Results for 'Michael P. Etgen'

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  1.  30
    Cognitive dissonance: Physiological arousal in the performance expectancy paradigm.Michael P. Etgen & Ellen F. Rosen - 1993 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 31 (3):229-231.
  2.  10
    The afterlife of Moses: exile, democracy, renewal.Michael P. Steinberg - 2022 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
    In The Afterlife of Moses, Steinberg addresses the story of Moses and the Exodus as a foundational myth of politics, of the formation not of a nation but of a political community grounded in universal law. Motivated in part by this recent period of reactionary insurgency in the US, Europe, and Israel, this work of intellectual history articulates the way in which a critique of myths of origin as a principle of democratic government, affect, and citizenship has equal relevance in (...)
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  3. Is Modern Liberalism Compatible with Limited Government?: The Case of Rawls.Michael P. Zuckert - 1996 - In Robert P. George (ed.), Natural law, liberalism, and morality: contemporary essays. New York: Oxford University Press.
  4.  13
    What's in a name?: bringingmeishito the UK.Michael P. D. Simmons - 1997 - Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education 1 (2):59-61.
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  5. Truth as one and many.Michael P. Lynch - 2009 - New York : Clarendon Press,: Clarendon Press.
    What is truth? Michael Lynch defends a bold new answer to this question. Traditional theories of truth hold that truth has only a single uniform nature. All truths are true in the same way. More recent deflationary theories claim that truth has no nature at all; the concept of truth is of no real philosophical importance. In this concise and clearly written book, Lynch argues that we should reject both these extremes and hold that truth is a functional property. (...)
  6. True to Life: Why Truth Matters.Michael P. Lynch - 2004 - Cambridge: MIT Press.
    In this engaging and spirited text, Michael Lynch argues that truth does matter, in both our personal and political lives. He explains that the growing cynicism over truth stems in large part from our confusion over what truth is.
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  7.  65
    Know-it-All Society: Truth and Arrogance in Political Culture.Michael P. Lynch - 2020 - New York, NY, USA: WW Norton.
    Know-it-All Society is about how we form and maintain our political convictions, and the ways in which political ideologies, human psychology and technology conspire to make our society more dogmatic, less intellectually humble and ultimately less democratic.
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  8.  48
    Internet of Us: Knowing More and Understanding Less in the Age of Big Data.Michael P. Lynch - 2016 - New York, NY, USA: WW Norton.
    An investigation into the way in which information technology has shaped how and what we know, from "Google-knowing" to privacy and social media.
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  9. True to Life: Why Truth Matters.Michael P. Lynch - 2004 - Philosophy 80 (314):601-604.
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  10.  48
    Truth in Context: An Essay on Pluralism and Objectivity.Michael P. Lynch - 1998 - Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
    A Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 1999 Academic debates about pluralism and truth have become increasingly polarized in recent years. One side embraces extreme relativism, deeming any talk of objective truth as philosophically naïve. The opposition, frequently arguing that any sort of relativism leads to nihilism, insists on an objective notion of truth according to which there is only one true story of the world. Both sides agree that there is no middle path. In Truth in Context, Michael Lynch (...)
  11. Epistemic circularity and epistemic incommensurability.Michael P. Lynch - forthcoming - Social Epistemology:262--77.
  12.  30
    Natural Rights and the New Republicanism.Michael P. Zuckert - 1998 - Princeton University Press.
    In Natural Rights and the New Republicanism, Michael Zuckert proposes a new view of the political philosophy that lay behind the founding of the United States.
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  13.  85
    After the Spade Turns: Disagreement, First Principles and Epistemic Contractarianism.Michael P. Lynch - 2016 - International Journal for the Study of Skepticism 6 (2-3):248-259.
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  14. The Nature of Truth: Classic and Contemporary Perspectives.Michael P. Lynch (ed.) - 2001 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
  15.  43
    Leo Strauss and the Problem of Political Philosophy.Michael P. Zuckert & Catherine H. Zuckert - 2014 - London: University of Chicago Press. Edited by Catherine H. Zuckert.
    Leo Strauss and his alleged political influence regarding the Iraq War have in recent years been the subject of significant media attention, including stories in the _Wall Street Journal _and _New York Times._ _Time_ magazine even called him “one of the most influential men in American politics.” With _The Truth about Leo Strauss_, Michael and Catherine Zuckert challenged the many claims and speculations about this notoriously complex thinker. Now, with _Leo Strauss and the Problem of Political Philosophy_, they turn (...)
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  16. ReWrighting Pluralism.Michael P. Lynch - 2006 - The Monist 89 (1):63–84.
  17.  25
    Obligations Beyond Competency.Michael P. Sipiora - 2008 - Janus Head 10 (2):425-443.
    A Heideggerian reading of J.H. van den Berg's writings contributes to an appreciation of phenomenological psychology as a cultural therapeutics. Both van den Berg's structural phenomenology of human existence and his Metablectic theory of historical changes lead to a notion of culture as a disclosive construction of the world. Our technological culture, in its reduction of all forms of relatedness to functionality (what van den Berg refers to as secularization), has repressed the spiritual dimension of contemporary life. The resultant derangement (...)
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  18. A Functionalist Theory of Truth.Michael P. Lynch - 2001 - In The Nature of Truth: Classic and Contemporary Perspectives. pp. 723--750.
  19. Truth and multiple realizability.Michael P. Lynch - 2004 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 82 (3):384 – 408.
    Pluralism about truth is the view that there is more than one way for a proposition to be true. When taken to imply that there is more than one concept and property of truth, this position faces a number of troubling objections. I argue that we can overcome these objections, and yet retain pluralism's key insight, by taking truth to be a multiply realizable property of propositions.
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  20. The values of truth and the truth of values.Michael P. Lynch - 2009 - In Adrian Haddock, Alan Millar & Duncan Pritchard (eds.), Epistemic Value. Oxford, GB: Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 225--42.
     
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  21.  42
    Active learning as destituent potential: Agambenian philosophy of education and moderate steps towards the coming politics.Michael P. A. Murphy - 2020 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 52 (1):66-78.
    Beginning in earnest in the late 1990s, educational researchers devoted increasing attention to the study of “active learning,” leading to a robust literature on the topic in the scholarship of teaching and learning. Meanwhile, during largely the same period, political theorists discovered the radical philosophy of Giorgio Agamben, which soon after began to ripple through more radical forms of philosophy of education. While both the SoTL works on active learning and writings of “Agambenian” philosophers of education have offered new insights (...)
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  22. Against Liberation: Putting Animals in Perspective.Michael P. T. Leahy - 1991 - New York: Routledge.
    The Western world is currently gripped by an obsessive concern for the rights of animals - their uses and abuses. In this book, Leahy argues that this is a movement based upon a series of fundamental misconceptions about the basic nature of animals. This is a radical philosophical questioning of prevailing views on animal rights, which credit animals with a self-consciousness like ours. Leahy's conclusions have implications for issues such as bloodsports, meat eating and fur trading.
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  23. Truth, value and epistemic expressivism.Michael P. Lynch - 2009 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 79 (1):76-97.
  24. Epistemic Circularity and Epistemic Disagreement.Michael P. Lynch - 2008 - In Duncan Pritchard, Alan Millar & Adrian Haddock (eds.), Social Epistemology. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
  25.  30
    Repression in the child's conception of the world: A phenomenological reading of Piaget.Michael P. Sipiora - 1993 - Philosophical Psychology 6 (2):167 – 180.
    The present article undertakes a psychological reading of The Child's Conception of the World as a cultural artifact in which genetic psychology's naturalistic and positivistic assumptions reflect an Enlightenment model of science, and Piaget figures as an agent of technological rationality. A phenomenological analysis of the text reveals how Piaget's research engages in an active repression of specific dimensions of childhood experience. Young children's 'adualistic' conceptions of thought, self and language are deemed 'confused', and thereby discounted, by virtue of the (...)
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  26.  8
    A Propositions.Michael P. Slattery & Tadeusz Gierymski - 1959 - Modern Schoolman 36 (2):91-107.
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  27.  1
    A Propositions.Michael P. Slattery - 1959 - Modern Schoolman 36 (2):91-107.
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  28.  57
    Christian Materialism Versus Anti-Christian “Spirituality”.Michael P. Slattery - 1978 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 52:159-167.
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  29. Christian Materialism Versus Anti-Christian "Spirituality".Michael P. Slattery - 1978 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 52:159.
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  30.  29
    Concerning Two Recent Studies in Analogy.Michael P. Slattery - 1957 - New Scholasticism 31 (2):237-246.
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  31.  31
    Descriptions as Negations.Michael P. Slattery - 1967 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 16:193-209.
  32.  4
    Descriptions as Negations.Michael P. Slattery - 1967 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 16:193-209.
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  33.  4
    Descriptions as Negations.Michael P. Slattery - 1967 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 16:193-209.
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  34. Genus and Difference.Michael P. Slattery - 1958 - The Thomist 21:343-64.
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  35.  34
    Is Being a Genus? (2).Michael P. Slattery - 1958 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 8:89-104.
    Those who in the past tended to say that being is a genus, coupled their assertion with the belief that the genus is univocal, thus making being univocal—a position which can easily be overturned. Others failed to distinguish between being as meaning essence, and so divisible into the ten categories, and being as meaning existence. The consequence was that they restricted the Divine Being to a genus of being, thereby denying God’s transcendence. As far as I know, the theory which (...)
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  36.  16
    Is Being a Genus? (2).Michael P. Slattery - 1958 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 8:89-104.
    Those who in the past tended to say that being is a genus, coupled their assertion with the belief that the genus is univocal, thus making being univocal—a position which can easily be overturned. Others failed to distinguish between being as meaning essence, and so divisible into the ten categories, and being as meaning existence. The consequence was that they restricted the Divine Being to a genus of being, thereby denying God’s transcendence. As far as I know, the theory which (...)
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  37.  11
    Metaphor and Metaphysics.Michael P. Slattery - 1955 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 5:89-99.
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  38.  16
    Metaphor and Metaphysics.Michael P. Slattery - 1955 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 5:89-99.
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  39.  3
    Metaphor and Metaphysics.Michael P. Slattery - 1955 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 5:89-99.
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  40.  29
    More on What There Isn’t.Michael P. Slattery - 1972 - Review of Metaphysics 26 (2):344 - 348.
    In what follows I will use the phrase "category term" to mean any term which indicates a species or genus of physical object, as for example "dog" and "animal." I will use the word "category" for a range of types going from ultimate genus to ultimate species, a type being a genus or species.
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  41. Thomism and Positivism.Michael P. Slattery - 1957 - The Thomist 20:447.
     
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  42.  24
    The Negative Ontological Argument.Michael P. Slattery - 1969 - New Scholasticism 43 (4):614-617.
  43.  12
    Two Notes on Fonseca.Michael P. Slattery - 1957 - Modern Schoolman 34 (3):193-202.
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  44.  26
    The Threefold Division of Analogy.Michael P. Slattery - 1966 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 15:131-154.
  45.  6
    The Threefold Division of Analogy.Michael P. Slattery - 1966 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 15:131-154.
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  46.  2
    The Threefold Division of Analogy.Michael P. Slattery - 1966 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 15:131-154.
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  47.  46
    Perception of motion affects language processing.Michael P. Kaschak, Carol J. Madden, David J. Therriault, Richard H. Yaxley, Mark Aveyard, Adrienne A. Blanchard & Rolf A. Zwaan - 2005 - Cognition 94 (3):B79-B89.
  48.  79
    Minimalism and the Value of Truth.Michael P. Lynch - 2004 - Philosophical Quarterly 54 (217):497 - 517.
    Minimalists generally see themselves as engaged in a descriptive project. They maintain that they can explain everything we want to say about truth without appealing to anything other than the T-schema, i.e., the idea that the proposition that p is true iff p. I argue that despite recent claims to the contrary, minimalists cannot explain one important belief many people have about truth, namely, that truth is good. If that is so, then minimalism, and possibly deflationism as a whole, must (...)
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  49. The importance of values in evidence-based medicine.Michael P. Kelly, Iona Heath, Jeremy Howick & Trisha Greenhalgh - 2015 - BMC Medical Ethics 16 (1):69.
    Evidence-based medicine has always required integration of patient values with ‘best’ clinical evidence. It is widely recognized that scientific practices and discoveries, including those of EBM, are value-laden. But to date, the science of EBM has focused primarily on methods for reducing bias in the evidence, while the role of values in the different aspects of the EBM process has been almost completely ignored.
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  50.  85
    Three questions for truth pluralism.Michael P. Lynch - 2012 - In Nikolaj Jang Lee Linding Pedersen & Cory Wright (eds.), Truth and Pluralism: Current Debates. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. pp. 21.
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