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Results for 'J. B. Wallace'

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  1. An Attempt to realise Mr Campbell's Proposal.J. B.Wallace -1906 -Hibbert Journal 5:903.
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  2.  37
    Being human in a global age of technology.Beverly J. B. Whelton -2016 -Nursing Philosophy 17 (1):28-35.
    This philosophical enquiry considers the impact of a global world view and technology on the meaning of being human. The global vision increases our awareness of the common bond between all humans, while technology tends to separate us from an understanding of ourselves as human persons. We review some advances in connecting as community within our world, and many examples of technological changes. This review is not exhaustive. The focus is to understand enough changes to think through the possibility of (...) healthcare professionals becoming cyborgs, human–machine units that are subsequently neither human and nor machine. It is seen that human technology interfaces are a different way of interacting but do not change what it is to be human in our rational capacities of providing meaningful speech and freely chosen actions. In the highly technical environment of the ICU, expert nurses work in harmony with both the technical equipment and the patient. We used Heidegger to consider the nature of equipment, and Descartes to explore unique human capacities. Aristotle,Wallace, Sokolowski, and Clarke provide a summary of humanity as substantial and relational. (shrink)
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  3. The World, the Mind and the Body: Psychology after cognitivism.B.Wallace,A. Ross,J. Davies &T. Anderson (eds.) -2007 - Imprint Academic.
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  4. J. B. Mayor, A Sketch of Ancient Philosophy from Thales to Cicero. [REVIEW]W.Wallace -1882 -Mind 7:286.
     
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  5.  111
    Integral Field Spectroscopy of the Low-mass Companion HD 984 B with the Gemini Planet Imager.Mara Johnson-Groh,Christian Marois,Robert J. De Rosa,Eric L. Nielsen,Julien Rameau,Sarah Blunt,Jeffrey Vargas,S. Mark Ammons,Vanessa P. Bailey,Travis S. Barman,Joanna Bulger,Jeffrey K. Chilcote,Tara Cotten,René Doyon,Gaspard Duchêne,Michael P. Fitzgerald,Kate B. Follette,Stephen Goodsell,James R. Graham,Alexandra Z. Greenbaum,Pascale Hibon,Li-Wei Hung,Patrick Ingraham,Paul Kalas,Quinn M. Konopacky,James E. Larkin,Bruce Macintosh,Jérôme Maire,Franck Marchis,Mark S. Marley,Stanimir Metchev,Maxwell A. Millar-Blanchaer,Rebecca Oppenheimer,David W. Palmer,Jenny Patience,Marshall Perrin,Lisa A. Poyneer,Laurent Pueyo,Abhijith Rajan,Fredrik T. Rantakyrö,Dmitry Savransky,Adam C. Schneider,Anand Sivaramakrishnan,Inseok Song,Remi Soummer,Sandrine Thomas,David Vega,J. KentWallace,Jason J. Wang,Kimberly Ward-Duong,Sloane J. Wiktorowicz &Schuyler G. Wolff -2017 -Astronomical Journal 153 (4):190.
    © 2017. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.We present new observations of the low-mass companion to HD 984 taken with the Gemini Planet Imager as a part of the GPI Exoplanet Survey campaign. Images of HD 984 B were obtained in the J and H bands. Combined with archival epochs from 2012 and 2014, we fit the first orbit to the companion to find an 18 au orbit with a 68% confidence interval between 14 and 28 au, an eccentricity (...) of 0.18 with a 68% confidence interval between 0.05 and 0.47, and an inclination of 119°with a 68% confidence interval between 114°and 125°. To address the considerable spectral covariance in both spectra, we present a method of splitting the spectra into low and high frequencies to analyze the spectral structure at different spatial frequencies with the proper spectral noise correlation. Using the split spectra, we compare them to known spectral types using field brown dwarf and low-mass star spectra and find a best-fit match of a field gravity M6.5 ±1.5 spectral type with a corresponding temperature of K. Photometry of the companion yields a luminosity of log=2.88 ± 0.07 dex with DUSTY models. Mass estimates, again from DUSTY models, find an age-dependent mass of 34 ±1 to 95 ±4 M Jup. These results are consistent with previous measurements of the object. (shrink)
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  6.  47
    The American Art Journal IArt Treasures in the British IslesThe Aesthetic Movement, Prelude to Art NouveauIranian ArtDirectory of American PhilosophersThe Far PointGustave CourbetPhilosophy and Science as Modes of KnowingArt, Music and IdeasCaravaggio Studies.M. Stokstad,Elizabeth Aslin,Gian Guido Belloni,Liliana F. Dall-Asen,Archie J. Bahm,Robert Fernier,A. L. Fisher,G. B. Murray,William Fleming,Walter Friedlaender,Lilian R. Furst,Henry Geldzahler,Eugene Goodheart,D. W. Gotshalk,Reynolds Graham,Francoise Henry,H. W. Janson,J. Kerman,Pal Kelemen,Walter Lowrie,Gabor Peterdi,Ida R. Prampolini,RobertWallace &J. J. M. van GoghTimmons -1970 -Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 29 (1):143.
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  7.  18
    Ethics, Literature, and Theory: An Introductory Reader.Wayne C. Booth,Dudley Barlow,Orson Scott Card,Anthony Cunningham,John Gardner,Marshall Gregory,John J. Han,Jack Harrell,Richard E. Hart,Barbara A. Heavilin,Marianne Jennings,Charles Johnson,Bernard Malamud,Toni Morrison,Georgia A. Newman,Joyce Carol Oates,Jay Parini,David Parker,James Phelan,Richard A. Posner,Mary R. Reichardt,Nina Rosenstand,Stephen L. Tanner,John Updike,John H.Wallace,Abraham B. Yehoshua &Bruce Young (eds.) -2005 - Sheed & Ward.
    Do the rich descriptions and narrative shapings of literature provide a valuable resource for readers, writers, philosophers, and everyday people to imagine and confront the ultimate questions of life? Do the human activities of storytelling and complex moral decision-making have a deep connection? What are the moral responsibilities of the artist, critic, and reader? What can religious perspectives—from Catholic to Protestant to Mormon—contribute to literary criticism? Thirty well known contributors reflect on these questions, including iterary theorists Marshall Gregory, James Phelan, (...) and Wayne Booth; philosophers Martha Nussbaum, Richard Hart, and Nina Rosenstand; and authors John Updike, Charles Johnson, Flannery O'Connor, and Bernard Malamud. Divided into four sections, with introductory matter and questions for discussion, this accessible anthology represents the most crucial work today exploring the interdisciplinary connections between literature, religion and philosophy. (shrink)
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  8.  43
    Hegel's first american followers, the ohio Hegelians: J. B. stallo, Peter Kaufmann, moncure Conway, August willich.HerbertWallace Schneider -1967 -Journal of the History of Philosophy 5 (4):378.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:378 HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY these churches to deal reasonably with frontier conditions and popular prejudices is common knowledge, but it is often forgotten that their founder and guide during the critical days of growth was also an exponent of the late Scottish Enlightenment. To make this careful analysis of Campbell's philosophy, as an extraordinary specimen of empirical method, is a welcome achievement by an experienced empiricist. The volume also (...) contains a Foreword by President Perry E. Gresham of Bethany College, and a comprehensive bibliography of Campbell's writings compiled by Claude E. Spencer. HERBERT W. SCHNEIDER Claremont, Cali]ornia Hegel's First American Followers, The Ohio Hegelians: J. B. Stallo, Peter Kau]mann, Moncure Conway, August WiUich. By Loyd D. Easton. (Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 1966. Pp. lx + 353. $7.00.) This expansion of the theme outlined in Professor Easton's article of 1962 gives us fulllength accounts of the careers and ideas of four picturesque characters of the Ohio River Valley during the 19th century. The four had little in common except Hegel, and even him they did not really share, for they interpreted him differently and used him for different interests. The author is somewhat generous in calling them "Hegelians" and "followers" of Hegel, for like practically all those Americans who have been influenced by Hegel, they followed him at a safe distance and not very long. But this diversity makes Easton's account all the more fascinating. He portrays not only four characters but also the culture of Cincinati and its environment. J. B. Stallo is better known among American historians and philosophers than the other three, and deservedly so, for he was more philosophical. But he gains in stature here, noteworthy not only for his philosophy of nature but also as a prominent citizen, judge of a Superior Court, and political leader of a large German community. Stallo had two very different careers: the early Catholic student and teacher of Oken's philosophy of nature, mixed liberally with Schelling's similar system and with Hegel's Encyclopedia and his Phenomenology. Emerson was probably right in getting out of Stallo's General Principles an idea of "nature's rhythmic unfolding" rather than an idea of historical dialectic. Then came the later Stallo (after 1855), a convert from Catholicism and transcendentalism to empiricism, and a devoted follower of Ernst Mach. It is this later Stallo, author in 1881 of The Concepts and Theories oJ Modern Physics, who is better known, and who used the term "relativity" to indicate that physics deals not with things-in-themselves but with the data given to observers. Peter Kaufmann is an excellent representative of those pietists who, when they came to the open spaces and free manners of America, made serious attempts to give their religious "perfectionism" a practical social embodiment in utopian, communal economies. He became a teacher in the Rappite "Community of Equality and Social Harmony" and after a few years founded his own "Society of Germans at Teutonia." The members of this society agreed to devote their communal surplus to the education of orphans, the conversion of Indians, the spreading of the Gospel to "the four corners of the earth", and publishing a weekly Herald o] Better Times. After four years of this Society he moved northward to Canton, Ohio, where he settled down comfortably as a publisher and promoter of public education. His major publication, The Temple oJ Truth, incorporated some ideas on dialectic taken from Hegel. He continued his contacts with many utopian communities and urged his fellow citizens to help in making the United States of America "a saviour nation of the rest of mankind." Moncure Conway, a native of Virginia and graduate of Dickinson College, became an itinerant Methodist minister. But in 1853 the Harvard Divinity School made a Unitarian of him and an enthusiast for the higher criticism of Strauss and the transcendentalism of Hegel. In 1858 his wife introduced him to her home town, Cincinnati, and there he became BOOK REVIEWS 379 the minister of a very influential and liberal congregation. In 1860 he began publication in Cincinnati of The Dial, successor to the New England transcendentalist journal, and used its... (shrink)
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  9. (1 other version)Individual differences in patterns of hypnotic experience across low and high hypnotically susceptible individuals. In (r. Kunzendorf & B.Wallace, eds) individual differences in conscious experience. [REVIEW]Ronald J. Pekala &V. K. Kumar -2000 -John Benjamins.
     
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  10.  47
    Business Adrift.Wallace B. Donham.J. M. Clark -1932 -International Journal of Ethics 42 (3):344-346.
  11. Deconstructing the Map.J. B. Harley -1980
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  12.  52
    The foundations of corporate responsibility.J. B. Wilbur -1982 -Journal of Business Ethics 1 (2):145 - 155.
    The thesis of this paper is that corporate activity can best be understood on analogy with the acitivity of persons. The ground for this analogy lies in the nature of activity itself which is common to both and to find a ground therein an analysis of the features of activity is presented based upon a comparison of activity and process by Alburey Castell. Activity is said to be bi-polar with one pole the purpose or goal to be handled in utilitarean (...) fashion and the other pole concerned with the maintenance of the presuppositions of activity.While any goal chosen will have hypothetical oughts as its conditions, it is argued that the presuppositions of activity are categorical oughts in that they cannot be denied without asserting them. And since one of these presuppositions is freedom of choice, thus giving activity the power to destroy its own possibility, these presuppositions function in the context of practice as categorical norms and are universal in their applicability as preserving the possibility of responsible activity for everyone else as well as myself. All activity whether it be other-regarding or self-regarding (self-interest in the business world) is subject to the norms of its own possibility, its enabling conditions, and this constitutes the moral ground for personal, managerial and a basis for inquiry into corporate responsibility. (shrink)
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  13. Jean Anouilh's Thirst for the Absolute and His Formulation of the Ideal.J. B. Williamson -1996 -Analecta Husserliana 49:45-60.
     
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  14.  19
    The Worlds of Plato and Aristotle.The Worlds of the Early Greek Philosophers.J. B. Wilbur &H. J. Allen -1983 -Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 43 (4):556-556.
  15.  16
    Galileo: For Copernicanism and for the Church by Annibale Fantoli.William A.Wallace -1996 -The Thomist 60 (2):317-322.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:BOOK REVIEWS Galileo: For Copemicanism and for the Church. By ANNIBALE FANTOLI. Translated by George V. Coyne, S.J. Studi Galileiani Vol. 3. Vatican City: Vatican Observatory Publications, 1994. Distributed by the University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Indiana. Pp. xix+ 540. $21.95 (paper). This exhaustive treatment of Galileo and his relationship to the Church was first published in Italian by the Vatican Observatory in 1993 as Vol. 2 (...) of its Studi Galileiani series, bearing the title Galileo: Per il Copemicanesimo e per la Chiesa. So excellent was the study that Father George Coyne, the director of the Vatican Observatory, took it on himself personally to translate the volume into English. Although not a member of the Galileo Commission set up by Pope John Paul II to review the Galileo case, as were Coyne and myself, Fantoli has admirably complemented the work of the Commission and his book surely belongs in the Studi Galileiani collection. A former Jesuit with degrees in mathematics and physics, Fantoli began the book more than twenty-five years ago when he was preparing a course on Galileo at Sophia University in Tokyo. His intention was to show that for Galileo it was never a question of choosing between Copernicanism and the Church, and that the saddest drama of his life was being faced with an injunction that forced him to befor the Church and against Copemicanism. The subtitle of his book proclaims Galileo's true intentions, despite his failure to convince others that this was what his life was all about. A great strength of Fantoli's treatment is its documentation, which abounds in excerpts from Galileo's writings and his correspondence as found in the National Edition of his works and also in citations from new materials that have been uncovered by the Galileo Commission. Thanks to Coyne, all of these texts, many of which were hitherto available only in Latin or Italian, can now be easily accessed in English translation. Another strength of Fantoli's work is that he has kept abreast of Galileo literature over the years and thus is able to offer scholarly critiques of authors whose works exhibit a bias against the Church. Especially welcome are his careful discussions of the positions of earlier writers such as Giorgio de Santillana, Ludovico Geymonat, and Stillman Drake, as well as those of more recent authors, Mario Biagioli, Maurice Finocchiaro, Pietro Redondi, William R. Shea, and Richard S. Westfall. The book is a tour de force and there is little to criticize in it. Unfortunately, however, a typesetting error at its very beginning might create 317 318 BOOK REVIEWS the wrong impression and throw off prospective readers. About six lines of text were omitted at the bottom of page 9. To remedy this the following words should be inserted between the end of page 9 and the beginning of page 10: confused with the Sun) which had heen worked out by Philolaus (about 475 B.C.) within the context of the Pythagorean school.9 In a further modification of this theory the central fire as well as the hypothesis of an anti-earth were done away with, which left the earth at the center of the universe. To offset this addition, the last six lines on the bottom of page 10 should be deleted, for these lines are repeated at the top of page 11. Otherwise, with this change, the exposition reads correctly. The remaining typographical errors are few and in no case do they affect the sense. After a brief introduction in which he presents the astronomical concepts necessary for understanding the details of the Copernican debate, Fantoli divides his treatment into seven chapters. The first two of these are devoted to Galileo's early life and teaching at the Universities of Pisa and Padua, his perfection of the telescope, and the beginnings of the controversies about the earth's motion that were provoked by his telescopic discoveries, The next three chapters then take up the scriptural arguments in detail, Galileo's battle with the Jesuits over the comets of 1618 and his The Assayer of 1623, and his resumption of the Copernican program with the publication of his Dialogue... (shrink)
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  16. What is behaviorism? The old and new psychology contrasted.J. B. Watson -forthcoming -Behaviorism.
     
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  17.  25
    Semantics of Natural Language. [REVIEW]L. J. -1973 -Review of Metaphysics 26 (3):531-533.
    J. L. Austin, in "Ifs and Cans," proclaimed the common hope that we soon "may see the birth, through the joint labors of philosophers, grammarians, and numerous other students of language, of a true and comprehensive science of language." The problem has always been with the "joint labors" part. Philosophers have always been willing to issue linguists dictums and linguists have been happy to teach philosophers "plain facts." Austin’s general view of language, and his particular notion of performative utterance, can (...) be found in the writing of J. R. Firth, the most commanding British linguist of Austin’s generation, but Austin never refers to Firth. In the present volume, however, we find clear and exciting evidence of genuinely joint labors on the part of philosophers and linguists. They stem from a summer conference in 1969 rounded out with contributions from notables. To two thick issues of Synthese the editors have added a dazzling piece by Saul Kripke, two substantial pieces by James McCawley and J. R. Ross, a short paper by Paul Ziff, and a reprint of P. F. Strawson’s "Grammar and Philosophy." This is an invaluable book and the best book among the many now available concerning the interaction of linguistics and philosophy: worth the cost, which the contributors attempted to reduce through foregoing royalties. The philosophers in this volume hold, or hold intriguing, the view that the semantics of a natural language can and must, in effect, be a theory of truth for a language in much the manner that Tarski suggested, and provided, for artificial language: the recursive specification of biconditionals in which the left hand gives the structural description of an object language sentence and the right hand, the truth conditions in the metalanguage. In "homophonic" translation this requirement can be trivially satisfied simply by mentioning the sentence on the left that one uses on the right: one makes the requirement non-trivial by forcing enough into the recursive specification so that one captures the native speaker’s implicit semantic competence. In this volume, the "orthodox" Davidsonian program, which takes the syntax of the metalanguage to be standard predicate logic, is ably argued by JohnWallace ; Richard Montague, David Lewis, and Jaakko Hintikka would want an intensional logic covering modality and propositional attitudes. The linguists who find this philosophical climate most appealing are called "generative semanticists": McCawley, Ross, George Lakoff and others argue that any proposed semantic rule will eventually prove necessary to syntax too and that, hence, the deepest level of syntactical form will be equivalent to semantic form. Whatever the ultimate fate of this joint program, it leads here to much exciting interaction between linguists and philosophers: linguists who welcome the machinery and conceptual standards of modern logic, and philosophers who try to grasp the specifics of crucial issues in recent linguistic theory. Even if Quine’s doubts, here sketched, and Chomsky’s currently unpublished more technical objections should be well-founded, nonetheless the joint labor will have been very much worthwhile. Aside from this general debate about semantics, there are several papers covering more specific issues. The papers of J. A. Fodor, Terence Parsons, and Ross concern adverbs and the logical form of action sentences; several papers, particularly B. H. Partee’s, examine "Opacity, Coreference, and Pronouns." In all these papers one notes the fulfillment of Austin’s hope that philosophic and linguistic arguments should become intermixed, if not at times properly indistinguishable. Perhaps the most enjoyable and exciting paper stands aside from linguistics: Saul Kripke’s "Naming and Necessity." Kripke here argues quite informally for the separation of analytic, a priori, and necessary that is required for a Kripke style, S5, modal logic with de re modalities. "Gold is a yellow metal," for example, turns out to be contingent, while "Heat is the motion of particles" is necessary but a posteriori ; and that philosopher’s stone of stones, "The morning star is the evening star," is discovered to be necessary but a posteriori.—J. L. (shrink)
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  18.  36
    Tachyons and causal paradoxes.J. B. Maund -1979 -Foundations of Physics 9 (7-8):557-574.
    Although the existence of tachyons is not ruled out by special relativity, it appears that causal paradoxes will arise if there are tachyons. The usual solutions to these paradoxes employ some form of the reinterpretation principle. In this paper it is argued first that the principle is incoherent, second that even if it is not, some causal paradoxes remain, and third, the most plausible “solution,” which appeals to boundary conditions of the universe, will conflict with special relativity.
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  19. Akrasia and Enkrateia in Ancient Stoicism: minor vice and minor virtue?J. B. Gourinat -2007 - In Christopher Bobonich & Pierre Destrée,Akrasia in Greek philosophy: from Socrates to Plotinus. Boston: Brill. pp. 215--247.
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  20.  28
    Diagrammatic classifications of birds, 1819–1901: views of the natural system in 19th-century British ornithology.Robert J. O'Hara -1988 -Acta XIX Congressus Internationalis Ornithologici: pp. 2746–2759.
    Classifications of animals and plants have long been represented by hierarchical lists of taxa, but occasional authors have drawn diagrammatic versions of their classifications in an attempt to better depict the "natural relationships" of their organisms. Ornithologists in 19th-century Britain produced and pioneered many types of classificatory diagrams, and these fall into three groups: (a) the quinarian systems of Vigors and Swainson (1820s and 1830s); (b) the "maps" of Strickland andWallace (1840s and 1850s); and (c) the evolutionary diagrams (...) of the post-Darwin authors (1860 on). The quinarians distinguished between affinity and analogy and used both in their classifications, whereas Strickland rejected the quinarians' belief in numerical regularity and their use of analogy.Wallace's "maps" are easily given an evolutionary interpretation, and his approach was taken up and modified by later evolutionary anatomists. Sharpe returned to Strickland's methods and merely appended a superficial evolutionary interpretation. Contrary to common belief systematics has a rich conceptual history, and many of the conceptual developments in 19th-century systematics were made by ornithologists. (shrink)
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  21.  62
    Typability and type checking in System F are equivalent and undecidable.J. B. Wells -1999 -Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 98 (1-3):111-156.
    Girard and Reynolds independently invented System F to handle problems in logic and computer programming language design, respectively. Viewing F in the Curry style, which associates types with untyped lambda terms, raises the questions of typability and type checking. Typability asks for a term whether there exists some type it can be given. Type checking asks, for a particular term and type, whether the term can be given that type. The decidability of these problems has been settled for restrictions and (...) extensions of F and related systems and complexity lower-bounds have been determined for typability in F, but this report is the first to resolve whether these problems are decidable for System F. This report proves that type checking in F is undecidable, by a reduction from semi-unification, and that typability in F is undecidable, by a reduction from type checking. Because there is an easy reduction from typability to type checking, the two problems are equivalent. The reduction from type checking to typability uses a novel method of constructing lambda terms that simulate arbitrarily chosen type environments. All of the results also hold for the λI-calculus. (shrink)
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  22.  96
    The uniqueness of biological self-organization: Challenging the Darwinian paradigm.J. B. Edelmann &M. J. Denton -2007 -Biology and Philosophy 22 (4):579-601.
    Here we discuss the challenge posed by self-organization to the Darwinian conception of evolution. As we point out, natural selection can only be the major creative agency in evolution if all or most of the adaptive complexity manifest in living organisms is built up over many generations by the cumulative selection of naturally occurring small, random mutations or variants, i.e., additive, incremental steps over an extended period of time. Biological self-organization—witnessed classically in the folding of a protein, or in the (...) formation of the cell membrane—is a fundamentally different means of generating complexity. We agree that self-organizing systems may be fine-tuned by selection and that self-organization may be therefore considered a complementary mechanism to natural selection as a causal agency in the evolution of life. But we argue that if self-organization proves to be a common mechanism for the generation of adaptive order from the molecular to the organismic level, then this will greatly undermine the Darwinian claim that natural selection is the major creative agency in evolution. We also point out that although complex self-organizing systems are easy to create in the electronic realm of cellular automata, to date translating in silico simulations into real material structures that self-organize into complex forms from local interactions between their constituents has not proved easy. This suggests that self-organizing systems analogous to those utilized by biological systems are at least rare and may indeed represent, as pre-Darwinists believed, a unique ascending hierarchy of natural forms. Such a unique adaptive hierarchy would pose another major challenge to the current Darwinian view of evolution, as it would mean the basic forms of life are necessary features of the order of nature and that the major pathways of evolution are determined by physical law, or more specifically by the self-organizing properties of biomatter, rather than natural selection. (shrink)
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  23.  25
    Lavoisier's Early Career in Science: An Examination of Some New Evidence.J. B. Gough -1968 -British Journal for the History of Science 4 (1):52-57.
    Shortly before his death in 1934, the British historian of chemistry, A. N. Meldrum, published two lengthy articles on Lavoisier's early career in science. After a careful investigation of the collection of manuscripts at the Académie des Sciences in Paris and in light of a detailed and penetrating analysis of Lavoisier's published work, Meldrum concluded that as a youth, Lavoisier was concerned with chemistry only to the extent that he found it useful for his mineralogical and geological researches. Lavoisier began (...) his career as a mineralogist; he became a chemist only in 1772, the “crucial year” when he turned his attention to chemical theory for its own sake and started his famous course of experiments on the nature of combustion and fixed air. Although some details—notably concerning Lavoisier's early education and geological work—have been added to this account since Meldrum's time, the broad conclusions of Meldrum's study are still generally accepted by historians of the chemical revolution. (shrink)
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  24. McDermott, J., B11 Milders, M., B23 Needham, A., 215 Newman, RS, B45 Niedeggen, M., B23.P. Bloom,N. Burgess,J. B. Cicchino,F. M. del Prado Martın,G. Dueker,L. R. Gleitman,A. E. Goldberg,A. I. Goldman,T. Hartley &H. Intraub -2005 -Cognition 94:257.
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  25.  41
    Research on Lgbt Issues and Queer Theory in the Social Studies.J. B. Mayo -2016 -Journal of Social Studies Research 40 (3):169-171.
  26.  284
    A logical basis for genetics?J. B. S. Haldane -1955 -British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 6 (23):245-248.
    Woodger's substitution of the "allegedly more precise term 'an environmentally insensitive set of lives'" for the term 'an inborn character' is discussed by haldane. He proposes that "woodger's definitions do not appear to have reached precision." (staff).
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  27.  14
    Against Our Will. Men, Women and Rape.J. B. Elshtain -1976 -Télos 1976 (30):237-242.
  28.  16
    (1 other version)Against Androgyny.J. B. Elshtain -1981 -Télos 1981 (47):5-21.
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  29.  29
    The manuscripts of theophrastus' de sensibus.J. B. Mcdlarmid -1962 -Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 44 (1):1-32.
  30.  56
    Induction, Probability and Causation.J. B. Maund -1972 -Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 21:309-312.
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  31. A History of the Family, Volume II: The Impact of Modernity. Edited by Andre Burguiere et al.J. B. Margadant -1999 -The European Legacy 4:103-103.
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  32.  32
    Critical Notes on Clem. Al.Strom v.J. B. Mayor -1895 -The Classical Review 9 (04):202-206.
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  33.  52
    Critical Notes on Clem. Al.Strom. VII.J. B. Mayor -1895 -The Classical Review 9 (09):433-439.
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  34.  32
    Critical Notes on Clem. Al. Strom. VI.J. B. Mayor -1895 -The Classical Review 9 (06):297-302.
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  35.  39
    Critical Notes on Clem. Al.Strom. IV.J. B. Mayor -1895 -The Classical Review 9 (02):97-105.
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  36.  38
    (1 other version)Critical Notes on Clem. Al.Strom. III.J. B. Mayor -1894 -The Classical Review 8 (09):385-391.
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    Critical Notes on the First Book of theStromateis of Clement of Alexandria.J. B. Mayor -1894 -The Classical Review 8 (06):233-239.
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  38.  44
    Further Note on PlatoRep. X. 597 E.J. B. Mayor -1896 -The Classical Review 10 (05):245-.
  39.  20
    Unrecorded Uses of ατκα.J. B. Mayor -1897 -The Classical Review 11 (09):442-444.
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    Ziegler's Cleomedes.J. B. Mayor -1893 -The Classical Review 7 (04):165-166.
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  41.  15
    The Place of Kinaesthetic, Visceral and Laryngeal Organization in Thinking.J. B. Watson -1924 -Psychological Review 31 (5):339-347.
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  42.  27
    The Unverbalized in Human Behavior.J. B. Watson -1924 -Psychological Review 31 (4):273-280.
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  43. was the author among others of Animal Education (1903), Behavior (1914).J. B. Watson -forthcoming -Behaviorism.
  44. Cartography, Ethics and Social Theory.J. B. Harley -1990
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  45. Saúde e doença na perspectiva dos profissionais de saúde no hospital.J. B. Hartmann -1999 -Aletheia: An International Journal of Philosophy 9:39-49.
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  46.  9
    Acid Stomachs and Breines' Bromides.J. B. Elshtain -1981 -Télos 1981 (47):211-214.
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  47.  7
    (1 other version)The Decline of the City.J. B. Elshtain -1987 -Télos 1987 (73):180-181.
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  48.  11
    (1 other version)The Social Relations of the Classroom: A Moral and Political Perspective.J. B. Elshtain -1976 -Télos 1976 (27):97-110.
  49.  9
    (1 other version)The Self: Reborn, Undone, Transformed.J. B. Elshtain -1980 -Télos 1980 (44):101-111.
  50.  231
    Kripke's refutation of materialism.J.-B. Blumenfeld -1975 -Australasian Journal of Philosophy 53 (2):151-6.
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