeutic Practices, 1700-1850.J. Worth Estes & Alain Touwaide - 1995 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 17 (3):503.
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  10. Core Texts, Community, and Culture: Working Together for Liberal Education.Ronald J. Weber, Scott J. Lee, Mary Buzan, Anne Marie Flanagan & Douglas Hadley (eds.) - 2009 - Upa.
    The Association for Core Texts and Courses asserts its commitment to coming together and speaking about the scientific, the political, and the artistic to live together in an enlightened fashion. ACTC's Tenth Annual Conference re-affirmed and re-examined the value of serious reading and discussion focused through core texts.
     
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  11. “The Church.William J. Abraham, Jose Miguez Bonino, Robert F. Drinan, Leo Pfeffer, Seymour Siegel, George Huntston Williams & Sharon L. Worthing - 2010 - In Charles Taliaferro & Chad Meister (eds.), The Cambridge companion to Christian philosophical theology. New York: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  12.  15
    Leo Strauss, the Straussians, and the Study of the American Regime.Kenneth L. Deutsch, John A. Murley, George Anastaplo, Hadley Arkes, Larry Arnhart, Laurence Berns With Eva Brann, Mark Blitz, Aryeh Botwinick, Christopher A. Colmo, Joseph Cropsey, Kenneth Deutsch, Murray Dry, Robert Eden, Miriam Galston, William A. Galston, Gary D. Glenn, Harry Jaffa, Charles Kesler, Carnes Lord, John A. Marini, Eugene Miller, Will Morrisey, John Murley, Walter Nicgorski, Susan Orr, Ralph Rossum, Gary J. Schmitt, Abram Shulsky, Gregory Bruce Smith, Ronald Terchek & Michael Zuckert - 1999 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Responding to volatile criticisms frequently leveled at Leo Strauss and those he influenced, the prominent contributors to this volume demonstrate the profound influence that Strauss and his students have exerted on American liberal democracy and contemporary political thought. By stressing the enduring vitality of classic books and by articulating the theoretical and practical flaws of relativism and historicism, the contributors argue that Strauss and the Straussians have identified fundamental crises of modernity and liberal democracy.
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  13.  43
    How far did we get? How far to go? A European survey on postgraduate courses in evidence‐based medicine.Regina Kunz, Eva Nagy, Sjors F. P. J. Coppus, Jose I. Emparanza, Julie Hadley, Regina Kulier, Susanne Weinbrenner, Theodoros N. Arvanitis, Amanda Burls, Juan B. Cabello, Tamas Decsi, Andrea R. Horvath, Jacek Walzak, Marcin P. Kaczor, Gianni Zanrei, Karin Pierer, Roland Schaffler, Katja Suter, Ben W. J. Mol & Khalid S. Khan - 2009 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 15 (6):1196-1204.
  14.  20
    Michael W. Allen.John J. McDermott & Is Life Worth Living - 2006 - In James Campbell & Richard E. Hart (eds.), Experience as philosophy: on the work of John J. McDermott. New York: Fordham University Press. pp. 84.
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  15.  25
    Internally produced electron pairs from π−-mesons captured in hydrogen.D. C. Cundy, R. A. Donald, W. H. Evans, D. W. Hadley, W. Hart, P. Mason, R. W. Newport, D. E. Plane, J. R. Smith & J. G. Thomas - 1962 - Philosophical Magazine 7 (73):121-126.
  16.  22
    Systematic track distortion in a 10 in. diameter liquid hydrogen bubble chamber.D. C. Cundy, W. H. Evans, D. W. Hadley, P. Mason, R. W. Newport, J. R. Smith & P. R. Williams - 1960 - Philosophical Magazine 5 (50):154-160.
  17.  2
    The Textile Term Scutulatus.J. P. Wild - 1964 - Classical Quarterly 14 (2):263-266.
    The received translation and interpretation of many of the technical terms current in the textile industry of the Roman Empire are inaccurate, because lexicographers have either fought shy of being precise, or have thought that they recognized in the ancient world technical processes which originated at a much later date. The evidence is often equivocal or insufficient, but may still yield details that have been overlooked. The textile expression scutulatus, to take an example, deserves more attention than Blümner has devoted (...)
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  18.  76
    Cognition, systematicity, and nomic necessity.Robert F. Hadley - 1997 - Mind and Language 12 (2):137-53.
    In their provocative 1988 paper, Fodor and Pylyshyn issued a formidable challenge to connectionists, i.e. to provide a non‐classical explanation of the empirical phenomenon of systematicity in cognitive agents. Since the appearance of F&P's challenge, a number of connectionist systems have emerged which prima facie meet this challenge. However, Fodor and McLaughlin (1990) advance an argument, based upon a general principle of nomological necessity, to show that one of these systems (Smolensky's) could not satisfy the Fodor‐Pylyshyn challenge. Yet, if Fodor (...)
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  19.  4
    Copyright licensing in the UK: "If it's worth copying, it's worth protecting".Colin P. Hadley - 1991 - Logos 2 (4):185-189.
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  20.  65
    Critique of Callicott's biosocial moral theory.John Hadley - 2007 - Ethics and the Environment 12 (1):67-78.
    : J. Baird Callicott's claim to have unified environmentalism and animal liberation should be rejected by holists and liberationists. By making relations of intimacy necessary for moral considerability, Callicott excludes from the moral community nonhuman animals unable to engage in intimate relations due to the circumstances of their confinement. By failing to afford moral protection to animals in factory farms and research laboratories, Callicott's biosocial moral theory falls short of meeting a basic moral demand of liberationists. Moreover, were Callicott to (...)
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  21.  42
    Intrinsic Value and Individual Worth.M. J. Zimmerman - 2005 - In Toni Rønnow-Rasmussen & Michael J. Zimmerman (eds.), Recent work on intrinsic value. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 191--205.
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  22. Letters and Tracts on Spiritualism. Also, Two Inspirational Orations by C. L. V. Tappan. Ed. By J. Burns.John Worth Edmonds, James Burns & Cora Linn V. Richmond - 1875
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  23. Moral Worth and Knowing How to Respond to Reasons.J. J. Cunningham - 2021 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 105 (2):385-405.
    It’s one thing to do the right thing. It’s another to be creditable for doing the right thing. Being creditable for doing the right thing requires that one does the right thing out of a morally laudable motive and that there is a non-accidental fit between those two elements. This paper argues that the two main views of morally creditable action – the Right Making Features View and the Rightness Itself View – fail to capture that non-accidentality constraint: the first (...)
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  24.  26
    Review of William Irwin, Jorge J. E. Gracia (eds.), Philosophy and the Interpretation of Pop Culture[REVIEW]Sarah Worth - 2007 - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007 (11).
  25.  18
    Head Transplantation and Immortality: When Is Life Worth Living Forever?J. Clint Parker - 2022 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 47 (2):279-292.
    Head transplantation fits within the broader conceptual space occupied by transhumanists and others who seek to extend the lives of human beings indefinitely. It is reasonable to reflect on whether, under what circumstances, and in what ways human immortality would be good. In this paper, I disambiguate the ways in which immortality might be considered a human good and then argue that immortality is neither necessary nor sufficient condition for objective meaning in life. I also argue that mortality is not (...)
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  26. Why a diagram is (sometimes) worth a thousand words….J. Takrkin & H. A. Simon - 1987 - Cognitive Science 1:l.
     
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  27. Is the immortal life worth living?J. Jeremy Wisnewski - 2005 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 58 (1):27 - 36.
  28.  9
    Scientific Philosophy Today: Essays in Honor of Mario Bunge.J. Agassi & Robert S. Cohen - 2013 - Springer Verlag.
    This volume is dedicated to Mario Bunge in honor of his sixtieth birthday. Mario Bunge is a philosopher of great repute, whose enormous output includes dozens of books in several languages, which will culminate with his Treatise on Basic Philosophy projected in seven volumes, four of which have already appeared [Reidel, I 974ff. ]. He is known for his works on research methods, the foundations of physics, biology, the social sciences, the diverse applications of mathematical methods and of systems analysis, (...)
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  29. A picture is worth 1000 words, but which 1000.J. Illes, E. Racine & M. P. Kirschen - forthcoming - Neuroethics: Defining the Issues in Theory, Practice, and Policy. Oxford University Press, New York.
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  30.  41
    Saints and Heroes.J. O. Urmson - 2023 - In David Heyd (ed.), Handbook of Supererogation. Springer Nature Singapore. pp. 17-27.
    Moral philosophers tend to discriminate, explicitly or implicitly, three types of action from the point of view of moral worth. First, they recognize actions that are a duty, or obligatory, or that we ought to perform, treating these terms as approximately synonymous; second, they recognize actions that are right in so far as they are permissible from a moral standpoint and not ruled out by moral considerations, but that are not morally required of us, like the lead of this (...)
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  31. Why one picture is worth more than ten thousand words.J. Larkin & H. A. Simon - 1987 - Cognitive Science 13:63-100.
     
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  32. A picture is worth a thousand word, but which one thousand.J. Illes & E. Racine - forthcoming - Neuroethics: Defining the Issues in Research, Practice and Policy. Oxford University Press, Oxford, Sous Presse.
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  33. Is the unexamined life worth living or not?J. O. Famakinwa - 2012 - Think 11 (31):97-103.
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  34.  62
    Was Aldo Leopold a Pragmatist? Rescuing Leopold from the Imagination of Bryan Norton.J. Baird Callicott, William Grove-Fanning, Jennifer Rowland, Daniel Baskind, Robert Heath French & Kerry Walker - 2009 - Environmental Values 18 (4):453 - 486.
    Aldo Leopold was a pragmatist in the vernacular sense of the word. Bryan G. Norton claims that Leopold was also heavily influenced by American Pragmatism, a formal school of philosophy. As evidence, Norton offers Leopold's misquotation of a definition of right (as truth) by political economist, A.T. Hadley, who was an admirer of the philosophy of William James. A search of Leopold's digitised literary remains reveals no other evidence that Leopold was directly influenced by any actual American Pragmatist or (...)
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  35.  29
    Basic human worth and religious restraint.Christopher J. Eberle - 2009 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 35 (1-2):151-181.
    The Doctrine of Religious Restraint is the claim that citizens and officials in a liberal democracy should not support coercive laws that they know to require a religious rationale. The most prominent argument for the Doctine of Religious Restraint appeals to the claim that we ought to treat each person as having basic worth: citizens and officials ought to obey the Doctrine of Religious Restraint because doing so is required in order for them to respect their compatriots as persons (...)
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  36.  15
    Directions in Relevant Logic.J. Norman & R. Sylvan (eds.) - 1989 - Dordrecht and Boston: Springer.
    Relevance logics came of age with the one and only International Conference on relevant logics in 1974. They did not however become accepted, or easy to promulgate. In March 1981 we received most of the typescript of IN MEMORIAM: ALAN ROSS ANDERSON Proceedings of the International Conference of Relevant Logic from the original editors, Kenneth W. Collier, Ann Gasper and Robert G. Wolf of Southern Illinois University. 1 They had, most unfortunately, failed to find a publisher - not, it appears, (...)
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  37. Consciousness and the Collapse of the Wave Function.David J. Chalmers & Kelvin J. McQueen - 2022 - In Shan Gao (ed.), Consciousness and Quantum Mechanics. Oxford University Press.
    Does consciousness collapse the quantum wave function? This idea was taken seriously by John von Neumann and Eugene Wigner but is now widely dismissed. We develop the idea by combining a mathematical theory of consciousness (integrated information theory) with an account of quantum collapse dynamics (continuous spontaneous localization). Simple versions of the theory are falsified by the quantum Zeno effect, but more complex versions remain compatible with empirical evidence. In principle, versions of the theory can be tested by experiments with (...)
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  38.  22
    Values and Intentions: A Study in Value-Theory and Philosophy of Mind.J. N. Findlay - 1961 - New York,: Routledge.
    Professor Findlay in this book, originally published in 1961, set out to justify, and to some extent carry out, a ‘material value-ethic’, ie. A systematic setting forth of the ends of rational action. The book is in the tradition of Moore, Rashfall, Ross, Scheler and Hartmann though it avoids altogether dogmatic intuitive methods. It argues that an organised framework of ends of action follows from the attitude underlying our moral pronouncements, and that this framework, while allowing personal elaboration, is not (...)
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  39. Disjunctivism and Perceptual Knowledge in Merleau-Ponty and McDowell.J. C. Berendzen - 2014 - Res Philosophica 91 (3):261-286.
    On the face of it, Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s views bear a strong resemblance to contemporary disjunctivist theories of perception, especially John McDowell’s epistemological disjunctivism. Like McDowell (and other disjunctivists), Merleau-Ponty seems to be a direct realist about perception and holds that veridical and illusory perceptions are distinct. This paper furthers this comparison. Furthermore, it is argued that elements of Merleau-Ponty’s thought provide a stronger case for McDowell’s kind of epistemological view than McDowell himself provides. Merleau-Ponty’s early thought can be used to (...)
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  40.  49
    Incomparable Worth, Steven E. Rhoads. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993, 334 + xi pages.J. Donald Moon - 1994 - Economics and Philosophy 10 (1):133.
  41.  10
    Peace is worth paying for.Terence J. Martin - 2023 - Moreana 60 (1):22-37.
    This essay examines the unsettling claim of Erasmus that “an unjust peace is preferable by far than a just war”—a dictum he retrieves from Cicero but applies to debates about warfare between nations, feuds of religion, and interpersonal conflicts. Embedded in this aphorism is an entire Erasmian ethic of conflict, one wherein he prods leaders and individuals to pay the price for peace by settling on less than desirable and possibly unfair terms, in order to avoid the devastating fallout of (...)
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  42. Trust: On the real but almost always unnoticed, ever-changing foundation of ethical life.J. M. Bernstein - 2011 - Metaphilosophy 42 (4):395-416.
    Following the lead of Annette Baier, this essay argues that trust relations provide the ethical substance of everyday living. When A trusts B, A unreflectively allows B to approach sufficiently close so as to be able to harm A. In order for this to be possible, A practically presupposes that B perceives A as a person and will hence act accordingly. Trust relations are relations of mutual recognition in which we acknowledge our mutual standing and vulnerability with respect to one (...)
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  43. Life's worth: the case against assisted suicide.Arthur J. Dyck - 2002 - Grand Rapids, Mich.: William B. Eerdmans Pub. Co..
    But as Harvard ethicist Arthur J. Dyck shows in this powerful work, there are solid moral and practical bases for the existing laws against assisted suicide in ...
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  44.  19
    Some Differences between Speech-Scansion and Narrative-Scansion in Homeric Verse.J. A. J. Drewitt - 1908 - Classical Quarterly 2 (02):94-.
    If in the various books of the Iliad and Odyssey the speeches or personated lines are separated from the rest, the metrical phenomena will, when tabulated, be found to show a perceptible divergence from those of the narrative verse. The differences are worth some notice. They throw into sharp relief the subtle rules that control the narrative type; and, what is more important, they do to some extent suggest the principle, of which these rules are the necessary outcome. There (...)
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  45.  7
    Some Differences between Speech-Scansion and Narrative-Scansion in Homeric Verse1.J. A. J. Drewitt - 1908 - Classical Quarterly 2 (2):94-109.
    If in the various books of the Iliad and Odyssey the speeches or personated lines are separated from the rest, the metrical phenomena will, when tabulated, be found to show a perceptible divergence from those of the narrative verse. The differences are worth some notice. They throw into sharp relief the subtle rules that control the narrative type; and, what is more important, they do to some extent suggest the principle, of which these rules are the necessary outcome. There (...)
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  46. Falsificationism Redux Indeed: a Rebuttal of the Callahan Rejoinder.J. C. Lester - manuscript
    Readers of “Falsificationism Redux” (the rejoinder) may have found it to be another waffling non-explanation of induction and the alleged falsity of falsificationism—or even self-refuting, as its title indicates (redux: brought back, revived, restored). However, it seems worth another round of replies if only because the arguments are fairly typical of the would-be ‘inductivist’ and it might help some people who have yet to see how these arguments fail.
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  47. Explaining the First Thing about Libertarianism.J. C. Lester - manuscript
    Escape from Leviathan (EfL) is a first attempt at explaining a somewhat complex philosophical theory of libertarianism. The theory is far from being as clear as it has subsequently become possible to make it. Consequently, most reviews have misunderstood it to varying degrees. What is striking is the great confidence with which some of these reviews assume they have completely understood it and refuted it. This is odd because it does not seem entirely reasonable to suppose that EfL’s errors are (...)
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  48.  29
    On the Aristotelian Use of ∧ΟΓΟΣ : A Reply.J. L. Stocks - 1914 - Classical Quarterly 8 (1):9-12.
    In the June issue of the Classical Review Professor Cook Wilson announces his conversion to the view that in ‘a well-defined group’ of passages in the Nicomachean Ethics λόγος means Reason. While I cannot hope to re-convert Professor Cook Wilson, I feel that it is worth while to try to express the reasons for which it seems difficult to follow him.
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  49.  23
    Dating Locke's Second Treatise.J. Milton - 1995 - History of Political Thought 16 (3):356-390.
    There is as yet no general agreement about exactly when Locke's Second Treatise of Government was written. Primarily as a result of Peter Laslett's arguments, the old assumption that it was written after the Revolution of 1688 has been abandoned, and it is almost universally agreed that both of the Two Treatises were written (apart from a small number of additions made in 1689) in the period between Locke's return to England from France at the end of April 1679 and (...)
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  50.  23
    John Hadley.L. J. M. Coleby - 1952 - Annals of Science 8 (4):293-301.
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