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Results for 'Joshua James Kassner'

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  1.  23
    Rwanda and The Moral Obligation of Humanitarian Intervention.JoshuaJamesKassner -2012 - Edinburgh, UK: Edinburgh University Press.
    Kassner contends that the violation of the basic human rights of the Rwandan Tutsis morally obliged the international community to intervene militarily to stop the genocide. This compelling argument, grounded in basic rights, runs counter to the accepted view on the moral nature of humanitarian intervention. It has profound implications for our understanding of the moral nature of humanitarian military intervention, global justice and the role moral principles should play in the practical deliberations of states. A new approach to (...) the intersection of human and sovereign rights that is of tremendous moral, political and legal importance to theorists working in international relations today Challenges the immutability of the right of non-intervention held by sovereign states, assessing when it becomes right for the international community to intervene militarily in order to avoid another Rwanda. (shrink)
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  2.  19
    The value and purpose of law: essays in honor of M.N.S. Sellers.M. N. S. Sellers,JoshuaJamesKassner &Colin Starger (eds.) -2019 - Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag.
    This book reveals and discusses the foundations of law and justice. Fifteen leading lawyers and philosophers of law, representing thirteen nations and fifteen different philosophical schools examine the value and purpose of law, and the nature and requirements of law and justice. Some of the world's most learned and provocative legal scholars address the ultimate questions of legal and social philosophy from all angles and the broadest possible perspective, with special reference to the work of Mortimer Newlin Stead Sellers, and (...) the republican, liberal, and analytical schools of legal thought. The conclusions reached here are not fully unanimous, congruent or conclusive, but they represent the pinnacle of legal scholarship as it exists today and furnish the necessary basis for any future study of law, justice, or the ultimate requirements of just, effective and legitimate law and society. (shrink)
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  3. Limits of trust in medical AI.JoshuaJames Hatherley -2020 -Journal of Medical Ethics 46 (7):478-481.
    Artificial intelligence (AI) is expected to revolutionise the practice of medicine. Recent advancements in the field of deep learning have demonstrated success in variety of clinical tasks: detecting diabetic retinopathy from images, predicting hospital readmissions, aiding in the discovery of new drugs, etc. AI’s progress in medicine, however, has led to concerns regarding the potential effects of this technology on relationships of trust in clinical practice. In this paper, I will argue that there is merit to these concerns, since AI (...) systems can be relied on, and are capable of reliability, but cannot be trusted, and are not capable of trustworthiness. Insofar as patients are required to rely on AI systems for their medical decision-making, there is potential for this to produce a deficit of trust in relationships in clinical practice. (shrink)
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  4. Is the exclusion of psychiatric patients from access to physician-assisted suicide discriminatory?JoshuaJames Hatherley -2019 -Journal of Medical Ethics 45 (12):817-820.
    Advocates of physician-assisted suicide (PAS) often argue that, although the provision of PAS is morally permissible for persons with terminal, somatic illnesses, it is impermissible for patients suffering from psychiatric conditions. This claim is justified on the basis that psychiatric illnesses have certain morally relevant characteristics and/or implications that distinguish them from their somatic counterparts. In this paper, I address three arguments of this sort. First, that psychiatric conditions compromise a person’s decision-making capacity. Second, that we cannot have sufficient certainty (...) that a person’s psychiatric condition is untreatable. Third, that the institutionalisation of PAS for mental illnesses presents morally unacceptable risks. I argue that, if we accept that PAS is permissible for patients with somatic conditions, then none of these three arguments are strong enough to demonstrate that the exclusion of psychiatric patients from access to PAS is justifiable. (shrink)
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  5.  559
    Medical assistance in dying for the psychiatrically ill: Reply to Buturovic.JoshuaJames Hatherley -2021 -Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (4):259-260.
    In a recent Response published in the Journal of Medical Ethics,1 Buturovic provides two criticisms of my argument in ‘Is the exclusion of psychiatric patients from access to physician-assisted suicide discriminatory?’2 First, Buturovic argues that my argument effectively ‘erases the distinction between healthy adults and patients (whether somatic or psychiatric) essentially implying that PAS [physician-assisted suicide] should be available to all, for all reasons or, ultimately no reason’ (Buturovic,1 pg. 1). Second, Buturovic argues that opening the doors to medical assistance (...) in dying (MAID) for psychiatric patients could have a number of undesirable implications. In particular, Buturovic highlights the potential negative implications for relations of trust in medicine—psychiatry in particular—along with potential effects on the rate of organ donation. I would here like to respond to these two criticisms. In short, my response to Buturovic’s first argument is that the slope is not nearly as slippery as Buturovic suggests. The reason for this is that the plausibility of Buturovic’s argument rests on a significant misinterpretation of my argument, along with an important equivocation in her own. Buturovic argues that, under the three criteria that I propose for the provision of MAID—sufficient decision-making capacity, demonstrated treatment resistance, and a lack of substantially negative implications for existing standards of psychiatric treatment and research—the provision of MAID for trivial reasons, even no reason at all, is justifiable. The main problem with this argument is that I propose no such positive criteria. My argument is that none of the three arguments addressed in my previous paper are sufficient to justify the exclusion of any and all psychiatric patients from access to MAID. I do not claim, in other words, that any individual …. (shrink)
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  6. The promise and perils of AI in medicine.Robert Sparrow &JoshuaJames Hatherley -2019 -International Journal of Chinese and Comparative Philosophy of Medicine 17 (2):79-109.
    What does Artificial Intelligence (AI) have to contribute to health care? And what should we be looking out for if we are worried about its risks? In this paper we offer a survey, and initial evaluation, of hopes and fears about the applications of artificial intelligence in medicine. AI clearly has enormous potential as a research tool, in genomics and public health especially, as well as a diagnostic aid. It’s also highly likely to impact on the organisational and business practices (...) of healthcare systems in ways that are perhaps under-appreciated. Enthusiasts for AI have held out the prospect that it will free physicians up to spend more time attending to what really matters to them and their patients. We will argue that this claim depends upon implausible assumptions about the institutional and economic imperatives operating in contemporary healthcare settings. We will also highlight important concerns about privacy, surveillance, and bias in big data, as well as the risks of over trust in machines, the challenges of transparency, the deskilling of healthcare practitioners, the way AI reframes healthcare, and the implications of AI for the distribution of power in healthcare institutions. We will suggest that two questions, in particular, are deserving of further attention from philosophers and bioethicists. What does care look like when one is dealing with data as much as people? And, what weight should we give to the advice of machines in our own deliberations about medical decisions? (shrink)
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  7. An essay in defense of a republican understanding of the relationship between liberty and law.JoshuaKassner -2019 - In M. N. S. Sellers, Joshua James Kassner & Colin Starger,The value and purpose of law: essays in honor of M.N.S. Sellers. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag.
     
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  8.  127
    Completing the incomplete: A defense of positive obligations to distant others.JoshuaKassner -2009 -Journal of Global Ethics 5 (3):181 – 193.
    Global justice is, at its core, about moral obligations to distant others. But which obligations ought to be included is a matter of considerable debate. In the discussion that follows I will explicate and challenge two objections to the inclusion of foundationally positive obligations in our account of global justice. The first objection is based on the proposition that negative obligations possess and positive obligations lack a property necessary for a moral demand to be a matter justice. The second objection (...) is that even the most trivial positive obligation becomes overly burdensome when applied to the global arena. And, though I do not offer any particular substantive account of positive obligations to distant others; I assess some of the implications that would arise were positive obligations to distant others to be included in our account of global justice. (shrink)
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  9.  3
    A new philosophy of human rights: the deliberative account.Joshua J.Kassner -2025 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    The philosophy of human rights has stalled over a debate between orthodox theorists committed to a moral understanding of human rights and political theorists who adopt a positivist approach. A New Philosophy of Human Rights challenges both, offering a novel deliberative account that bridges this divide.
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  10.  59
    Debate: Is everything really up for grabs? The relationship between democratic values and a democratic process.JoshuaKassner -2006 -Journal of Political Philosophy 14 (4):482–494.
  11.  30
    Deliberating about justice: The role of justice in the practical deliberations of states.Joshua J.Kassner -2011 -Contemporary Political Theory 10 (2):210-231.
  12.  20
    Thrift and Thriving in America: Capitalism and Moral Order From the Puritans to the Present.Joshua Yates &James Davison Hunter (eds.) -2011 - Oup Usa.
    Thrift and Thriving in America is a collection of groundbreaking essays on the significance of thrift throughout American history.
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  13.  10
    Queer Civics, Hermeneutical Injustice, and the Cis‐Straight Nation‐State: Reading the Illusion of LGBTQ+ Inclusion through the (Queer) Child.JamesJoshua Coleman &Jon M. Wargo -2024 -Educational Theory 74 (5):639-661.
    In this article,JamesJoshua Coleman and Jon Wargo interrogate the (queer) child as a concept and specter that haunts civic life in the United States. Whereas scholars across a range of fields and standpoints have questioned the value of LGBTQ+ inclusion in public school curricula, and society more broadly, together Coleman and Wargo wonder at the capacity of civics education to include queer (as opposed to LGBTQ+) citizens within the cis-straight nation-state. To explore this possibility, they read (...) across two bills: (1) H.R. 9197 (Stop the Sexualization of Children Act), and (2) Illinois House Bill 246 (Inclusive Curriculum Law). In so doing, they highlight how the (Queer) Child operates as an organizing binary logic within these bills and examine how hermeneutical injustice impedes the formation of a truly queer civics education. Specifically, Coleman and Wargo demonstrate how hermeneutical injustice limits the nature of inclusion for LGBTQ+ citizens, both for exclusionary, anti-LGBTQ+ policy and for seemingly inclusive legislation. Pointing to scenes that demonstrate hermeneutical justice and queer survivance, they conclude by suggesting the construction of a queer civics education that stands outside the binary logics of the cis-straight nation-state. (shrink)
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  14. X - Phi and Carnapian Explication.Joshua Shepherd &James Justus -2015 -Erkenntnis 80 (2):381-402.
    The rise of experimental philosophy has placed metaphilosophical questions, particularly those concerning concepts, at the center of philosophical attention. X-phi offers empirically rigorous methods for identifying conceptual content, but what exactly it contributes towards evaluating conceptual content remains unclear. We show how x-phi complements Rudolf Carnap’s underappreciated methodology for concept determination, explication. This clarifies and extends x-phi’s positive philosophical import, and also exhibits explication’s broad appeal. But there is a potential problem: Carnap’s account of explication was limited to empirical and (...) logical concepts, but many concepts of interest to philosophers are essentially normative. With formal epistemology as a case study, we show how x-phi assisted explication can apply to normative domains. (shrink)
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  15.  47
    Development and Psychometric Assessment of the Healthcare Provider Cultural Competence Instrument.L. SchwarzJoshua,Witte Raymond,L. Sellers Sherrill,A. Luzadis Rebecca,L. Weiner Judith,Domingo-Snyder Eloiza &E. PageJames -2015 -Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 52:004695801558369.
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  16. Religious voices in American public discourse.James Darsey &Joshua R. Ritter -2009 - In Andrea A. Lunsford, Kirt H. Wilson & Rosa A. Eberly,SAGE Handbook of Rhetorical Studies. SAGE. pp. 553--585.
     
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  17. Moral grandstanding and political polarization: a multi-study consideration.Joshua Grubbs,Brandon Warmke,Justin Tosi &ShantiJames -2020 -Journal of Research in Personality 88.
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  18.  36
    The logic of qualitative probability.James P. Delgrande,Bryan Renne &Joshua Sack -2019 -Artificial Intelligence 275 (C):457-486.
  19. Why a Bodily Resurrection?: The Bodily Resurrection and the Mind/Body Relation.Joshua Mugg &James T. Turner Jr -2017 -Journal of Analytic Theology 5:121-144.
    The doctrine of the resurrection says that God will resurrect the body that lived and died on earth—that the post-mortem body will be numerically identical to the pre-mortem body. After exegetically supporting this claim, and defending it from a recent objection, we ask: supposing that the doctrine of the resurrection is true, what are the implications for the mind-body relation? Why would God resurrect the body that lived and died on earth? We compare three accounts of the mind-body relation that (...) have been applied to the doctrine of the resurrection: substance dualism, constitutionalism, and animalism. We argue that animalism offers a superior explanation for the necessity of the resurrection: since human persons just are their bodies, life after death requires resurrection of one’s body. We conclude that those endorsing the doctrine of the resurrection should be animalists. (shrink)
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  20.  240
    ‘You do it like this!’: Bare Impersonals as Indefinite Singular Generics.James Ravi Kirkpatrick &Joshua Knobe -forthcoming -Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
    Sentences with impersonal pronouns, like 'You do it like this', seem to make both statistical and prescriptive claims, that a certain way of behaving is common and that it is prescriptively good. We argue that these kinds of sentences are closely related to another kind of sentence, namely, indefinite singular generics, like 'A person does it like this'. We propose that there is a single underlying mechanism that allows both kinds of sentences to express mixed statistical/prescriptive readings. We then provide (...) a compositional semantic analysis of these sentences and explain how, together with this single underlying mechanism, it accounts for this phenomenon. (shrink)
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  21.  780
    Moral Grandstanding in Public Discourse: Status-Seeking Motives as a Potential Explanatory Mechanism in Predicting Conflict.Joshua B. Grubbs,Brandon Warmke,Justin Tosi,A. ShantiJames &W. Keith Campbell -2019 -PLoS ONE 14 (10).
    Public discourse is often caustic and conflict-filled. This trend seems to be particularly evident when the content of such discourse is around moral issues (broadly defined) and when the discourse occurs on social media. Several explanatory mechanisms for such conflict have been explored in recent psychological and social-science literatures. The present work sought to examine a potentially novel explanatory mechanism defined in philosophical literature: Moral Grandstanding. According to philosophical accounts, Moral Grandstanding is the use of moral talk to seek social (...) status. For the present work, we conducted six studies, using two undergraduate samples (Study 1, N = 361; Study 2, N = 356); a sample matched to U.S. norms for age, gender, race, income, Census region (Study 3, N = 1,063); a YouGov sample matched to U.S. demographic norms (Study 4, N = 2,000); and a brief, one-month longitudinal study of Mechanical Turk workers in the U.S. (Study 5, Baseline N = 499, follow-up n = 296), and a large, one-week YouGov sample matched to U.S. demographic norms (Baseline N = 2,519, follow-up n = 1,776). Across studies, we found initial support for the validity of Moral Grandstanding as a construct. Specifically, moral grandstanding motivation was associated with status-seeking personality traits, as well as greater political and moral conflict in daily life. (shrink)
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  22. Moral grandstanding in public discourse: status-seeking motives as a potential explanatory mechanism in predicting conflict.Joshua Grubbs,Brandon Warmke,Justin Tosi,ShantiJames &Keith Campbell -2019 -PLoS ONE 14 (10).
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  23. Moral grandstanding and political polarization: A multi-study consideration.Joshua B. Grubbs,Brandon Warmke,Justin Tosi &A. ShantiJames -2020 -Journal of Research in Personality 88.
    The present work posits that social motives, particularly status seeking in the form of moral grandstanding, are likely at least partially to blame for elevated levels of affective polarization and ideological extremism in the U.S. In Study 1, results from both undergraduates (N = 981; Mean age = 19.4; SD = 2.1; 69.7% women) and a cross-section of U.S. adults matched to 2010 census norms (N = 1,063; Mean age = 48.20, SD = 16.38; 49.8% women) indicated that prestige-motived grandstanding (...) was consistently and robustly related to more extreme ideological views on a variety of issues. In Study 2, results from a weighted, nationally-representative cross-section of U.S. adults (N = 2,519; Mean age = 47.5, SD = 17.8; 51.4% women) found that prestige motivated grandstanding was reliably related to both ideological extremism and affective polarization. (shrink)
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  24.  73
    Blueprint for Transparency at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration: Recommendations to Advance the Development of Safe and Effective Medical Products.Joshua M. Sharfstein,James Dabney Miller,Anna L. Davis,Joseph S. Ross,Margaret E. McCarthy,Brian Smith,Anam Chaudhry,G. Caleb Alexander &Aaron S. Kesselheim -2017 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 45 (s2):7-23.
    BackgroundThe U.S. Food and Drug Administration traditionally has kept confidential significant amounts of information relevant to the approval or non-approval of specific drugs, devices, and biologics and about the regulatory status of such medical products in FDA’s pipeline.ObjectiveTo develop practical recommendations for FDA to improve its transparency to the public that FDA could implement by rulemaking or other regulatory processes without further congressional authorization. These recommendations would build on the work of FDA’s Transparency Task Force in 2010.MethodsIn 2016-2017, we convened (...) a team of academic faculty from Harvard Medical School, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Yale Medical School, Yale Law School, and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health to develop recommendations through an iterative process of reviewing FDA’s practices, considering the legal and policy constraints on FDA in expanding transparency, and obtaining insights from independent observers of FDA.ResultsThe team developed 18 specific recommendations for improving FDA’s transparency to the public. FDA could adopt all these recommendations without further congressional action.FundingThe development of the Blueprint for Transparency at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration was funded by the Laura and John Arnold Foundation. (shrink)
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  25.  149
    A New Semantics for Vagueness.Joshua D. K. Brown &James W. Garson -2017 -Erkenntnis 82 (1):65-85.
    Intuitively, vagueness involves some sort of indeterminacy: if Plato is a borderline case of baldness, then there is no fact of the matter about whether or not he’s bald—he’s neither bald nor not bald. The leading formal treatments of such indeterminacy—three valued logic, supervaluationism, etc.—either fail to validate the classical theorems, or require that various classically valid inference rules be restricted. Here we show how a fully classical, yet indeterminist account of vagueness can be given within natural semantics, an alternative (...) semantics for classical proof theory. The key features of the account are: there is a single notion of truth—definite truth—and a single notion of validity; sentences can be true, false, or undetermined; all classical theorems and all classical inference rule are valid; the sorites argument is unsound; ‘definitely’ is treated as a meta-language predicate; higher-order vagueness is handled via semantic ascent. (shrink)
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  26.  18
    Idealism and Christian theology.Joshua R. Farris,S. Mark Hamilton &James S. Spiegel (eds.) -2016 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing.
    In the recent history of philosophy few works have appeared which favorably portray Idealism as a plausible philosophical view of the world. Considerably less has been written about Idealism as a viable framework for doing theology. While the most recent and significant works on Idealism, composed by the late John Foster (Case for Idealism and A World for Us: The Case for Phenomenological Idealism), have put this theory back on the philosophical map, no such attempt has been made to re-introduce (...) Idealism to contemporary Christian theology. Idealism and Christian Theology is such a work, retrieving ideas and arguments from its most significant modern exponents (especially George Berkeley and Jonathan Edwards) in order to assess its value for present and future theological construction. As a piece of constructive philosophical-theology itself, this volume considers the explanatory power an Idealist ontology has for contemporary Christian theology. (shrink)
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  27.  54
    Making microbes matter: essay review of Maureen A. O’Malley’s Philosophy of Microbiology.Gregory J. Morgan,James Romph,Joshua L. Ross,Elizabeth Steward &Claire Szipszky -2018 -Biology and Philosophy 33 (1-2):12.
    In a pioneering book, Philosophy of Microbiology, Maureen O’Malley argues for the philosophical importance of microbes through an examination of their impact on ecosystems, evolution, biological classification, collaborative behavior, and multicellular organisms. She identifies many understudied conceptual issues in the study of microbes. If philosophers follow her lead, the philosophy of biology will be expanded and enriched.
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  28.  68
    Acts of Enjoyment: Rhetoric, Žižek, and the Return of the Subject (review).James J. Brown Jr &Joshua Gunn -2009 -Philosophy and Rhetoric 42 (2):183-190.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Acts of Enjoyment: Rhetoric, Žižek, and the Return of the SubjectJames J. Brown Jr. andJoshua GunnActs of Enjoyment: Rhetoric, Žižek, and the Return of the Subject by Thomas Rickert. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2007. Pp. x + 252. $24.95, hardcover.Thomas Rickert had a falling-out with his brother, and this distresses him so much that his disrupted relation is described as “traumatic.” Rickert reports that while (...) listening to a portable CD player during a run on an unexpectedly warm winter day, a song by the now defunct jazz/rock band Morphine reminded him of a happy time at a pool hall with his brother (24). Mediated—or better, medicated—by music, the homological happiness of running in the sun and a positive past memory also resurfaced a painful relational rupture, the reason of which Rickert omits to underscore that mysterious, “little detail or object” of the Real that marks his singular finitude as a writing subject (216 n. 11). We’ll want to come back to this curiously deliberate omission, but for the present we note Rickert is not simply an undead author but a human being with relations and feelings. He is not just a gifted scholar or a bundle of reflections, but a nexus of body and movement and words and affect. If there is anything that Rickert’s study can be said to work through with brilliance, humor, and grace, it is the reality of complex personhood.Rickert’s brotherly confession comes in Chapter 1 as a way to introduce a psychoanalytic understanding of subjectivity, and more specifically, to help illustrate how trauma works itself out as an afterwardness or “belatedness” ( Nachträglichkeit ): traumatic events from the past are not reckoned with or worked-through until some coincidence or reminder, such as a similar [End Page 183] sensory experience, reintroduces the event in doubled re-presentation (18–27). This implies the “subject” (a paradigm person) is a kind of timedelay, a self-conscious temporal moving that becomes this way through re-presentation. The rhetorical subject is analogously a retrojected reckoning with events past (not all traumatic) that Rickert identifies as a scene of writing, a locus that has important implications for rhetorical studies in general and writing pedagogy in particular. Rickert’s logic is as follows: if we agree that the subject is a belated one in the psychoanalytic sense, then how we teach rhetoric needs to change. Rickert opens the book with the observation that his students are producing excellent cultural critiques but that such critiques do not lead the students to change their actions (1–7), perhaps evidence enough that something is not quite right in a classroom grounded by “cultural studies pedagogy” and ideology critique—or at the very least, proof that something has changed. The opening gambit is simply that a “postpedagogy” premised on an understanding of rhetorical subjectivity as belatedness is better than a status quo rooted in the rational subject of the Enlightenment.Mostly through a Žižek-filtered, Lacanian lens, Acts of Enjoyment then undertakes a retake of the rhetorical field, frequently scanning from the traumatic ontology of the rhetorical subject to that domain of knowledge that we hold dear, the subject of rhetoric. In Chapter 2, the (primal) scene thus shifts from the slo-mo subject to rhetorical studies, initially through a reassessment of Kinneavy’s “communications triangle,” but ultimately in response to the shock treatment of poststructuralism. The initial theoretical traumas introduced by Victor Vitanza, Diane Davis, Sharon Crowley, and others discussed in Chapter 1 are threaded into an account of “poststructural” redress in Chapter 2: as is true of all forms of trauma, the initial poststructural jolt delivered to the concept of subjectivity was deadened; poststructural theory was eventually used to “shore up rather than challenge Kinneavy’s triangle” (37). To truly work-through our traumatized subject in both senses, we need a second trauma: Lacanian psychoanalysis. Presumably, “poststructuralist thought” is to be opposed because it has no account of the subject (21–24); “Lacan,” after all, “is not a poststructuralist” (48). The remainder of the chapter is then used to deploy Lacan’s conceptual lexicon.Just as... (shrink)
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  29.  88
    Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Deep Brain Stimulation Think Tank: Advances in Cutting Edge Technologies, Artificial Intelligence, Neuromodulation, Neuroethics, Pain, Interventional Psychiatry, Epilepsy, and Traumatic Brain Injury.Joshua K. Wong,Günther Deuschl,Robin Wolke,Hagai Bergman,Muthuraman Muthuraman,Sergiu Groppa,Sameer A. Sheth,Helen M. Bronte-Stewart,Kevin B. Wilkins,Matthew N. Petrucci,Emilia Lambert,Yasmine Kehnemouyi,Philip A. Starr,Simon Little,Juan Anso,Ro’ee Gilron,Lawrence Poree,Giridhar P. Kalamangalam,Gregory A. Worrell,Kai J. Miller,Nicholas D. Schiff,Christopher R. Butson,Jaimie M. Henderson,Jack W. Judy,Adolfo Ramirez-Zamora,Kelly D. Foote,Peter A. Silburn,Luming Li,Genko Oyama,Hikaru Kamo,Satoko Sekimoto,Nobutaka Hattori,James J. Giordano,Diane DiEuliis,John R. Shook,Darin D. Doughtery,Alik S. Widge,Helen S. Mayberg,Jungho Cha,Kisueng Choi,Stephen Heisig,Mosadolu Obatusin,Enrico Opri,Scott B. Kaufman,Prasad Shirvalkar,Christopher J. Rozell,Sankaraleengam Alagapan,Robert S. Raike,Hemant Bokil,David Green &Michael S. Okun -2022 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 16.
    DBS Think Tank IX was held on August 25–27, 2021 in Orlando FL with US based participants largely in person and overseas participants joining by video conferencing technology. The DBS Think Tank was founded in 2012 and provides an open platform where clinicians, engineers and researchers can freely discuss current and emerging deep brain stimulation technologies as well as the logistical and ethical issues facing the field. The consensus among the DBS Think Tank IX speakers was that DBS expanded in (...) its scope and has been applied to multiple brain disorders in an effort to modulate neural circuitry. After collectively sharing our experiences, it was estimated that globally more than 230,000 DBS devices have been implanted for neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders. As such, this year’s meeting was focused on advances in the following areas: neuromodulation in Europe, Asia and Australia; cutting-edge technologies, neuroethics, interventional psychiatry, adaptive DBS, neuromodulation for pain, network neuromodulation for epilepsy and neuromodulation for traumatic brain injury. (shrink)
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  30.  29
    Impulsive delayed reward discounting as a genetically-influenced target for drug abuse prevention: a critical evaluation.Joshua C. Gray &James MacKillop -2015 -Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  31.  48
    Asylum, Affinity, and Cosmopolitan Solidarity with Refugees.Joshua Hobbs &James Souter -2019 -Journal of Social Philosophy 51 (4):543-563.
  32.  692
    Moral grandstanding, narcissism, and self-reported responses to the COVID-19 crisis.Joshua B. Grubbs,A. ShantiJames,Brandon Warmke &Justin Tosi -2022 -Journal of Research in Personality 97 (104187):1-10.
    The present study aimed to understand how status-oriented individual differences such as narcissistic antagonism, narcissistic extraversion, and moral grandstanding motivations may have longitudinally predicted both behavioral and social media responses during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. Via YouGov, a nationally representative sample of U.S. adults was recruited in August of 2019 (N = 2,519; Mage = 47.5, SD = 17.8; 51.4% women) and resampled in May of 2020, (N = 1,533). Results indicated that baseline levels of narcissistic antagonism (...) were associated with lower levels of social distancing and lower compliance with public health recommended behaviors. Similarly, dominance oriented moral grandstanding motivations predicted greater conflict with others over COVID-19, greater engagement in status-oriented social media behaviors about COVID-19, and lower levels of social distancing. (shrink)
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  33.  534
    Eastern Christian Approaches to Philosophy.James Siemens &Joshua Matthan Brown (eds.) -2022 - Palgrave Macmillan.
    With few exceptions, the field of Eastern Christian studies has primarily been concerned with historical-critical analysis, hermeneutics, and sociology. For the most part it has not attempted to bring Eastern Christian philosophy into serious engagement with contemporary thought. This volume seeks to redress the matter by bringing the Eastern Christian tradition into a meaningful dialogue with contemporary philosophy. It boasts a diverse group of scholars―specialists in ancient philosophy, analytic philosophy, and continental philosophy―who engage with a wide range of pressing issues. (...) Among other things, it addresses such topics as contemporary atheism, the metaphysics of action, religious epistemology, the philosophy of language, bioethics, the philosophy of race, and human rights. In so doing, it aims to introduce contemporary readers to unique perspectives and novel arguments often overlooked by mainstream anglophone philosophy. (shrink)
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  34. Building lesson plans for 21st century active learning.Ari Bader-Natal,Joshua Fost &James Genone -2017 - In Stephen Michael Kosslyn, Ben Nelson & Robert Kerrey,Building the intentional university: Minerva and the future of higher education. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
     
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  35.  57
    Proceedings of the Seventh Annual Deep Brain Stimulation Think Tank: Advances in Neurophysiology, Adaptive DBS, Virtual Reality, Neuroethics and Technology.Adolfo Ramirez-Zamora,James Giordano,Aysegul Gunduz,Jose Alcantara,Jackson N. Cagle,Stephanie Cernera,Parker Difuntorum,Robert S. Eisinger,Julieth Gomez,Sarah Long,Brandon Parks,Joshua K. Wong,Shannon Chiu,Bhavana Patel,Warren M. Grill,Harrison C. Walker,Simon J. Little,Ro’ee Gilron,Gerd Tinkhauser,Wesley Thevathasan,Nicholas C. Sinclair,Andres M. Lozano,Thomas Foltynie,Alfonso Fasano,Sameer A. Sheth,Katherine Scangos,Terence D. Sanger,Jonathan Miller,Audrey C. Brumback,Priya Rajasethupathy,Cameron McIntyre,Leslie Schlachter,Nanthia Suthana,Cynthia Kubu,Lauren R. Sankary,Karen Herrera-Ferrá,Steven Goetz,Binith Cheeran,G. Karl Steinke,Christopher Hess,Leonardo Almeida,Wissam Deeb,Kelly D. Foote &Okun Michael S. -2020 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
  36.  25
    Lessons learned building a legal inference dataset.Sungmi Park &Joshua I.James -2024 -Artificial Intelligence and Law 32 (4):1011-1044.
    Legal inference is fundamental for building and verifying hypotheses in police investigations. In this study, we build a Natural Language Inference dataset in Korean for the legal domain, focusing on criminal court verdicts. We developed an adversarial hypothesis collection tool that can challenge the annotators and give us a deep understanding of the data, and a hypothesis network construction tool with visualized graphs to show a use case scenario of the developed model. The data is augmented using a combination of (...) Easy Data Augmentation approaches and round-trip translation, as crowd-sourcing might not be an option for datasets with sensible data. We extensively discuss challenges we have encountered, such as the annotator’s limited domain knowledge, issues in the data augmentation process, problems with handling long contexts and suggest possible solutions to the issues. Our work shows that creating legal inference datasets with limited resources is feasible and proposes further research in this area. (shrink)
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  37.  454
    Epistemic Corruption and the Research Impact Agenda.IanJames Kidd,Jennifer Chubb &Joshua Forstenzer -2021 -Theory and Research in Education 19 (2):148-167.
    Contemporary epistemologists of education have raised concerns about the distorting effects of some of the processes and structures of contemporary academia on the epistemic practice and character of academic researchers. Such concerns have been articulated using the concept of epistemic corruption. In this paper, we lend credibility to these theoretically-motivated concerns using the example of the research impact agenda during the period 2012-2014. Interview data from UK and Australian academics confirms the impact agenda system, at its inception, facilitated the development (...) and exercise of epistemic vices. As well as vindicating theoretically-motivated claims about epistemic corruption, inclusion of empirical methods and material can help us put the concept to work in ongoing critical scrutiny of evolving forms of the research impact agenda. (shrink)
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  38.  44
    Introduction.Anna L. Davis,James Dabney Miller,Joshua M. Sharfstein &Aaron S. Kesselheim -2017 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 45 (s2):5-6.
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  39.  26
    Mental time travel ability and the Mental Reinstatement of Context for crime witnesses.James H. Smith-Spark,Joshua Bartimus &Rachel Wilcock -2017 -Consciousness and Cognition 48:1-10.
  40.  27
    Book notes. [REVIEW]James Fremming,David Clarke,Paul Cerruzi,Joshua Hall &Irving Louis Horowitz -2001 -Knowledge, Technology & Policy 14 (3):141-156.
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  41.  357
    (1 other version)Estimating the Reproducibility of Experimental Philosophy.Florian Cova,Brent Strickland,Angela Abatista,Aurélien Allard,James Andow,Mario Attie,James Beebe,Renatas Berniūnas,Jordane Boudesseul,Matteo Colombo,Fiery Cushman,Rodrigo Diaz,Noah N’Djaye Nikolai van Dongen,Vilius Dranseika,Brian D. Earp,Antonio Gaitán Torres,Ivar Hannikainen,José V. Hernández-Conde,Wenjia Hu,François Jaquet,Kareem Khalifa,Hanna Kim,Markus Kneer,Joshua Knobe,Miklos Kurthy,Anthony Lantian,Shen-yi Liao,Edouard Machery,Tania Moerenhout,Christian Mott,Mark Phelan,Jonathan Phillips,Navin Rambharose,Kevin Reuter,Felipe Romero,Paulo Sousa,Jan Sprenger,Emile Thalabard,Kevin Tobia,Hugo Viciana,Daniel Wilkenfeld &Xiang Zhou -2018 -Review of Philosophy and Psychology (1):1-36.
    Responding to recent concerns about the reliability of the published literature in psychology and other disciplines, we formed the X-Phi Replicability Project to estimate the reproducibility of experimental philosophy. Drawing on a representative sample of 40 x-phi studies published between 2003 and 2015, we enlisted 20 research teams across 8 countries to conduct a high-quality replication of each study in order to compare the results to the original published findings. We found that x-phi studies – as represented in our sample (...) – successfully replicated about 70% of the time. We discuss possible reasons for this relatively high replication rate in the field of experimental philosophy and offer suggestions for best research practices going forward. (shrink)
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  42.  29
    Synchronous stimulation in the rubber hand illusion task boosts the subsequent sense of ownership on the vicarious agency task.Maria Cristina Cioffi,Joshua Hackett &James W. Moore -2020 -Consciousness and Cognition 80:102904.
  43. FromJoshua to Calaphas: High Priests after the Exile.James C. VanderKam -2004
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  44.  18
    Pragmatyzm i radykalny liberalizm: studium filozofii politycznej Johna Deweya = Pragmatism and radical liberalism: study of John Dewey's political philosophy.MaciejKassner -2019 - Toruń: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Mikołaja Kopernika.
    Książka ta jest poświęcona analizie filozofii politycznej Johna Deweya osadzonej w kontekście kryzysu liberalizmu po pierwszej wojnie światowej. Jedną z dróg wyjścia z impasu, w jakim znalazła się myśl liberalna, był radykalny liberalizm reprezentowany przez takich intelektualistów, jak John Dewey, Bertrand Russell, Karl Polanyi i Karl Mannheim. Wymienieni myśliciele upatrywali szans na odrodzenie liberalizmu w odrzuceniu koncepcji wolnorynkowych i dialogu z myślą socjalistyczną. W pracy przedstawiono zręby ideologii radykalnego liberalizmu oraz stosunek lewicowych liberałów do innych ideologii, w szczególności zaś do (...) liberalizmu ekonomicznego i rewolucyjnego marksizmu. Osobny rozdział pracy poświęcony jest refleksji Johna Deweya na temat demokracji, która należy do najoryginalniejszych osiągnięć amerykańskiego filozofa. Przedstawiona interpretacja uwypukla związki myśli Johna Deweya z radykalizmem Nowej Lewicy oraz twórczością takich teoretyków, jak C. W. Mills Axell Honneth czyJames Bohman. Drugim ważnym obszarem podejmowanych w pracy rozważań jest rekonstrukcja Deweyowskiej koncepcji myślenia jako rozwiązywania problemów. Pragmatyzm utrzymuje, że możliwe jest znalezienie mniej lub bardziej obiektywnych odpowiedzi na pytanie, co należy robić w danej problematycznej sytuacji. „Pragmatyczne oświecenie”, by posłużyć się terminem Hilarego Putnama, wyrzeka się oświeceniowego uniwersalizmu, ale nie rezygnuje całkowicie z roszczeń do obiektywności w dziedzinie rozstrzygnięć moralnych i politycznych. (shrink)
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  45.  352
    The Structure and Dynamics of Scientific Theories: A Hierarchical Bayesian Perspective.Leah Henderson,Noah D. Goodman,Joshua B. Tenenbaum &James F. Woodward -2010 -Philosophy of Science 77 (2):172-200.
    Hierarchical Bayesian models (HBMs) provide an account of Bayesian inference in a hierarchically structured hypothesis space. Scientific theories are plausibly regarded as organized into hierarchies in many cases, with higher levels sometimes called ‘paradigms’ and lower levels encoding more specific or concrete hypotheses. Therefore, HBMs provide a useful model for scientific theory change, showing how higher‐level theory change may be driven by the impact of evidence on lower levels. HBMs capture features described in the Kuhnian tradition, particularly the idea that (...) higher‐level theories guide learning at lower levels. In addition, they help resolve certain issues for Bayesians, such as scientific preference for simplicity and the problem of new theories. *Received July 2009; revised October 2009. †To contact the authors, please write to: Leah Henderson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, 32D‐808, Cambridge, MA 02139; e‐mail:[email protected]. (shrink)
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  46.  241
    Correction to: Estimating the Reproducibility of Experimental Philosophy.Florian Cova,Brent Strickland,Angela Abatista,Aurélien Allard,James Andow,Mario Attie,James Beebe,Renatas Berniūnas,Jordane Boudesseul,Matteo Colombo,Fiery Cushman,Rodrigo Diaz,Noah N’Djaye Nikolai van Dongen,Vilius Dranseika,Brian D. Earp,Antonio Gaitán Torres,Ivar Hannikainen,José V. Hernández-Conde,Wenjia Hu,François Jaquet,Kareem Khalifa,Hanna Kim,Markus Kneer,Joshua Knobe,Miklos Kurthy,Anthony Lantian,Shen-yi Liao,Edouard Machery,Tania Moerenhout,Christian Mott,Mark Phelan,Jonathan Phillips,Navin Rambharose,Kevin Reuter,Felipe Romero,Paulo Sousa,Jan Sprenger,Emile Thalabard,Kevin Tobia,Hugo Viciana,Daniel Wilkenfeld &Xiang Zhou -2018 -Review of Philosophy and Psychology 12 (1):45-48.
    Appendix 1 was incomplete in the initial online publication. The original article has been corrected.
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  47.  65
    Too Many Cooks: Bayesian Inference for Coordinating Multi‐Agent Collaboration.Sarah A. Wu,Rose E. Wang,James A. Evans,Joshua B. Tenenbaum,David C. Parkes &Max Kleiman-Weiner -2021 -Topics in Cognitive Science 13 (2):414-432.
    Collaboration requires agents to coordinate their behavior on the fly, sometimes cooperating to solve a single task together and other times dividing it up into sub‐tasks to work on in parallel. Underlying the human ability to collaborate is theory‐of‐mind (ToM), the ability to infer the hidden mental states that drive others to act. Here, we develop Bayesian Delegation, a decentralized multi‐agent learning mechanism with these abilities. Bayesian Delegation enables agents to rapidly infer the hidden intentions of others by inverse planning. (...) We test Bayesian Delegation in a suite of multi‐agent Markov decision processes inspired by cooking problems. On these tasks, agents with Bayesian Delegation coordinate both their high‐level plans (e.g., what sub‐task they should work on) and their low‐level actions (e.g., avoiding getting in each other's way). When matched with partners that act using the same algorithm, Bayesian Delegation outperforms alternatives. Bayesian Delegation is also a capable ad hoc collaborator and successfully coordinates with other agent types even in the absence of prior experience. Finally, in a behavioral experiment, we show that Bayesian Delegation makes inferences similar to human observers about the intent of others. Together, these results argue for the centrality of ToM for successful decentralized multi‐agent collaboration. (shrink)
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  48.  74
    What Do Gestational Mothers Deserve?Joshua Shaw -2016 -Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 19 (4):1031-1045.
    This paper analyzes the following question: What do women deserve, ethically speaking, when they agree to gestate a fetus on behalf of third parties? I argue for several claims. First, I argue that gestational motherhood’s moral significance has been misunderstood, an oversight I attribute to the focus in family ethics on the conditions of parenthood. Second, I use a less controversial version ofJames Rachels’s account of desert to argue that gestational mothers deserve a parent-like voice as well as (...) significant care and support, conclusions that have implications for commercial surrogacy. Finally, I argue that we should not make requests of others when fulfilling them will lead others to deserve goods we cannot reasonably expect them to receive, and I conclude based on this thesis, what I call the “strings attached thesis,” that pro-life arguments in support of prohibitions on abortion commit their proponents to policies which they may not be willing to support. (shrink)
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  49.  385
    Computational Thought Experiments for a More Rigorous Philosophy and Science of the Mind.Iris Oved,Nikhil Krishnaswamy,James Pustejovsky &Joshua Hartshorne -2024 - In Larissa Samuelson, Stefan Frank, Mariya Toneva, Allyson Mackey & Eliot Hazeltine,Proceedings of the 46th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. pp. 601-609.
    We offer philosophical motivations for a method we call Virtual World Cognitive Science (VW CogSci), in which researchers use virtual embodied agents that are embedded in virtual worlds to explore questions in the field of Cognitive Science. We focus on questions about mental and linguistic representation and the ways that such computational modeling can add rigor to philosophical thought experiments, as well as the terminology used in the scientific study of such representations. We find that this method forces researchers to (...) take a god’s-eye view when describing dynamical relationships between entities in minds and entities in an environment in a way that eliminates the need for problematic talk of belief and concept types, such as the belief that cats are silly, and the concept CAT, while preserving belief and concept tokens in individual cognizers’ minds. We conclude with some further key advantages of VW CogSci for the scientific study of mental and linguistic representation and for Cognitive Science more broadly. (shrink)
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  50.  52
    Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Deep Brain Stimulation Think Tank: Advances in Optogenetics, Ethical Issues Affecting DBS Research, Neuromodulatory Approaches for Depression, Adaptive Neurostimulation, and Emerging DBS Technologies.Vinata Vedam-Mai,Karl Deisseroth,James Giordano,Gabriel Lazaro-Munoz,Winston Chiong,Nanthia Suthana,Jean-Philippe Langevin,Jay Gill,Wayne Goodman,Nicole R. Provenza,Casey H. Halpern,Rajat S. Shivacharan,Tricia N. Cunningham,Sameer A. Sheth,Nader Pouratian,Katherine W. Scangos,Helen S. Mayberg,Andreas Horn,Kara A. Johnson,Christopher R. Butson,Ro’ee Gilron,Coralie de Hemptinne,Robert Wilt,Maria Yaroshinsky,Simon Little,Philip Starr,Greg Worrell,Prasad Shirvalkar,Edward Chang,Jens Volkmann,Muthuraman Muthuraman,Sergiu Groppa,Andrea A. Kühn,Luming Li,Matthew Johnson,Kevin J. Otto,Robert Raike,Steve Goetz,Chengyuan Wu,Peter Silburn,Binith Cheeran,Yagna J. Pathak,Mahsa Malekmohammadi,Aysegul Gunduz,Joshua K. Wong,Stephanie Cernera,Aparna Wagle Shukla,Adolfo Ramirez-Zamora,Wissam Deeb,Addie Patterson,Kelly D. Foote &Michael S. Okun -2021 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15:644593.
    We estimate that 208,000 deep brain stimulation (DBS) devices have been implanted to address neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders worldwide. DBS Think Tank presenters pooled data and determined that DBS expanded in its scope and has been applied to multiple brain disorders in an effort to modulate neural circuitry. The DBS Think Tank was founded in 2012 providing a space where clinicians, engineers, researchers from industry and academia discuss current and emerging DBS technologies and logistical and ethical issues facing the field. (...) The emphasis is on cutting edge research and collaboration aimed to advance the DBS field. The Eighth Annual DBS Think Tank was held virtually on September 1 and 2, 2020 (Zoom Video Communications) due to restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic. The meeting focused on advances in: (1) optogenetics as a tool for comprehending neurobiology of diseases and on optogenetically-inspired DBS, (2) cutting edge of emerging DBS technologies, (3) ethical issues affecting DBS research and access to care, (4) neuromodulatory approaches for depression, (5) advancing novel hardware, software and imaging methodologies, (6) use of neurophysiological signals in adaptive neurostimulation, and (7) use of more advanced technologies to improve DBS clinical outcomes. There were 178 attendees who participated in a DBS Think Tank survey, which revealed the expansion of DBS into several indications such as obesity, post-traumatic stress disorder, addiction and Alzheimer’s disease. This proceedings summarizes the advances discussed at the Eighth Annual DBS Think Tank. (shrink)
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