The Force of Norms? The Internal Point of View in Light of Experimental Economics.LeonardHoeft -2019 -Ratio Juris 32 (3):339-362.detailsSetting aside its conceptual issues, it remains an open question whether the internal point of view is a good descriptive tool for the behaviour of ordinary citizens or if a sanction‐based explanation of legal compliance is sufficient. This paper will discuss strains of experimental literature corroborating Hart’s criticism of sanction‐based accounts and suggesting that compliance with norms is indeed a shared practice sensitive to social influence. Legal institutions can interact with this shared practice in a way that cannot be reduced (...) to pure incentives. Sanction‐based theories cannot account for norm compliance: They face a challenge in explaining the complex behavioural patterns observed in the minimalistic setting of laboratories. (shrink)
Ocherk itogovoĭ filosofii.Leonard Nefëdov -2010 - Moskva: Greko-latinskiĭ kabinet I︠U︡.A. Shichalina.detailsФилософ, который подобным образом озаглавил свою работу, тем самым утверждает, что он знает, как выглядит непротиворечивая онтология, теория познания, что такое реальность, как, скажем, решается проблема непротиворечивости математики и т.д.
Histoire et existentialisme chez Sartre.Leonard Krieger -2005 -Cités 2 (22):155-182.detailsL’existentialisme pose à l’histoire des problèmes aussi bien subjectifs qu’objectifs. En tant que sujets, les existentialistes épousent des positions qui sont souvent antithétiques par rapport à la dimension historique ; en tant qu’objets, ils ont donné à voir des idées et des activités qui sont souvent difficilement accessibles à la connaissance historique. Chez Sartre se...
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Participatory action research: Should social inquiry be conducted democratically?Leonard Krimerman -2001 -Philosophy of the Social Sciences 31 (1):60-82.detailsof democratizing social inquiry by actively engaging the subject in the design and conduct of research. Drawing on four examples of PAR-based social science and a democratic reconstruction of "epistemic privilege," this article argues that philosophers need to take seriously PAR's notion that democratic norms should guide social inquiry. But it does not advocate replacing mainstream or expert-directed social science by PAR. Instead, it maintains that it is both possible and sensible for PAR practitioners to collaborate with conventional research. Indeed, (...) certain forms of nonparticipatory social science seem indispensable for any extensive application of the PAR framework. The article concludes by drawing out its (controversial) implications for two central issues in the philosophy of social science: first, that the methods of social inquiry are distinct from those in the natural sciences and, second, that there is a sense in which social research can and should be "value neutral.". (shrink)
Hide-and-seek or show-and-tell? Emerging issues of informed consent.Leonard J. Haas -1991 -Ethics and Behavior 1 (3):175 – 189.detailsThis article reviews key philosophical and legal underpinnings of mental health professionals' obligation to obtain informed consent from consumers of their services. The basic components of informed consent are described, and strategies for clinically and ethically appropriate methods of obtaining informed consent are discussed. Emerging issues in informed consent involving duty to assess and protect against client dangerousness, obligations to third parties, and issues of deception are considered as well. The article proposes that part of the process of obtaining informed (...) consent is the cultivation of a treatment environment that emphasizes beneficence and client autonomy. (shrink)
Vulnerability and Violence: On the Poverty of the Remainder.Leonard Lawlor -2018 -Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 49 (3):217-228.detailsThis article tries to show the irreducible connection between vulnerability and violence. This connection leads us back to the ethical level of experience. If vulnerability makes violence irreducible, then at least two reactions to violence are possible. On the one hand, a reaction is possible in which one attempts to negate vulnerability in order to close down the very thing within us that allows violence to enter. This negative reaction is actually the worst violence. On the other hand, a reaction (...) is possible in which one attempts to affirm vulnerability, even though its affirmation opens us to the violence that will happen. Affirming vulnerability is the least-violent reaction. If the formula for the worst violence is apocalypse without remainder, then the least violence is the maintenance of the remainder. The maintenance would happen only by not possessing the remainders, which places us in a new situation of poverty. (shrink)
Justice, hmos, and the invisible rationing of health care resources.Leonard M. Fleck -1990 -Bioethics 4 (2):97–120.detailsIf we accept the premise that some sort of rationing of access to health care resources is necessary to contain escalating health care costs effectively, then we need to ask how that rationing might be accomplished most fairly. Calabresi and Bobbitt have argued in their book Tragic Choices that there is no 'perfectly fair' or even 'reasonably fair' way to bring this about.
A handbook of traditional living.John BruceLeonard (ed.) -2020 - London: Arktos.detailsThe second volume of A Handbook of Traditional Living continues the project of the first: to resurrect perennial values for a Traditionalist lifestyle in an anti-Traditional world, and to provide concrete and desperately needed advice for those who wish to break free of the spell of a deadening and desert-like modernity. Deeply inspired by Julius Evola, René Guénon, and the Traditionalism of which they were foremost exponents, A Handbook of Traditional Living: Style and Ascesis confronts the fundamental questions of family, (...) friendship, work, genders and marriage, religion and spirituality, and what it means to be a militant of the Tradition in today's increasingly confused and fragmented society. The result is a treasure trove of wisdom, concisely providing the practical and theoretical bedrock for the Traditionalist worldview and ethic in one's day-to-day life, thereby giving new breath to a lifestyle, vision and philosophy that has too long been lacking from our world. (shrink)
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Handbook of Methodological Approaches to Community-Based Research: Qualitative, Quantitative, and Mixed Methods.Leonard Jason &David Glenwick (eds.) -2016 - Oxford University Press USA.detailsThe field of community psychology has focused on individuals' and groups' behavior in interaction with their social contexts, with an emphasis on prevention, early intervention, wellness promotion, and competency development. Over the past few decades, however, community-based applications of the newest research methodologies have not kept pace with the development of theory and methodology with regard to multilevel data collection and analysis. The Handbook of Methodological Approaches to Community-Based Research is intended to aid the community-oriented researcher in learning about and (...) applying cutting-edge quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods approaches. The Handbook presents a number of innovative methodologies relevant to community-based research, illustrating their applicability to specific social problems and projects. These methodological approaches explore individuals and groups in interaction with their communities and provide examples of how to implement and evaluate interventions conducted at the community level. The chapters discuss how particular methodologies can be used to help gather and analyze data dealing with community-based issues. Furthermore, they illustrate the benefits that occur when community theorists, interventionists, and methodologists work together to better understand complicated person-environment systems and the change processes within communities. (shrink)
« Par Avion » : Genèse sémiotique de la poste aérienne internationale.Léonard Laborie -2008 -Hermes 50:107.detailsLe transport aérien du courrier, en d'autres termes la poste aérienne, est moins une innovation technique qu'organisationnelle. Avec elle, il ne s'agit pas, seulement, de faire voler des avions, mais de les insérer dans un système complexe de collecte, de transport et de distribution de courrier à travers des territoires. L'exploit du vol en lui-même ne suffit pas, il doit aussi être régulier et sûr, et en somme s'articuler au mieux au reste de la chaîne postale pour satisfaire les usagers. (...) Seule une coopération, au sens strict une opération en commun du réseau par les acteurs concernés, le permet: les offices postaux d'une part et les compagnies aériennes d'autre part ont à travailler en étroite relation, et donc à communiquer. Dans les années 1920, la genèse de la poste aérienne se fait à travers la construction d'un espace de sens commun, mêlant institutions et signes. Une infrastructure de papier finit par porter les avions.Air transportation of mail, in other words airmail is less a technical innovation organizational. With it, it is not only to fly planes, but inserting them into a complex system of collection, transport and delivery of mail across territories. The feat of flying itself is not enough, it must also be smooth and safe, and in fact is the best articulate the rest of the mail stream to satisfy users. Only cooperation in the strict sense a joint operation of the network by stakeholders, allows: post offices on the one hand and the other airlines have to work closely, and thus communicate. In the 1920s, the genesis of airmail is done through the construction of a space of common sense, combining institutions and signs. Infrastructure eventually wear paper airplanes. (shrink)
Being Inclined: Félix Ravaisson’s Philosophy of Habit by Mark Sinclair.Leonard Lawlor -2021 -Journal of the History of Philosophy 59 (1):157-158.detailsBeing Inclined is erudite, clearly written, and well-argued. It is rich in the history of philosophy and in philosophical ideas. It is not an exaggeration when Sinclair says that “philosophy advances, and can only advance, by means of a living dialogue with the past”. This short review cannot do the book justice.Being Inclined is divided into six chapters. From a historical viewpoint, chapters 1 and 2 are revelatory for the Anglophone reader of the last two hundred years of French philosophy. (...) Sinclair is a master at assembling all the texts that influenced Ravaisson and all the texts on which he had an influence. However, in the first two chapters, Sinclair also presents the basics of Ravaisson’s philosophy... (shrink)