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Results for 'Michael E. Ferguson'

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  1. A remarkable teacher.Kathy E.Ferguson -2014 - In Robert L. Oprisko & Diane Rubenstein,Michael A. Weinstein: Action, Contemplation, Vitalism. New York: Routledge.
     
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  2.  25
    Let's move forward: Image-computable models and a common model evaluation scheme are prerequisites for a scientific understanding of human vision.James J. DiCarlo,Daniel L. K. Yamins,Michael E.Ferguson,Evelina Fedorenko,Matthias Bethge,Tyler Bonnen &Martin Schrimpf -2023 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e390.
    In the target article, Bowers et al. dispute deep artificial neural network (ANN) models as the currently leading models of human vision without producing alternatives. They eschew the use of public benchmarking platforms to compare vision models with the brain and behavior, and they advocate for a fragmented, phenomenon-specific modeling approach. These are unconstructive to scientific progress. We outline how the Brain-Score community is moving forward to add new model-to-human comparisons to its community-transparent suite of benchmarks.
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  3.  27
    Let's move forward: Image-computable models and a common model evaluation scheme are prerequisites for a scientific understanding of human vision – CORRIGENDUM.James J. DiCarlo,Daniel L. K. Yamins,Michael E.Ferguson,Evelina Fedorenko,Matthias Bethge,Tyler Bonnen &Martin Schrimpf -2024 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 47:e66.
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  4.  28
    Socioecological factors are linked to changes in prevalence of contempt over time.Michael E. W. Varnum &Igor Grossmann -2017 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40.
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  5.  68
    Sex differences in the inference and perception of causal relations within a video game.Michael E. Young -2014 -Frontiers in Psychology 5:103575.
    The learning of immediate causation within a dynamic environment was examined. Participants encountered seven decision points in which they needed to choose which of three possible candidates was the cause of explosions in the environment. Each candidate was firing a weapon at random every few seconds, but only one of them produced an immediate effect. Some participants showed little learning, but most demonstrated increases in accuracy across time. On average, men showed higher accuracy and shorter latencies that were not explained (...) by differences in self-reported prior video game experience. This result suggests that prior reports of sex differences in causal choice in the game are not specific to situations involving delayed or probabilistic causal relations. (shrink)
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  6.  31
    Words from the wound: selected addresses, letters and homilies of archbishop mark coleridge [Book Review].Michael E. Daniel -2016 -The Australasian Catholic Record 93 (2):251.
    Daniel,Michael E Review of: Words from the wound: selected addresses, letters and homilies of archbishop mark coleridge, by Mark Coleridge, edited by Anthony Ekpo and David Pascoe, pp. 342, $24.95.
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  7. Wehrmacht priests: Catholicism and the Nazi war of Annihilation [Book Review].Michael E. Daniel -2016 -The Australasian Catholic Record 93 (1):125.
    Daniel,Michael E Review of: Wehrmacht priests: Catholicism and the Nazi war of Annihilation, by Lauren Faulkner Rossi, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2015, pp. 255, hardback, $79.00.
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  8. Michael Stoeber and Hugo Meynell, eds., Critical Reflections on the Paranormal Reviewed by.Michael E. Zimmerman -1997 -Philosophy in Review 17 (3):215-217.
     
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  9. Teaching for conceptual change: Using status as a metacognitive tool.Michael E. Beeth -1998 -Science Education 82 (3):343-356.
  10.  63
    Geteilte Absichten.Michael E. Bratman -2007 -Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie 55 (3):409-424.
    Michael Bratmans individualistischer Ansatz geteilter Absichten im Kontext gemeinsamen absichtlichen Handelns ist in seiner Betonung des Teilens von intentionalen Zuständen klar nicht-atomistisch: Wenn zwei Akteure eine Absicht teilen, greifen nicht bloß ihre Subpläne ineinander, sondern ihre individuellen Einstellungen müssen so zueinander in Wechselbeziehung stehen, dass die Bindung nicht bloß kognitiver Natur ist. Jede der Beteiligten muss auch die Wirksamkeit der Absicht der anderen wollen.
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  11.  28
    This Mortal Flesh: Incarnation and Bioethics by Brent Waters.Michael E. Allsopp -2012 -The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 12 (2):372-374.
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  12.  15
    The Greek Ὕμνοσ: High Praise for Gods and Men.Michael E. Brumbaugh -2019 -Classical Quarterly 69 (1):167-186.
    Over a hundred instances of the word ὕμνος from extant archaic poetry demonstrate that the Greek hymn was understood broadly as a song of praise. The majority of these instances comes from Pindar, who regularly uses the term to describe his poems celebrating athletic victors. Indeed, Pindar and his contemporaries saw the ὕμνος as a powerful vehicle for praising gods, heroes, men and their achievements—often in service of an ideological agenda. Writing a century later Plato used the term frequently and (...) with much the same range. A survey of his usage reveals instances of ὕμνοι for gods,daimones, heroes, ancestors, leading citizens, noble deeds, sites and landscapes. Despite abundant evidence of Plato's own practice, studies of the Greek hymn posit an extreme narrowing of the genre in the classical period and cite the philosopher as the sole witness to, if not the originator of, this development. Two passages in particular, one from theRepublicand one from theLaws, are seen to support the claim that by the fourth centuryb.c.e.the term ὕμνος refers exclusively to songs for gods. InRepublicBook 10, we find the memorable edict on poetic censorship: ‘But we must know that of poetry only ὕμνοι for the gods and ἐγκώμια for the good must be admitted into our city.’LawsBook 3 offers what appears to be an even more straightforward pronouncement: ‘Back then our music was divided according to its various types and arrangements; and a certain type of song was prayers to the gods, and these were called by the name ὕμνοι.’ From these two statements has arisen the consensus that Plato saw a divine recipient as the defining feature of the ὕμνος and, moreover, that this position reflects thecommunis opiniofrom at least the fourth centuryb.c.e.onward. (shrink)
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  13. Gene V. Wallenstein and.Michael E. Hasselmo -1998 - In Dan J. Stein & Jacques Ludik,Neural Networks and Psychopathology: Connectionist Models in Practice and Research. Cambridge University Press. pp. 316.
     
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  14. My door is always open: A conversation on faith, hope and the church in a time of change [Book Review].Michael E. Daniel -2014 -The Australasian Catholic Record 91 (4):516.
    Daniel,Michael E Review of: My door is always open: A conversation on faith, hope and the church in a time of change, by Pope Francis with Antonio Spadaro, trans. Shaun Whiteside, London: Bloomsbury, 2014, pp. 172, $30.00.
     
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  15.  107
    Heidegger, Ethics, and National Socialism.Michael E. Zimmerman -1974 -Southwestern Journal of Philosophy 5 (1):97-106.
  16.  44
    Philosophy and Politics: the Case of Heidegger.Michael E. Zimmerman -1989 -Philosophy Today 33 (1):3-20.
    In this essay, I address three questions: the nature of heidegger's involvement with national socialism; whether there is an essential link between heidegger's thought and his political decision to support hitler; and allegations regarding anti-Semitism in his thought and politics.
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  17.  15
    Perception, Incarnation, and Transformation.Michael E. Zimmerman -2002 -Call to Earth 3 (2):13-17.
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  18. The Thought of Martin Heidegger.Michael E. Zimmerman -1984 - Tulane University.
     
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  19.  24
    The paradox of historical constructionism.Michael E. Hobart -1989 -History and Theory 28 (1):43-58.
    There is a paradox, or self-defeating supposition in the core of constructionism, for it would appear that any attempt to resolve a dispute in historical interpretation within a convention of self-contained criteria of confirmation by appealing to justificatory criteria outside the convention -to wit, the theory of constructionism -is self-defeating. Through the theoretical consideration of historians isolated in a vat, following Hilary Putnam's metaphor, it becomes clear that the vat language of the historians does not have the possibility of referring, (...) intrinsically or extrinsically, to anything external. The implications of the vat metaphor for an understanding of historical inquiry are: 1) we need to recognize and insist upon different levels of abstraction both in historical writing and in the justification of its claims; 2) applied to history, the set paradox reveals the need to recognize that at the most abstract level of consideration we encounter inescapable incoherence; and 3) we need to recognize that in some important sense reference must be completed in the world, regardless of the problems in characterizing this sense philosophically. (shrink)
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  20.  49
    Convergent approaches to understanding strange situation behavior.Michael E. Lamb,Ross A. Thompson,William P. Gardner &Eric L. Charnov -1986 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9 (3):559-561.
  21.  36
    Useful distinctions in human sociobiology.Michael E. Lamb -1987 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 10 (1):79-79.
  22.  45
    Fine, mathematics, and theory change.Michael E. Levin -1968 -Journal of Philosophy 65 (2):52-56.
  23.  48
    Response to Benfield.Michael E. Levin -1976 -Journal of Critical Analysis 6 (2):37-40.
  24.  30
    Higher in status, better-than-average.Michael E. W. Varnum -2015 -Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  25.  19
    An Hermeneutic Approach to Studying the Nature of Wilderness Experiences.Michael E. Patterson,Alan E. Watson,Daniel R. Williams &Joseph R. Roggenbuck -1998 -Journal of Leisure Research 30 (4):423-452.
    The most prevalent approach to understanding recreation experiences in resource management has been a motivational research program that views satisfaction as an appropriate indicator of experience quality. This research explores a different approach to studying the quality of recreation experiences. Rather than viewing recreation experiences as a linear sequence of events beginning with expectations and ending with outcomes that are then cognitively compared to determine experience quality, this alternative approach views recreation as an emergent experience motivated by the not very (...) well-defined goal of acquiring stories that ultimately enrich one's life. Further, it assumes that the nature of human experience is best characterized by situated freedom in which the environment sets boundaries that constrain the nature of the experience, but that within those boundaries recreationists are free to experience the world in unique and variable ways. Therefore this alternative approach seeks a more context specific description of the setting/experience relationship that is intended to complement more general management frameworks (e.g., the Recreation Opportunity Spectrum) developed in conjunction with the motivational research program. (shrink)
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  26.  224
    The universalizability of moral judgments revisited.Michael E. Levin -1979 -Mind 88 (349):115-119.
    The question is not whether the word "ought" means what hare says; the question is whether the concept of objectivity can be applied to practical judgments. Universalizability is the key, According to the kantian, And that's why the universalizability of moral judgments is conceptually important. As a preliminary to arguing this, I show that some common counterexamples to hare's thesis misfire--And I end by suggesting that it is no a priori truth that every speaker and every culture have morality.
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  27.  11
    Correction to: The Messiness of Instrumental Rationality: Reflections on Chrisoula Andreou’sChoosing Well.Michael E. Bratman -2025 -Philosophia 52 (5):1243-1243.
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  28. Liturgy in the twenty-first century: Contemporary issues and perspectives [Book Review].Michael E. Daniel -2019 -The Australasian Catholic Record 96 (4):498.
    Review of: Liturgy in the twenty-first century: Contemporary issues and perspectives, by Alcuin Reid, ed., pp. xxvi + 367, paperback, GBP17.99.
     
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  29. The path to Rome: Modern journeys to the catholic church [Book Review].Michael E. Daniel -2011 -The Australasian Catholic Record 88 (4):504.
     
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  30. Satisficing: The Rationality of Preferring What is Good Enough.Michael E. Weber -1998 - Dissertation, University of Michigan
    It is widely maintained that self-interested rationality is a matter of maximizing one's own good or well-being. Rationality more generally is also frequently characterized in maximizing terms: the rational thing to do in any decision context is whatever is best in terms of one's interests or will lead to the greatest preference-satisfaction, My dissertation consists of three independent papers that challenge this orthodoxy by lending support to "satisficing," the idea that it is rational to prefer what is good enough. In (...) the first I argue that the preferences frequently displayed in the Allais Paradox can not be reconciled with expected utility maximizing and therefore must be construed in satisficing terms. To the extent that common sense is an important touchstone for theory choice, this lends support to satisficing. In the second, I argue more directly for satisficing by claiming that satisficing is the best way to deal with the different temporal perspectives available to human beings. In the third, I argue that supererogation, the idea that options which are not optimal can nonetheless be morally or rationally acceptable, depends on "optional reasons," I claim, further, that the criticisms of the very idea of optional reasons are not compelling. I also include an appendix which addresses Derek Parfit's challenge to prudential rationality. (shrink)
     
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  31.  21
    Everyday Knowledge.Michael E. Gardiner -2006 -Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3):205-207.
  32.  11
    Herbert Marcuse in Italy.Michael E. Gardiner -2021 - In Silvia Benso & Antonio Calcagno,_Open Borders: Encounters Between Italian Philosophy and Continental Thought_, eds. Silvia Benso and Antonio Calcagno. Albany, New York: State University of New York Press. pp. 159-176.
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  33.  43
    Implicit knowledge in engineering judgment and scientific reasoning.Michael E. Gorman -1999 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (5):767-768.
    Dienes & Perner's theoretical framework should be applicable to two related areas: technological innovation and the psychology of scientific reasoning. For the former, this commentary focuses on the example of nuclear weapon design, and on the decision to launch the space shuttle Challenger. For the latter, this commentary focuses on Klayman and Ha's positive test heuristic and the invention of the telephone.
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  34.  31
    Revelation and the problem of historicism.Michael E. Quigley -1976 -Heythrop Journal 17 (3):293–308.
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  35.  17
    An Africana Philosophy of Temporality: Homo Liminalis.Michael E. Sawyer -2018 - Springer Verlag.
    This book is a timely intervention in the areas of philosophy, history, and literature. As an exploration of the modern political order and its racial genealogy, it emerges at a moment when scholars and activists alike are wrestling with how to understand subject formation from the perspective of the subordinated rather than from dominant social and philosophical modes of thought. For Sawyer, studying the formation of racialized subjects requires a new imagining of marginalized subjects. Black subjectivity is not viewed from (...) the static imaginings of social death, alienation, ongoing abjection, or as a confrontation with the treat of oblivion. Sawyer innovates the term "fractured temporality," conceptualizing Black subjects as moving within and across temporalities in transition, incorporated, yet excluded, marked with the social death of Atlantic slavery and the emergent political orders it etched, and still capable of exerting revolutionary force that acts upon, against, and through racial oppression. (shrink)
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  36.  25
    C. Y. Thomas’s Thinking and Perspectives on CARICOM.Michael E. Scott -2016 -CLR James Journal 22 (1-2):255-270.
  37.  16
    Schedule-induced and metabolic polydipsia.Michael E. Brush &Robert W. Schaeffer -1975 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 5 (2):132-134.
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  38. Australians and the Christian god: An historical study [Book Review].Michael E. Daniel -2014 -The Australasian Catholic Record 91 (3):381.
    Daniel,Michael E Review(s) of: Australians and the Christian god: An historical study, by Hugh Jackson, (Preston: Mosaic Press, 2013), pp.209, $37.95.
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  39.  47
    Network origins of anxiety and depression.Michael E. Hyland -2010 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 33 (2-3):161-162.
    Cramer et al. contrast two possible explanations for psychological symptoms: latent variables (i.e., specific cause) versus a network of causality between symptoms. There is a third explanation: The reason for comorbidity and the reported network structure of psychological symptoms is that the underlying biological cause is a psychoneuroimmunoendocrine information network which, when dysregulated, leads to several maladaptive psychological and somatic symptoms.
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  40. New times magazine.Michael E. Salla -2006 -Nexus 13 (2).
     
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  41.  29
    Undoing the Phaedrus.Michael E. Sawyer -2017 -CLR James Journal 23 (1-2):157-174.
    Readers of C.L.R. James are familiar with the thinker’s careful reading of Melville’s Moby-Dick in his text Mariners, Renegades, and Castaways. In that work James proposes that Melville exposes the foundations of societal level fascism as exemplified by the monomaniacal purpose of Ahab. The purpose of this effort is to push further into the concept of societal division as exemplified by Moby-Dick by proposing that Melville is taking on the discourse of color (black vs. white) and its relationship to ontological (...) value (bad vs. good) by imploding the internal logic of Plato’s Phaedrus. What concerns this project is the relationship between the phenotypic “blackness” of the characters of African descent in Moby-Dick and ways in which Melville endeavors to destabilize skin color in the western imaginary as a means to correct the negative consequences of this flattening of the hierarchical nature of society on the part of Ahab. (shrink)
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  42.  18
    Yes, Our Beliefs Could Be..Michael E. Levin -1980 -Journal of Philosophy 77 (4):233-237.
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  43. Plans and Resource-Bounded Practical Reasoning.E. B.Michael,I. David &P. Martha -1991 - In Robert C. Cummins,Philosophy and AI: Essays at the Interface. Cambridge: MIT Press.
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  44.  63
    Malebranche, Mathematics, and Natural Theology.Michael E. Hobart -1988 -International Studies in Philosophy 20 (1):11-25.
  45. Expressionist Signs and Metaphors in Martin Heidegger's "Being and Time".Michael E. Moriarty -1991 -Analecta Husserliana 32:61.
     
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  46.  739
    Shared cooperative activity.Michael E. Bratman -1992 -Philosophical Review 101 (2):327-341.
  47. Environmental Philosophy: From Animal Rights to Radical Ecology, 2nd ed.Michael E. Zimmerman,J. Baird Callicott,George Sessions,Karen J. Warren &John Clark (eds.) -1993
     
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  48.  55
    Introduction.Michael E. Zimmerman -1984 -Tulane Studies in Philosophy 32:7-13.
  49.  21
    Prolegomena Zur Geschichte Des Zeitbegriffs, by Martin Heidegger.Michael E. Zimmerman -1981 -Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 12 (1):87-89.
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  50.  104
    The critique of natural rights and the search for a non-anthropocentric basis for moral behavior.Michael E. Zimmerman -1985 -Journal of Value Inquiry 19 (1):43-53.
    MacIntyre, Clark, and Heidegger would all agree that the current problem with moral theory is its lack of a satisfactory conception of human telos. This lack leads us to resort to such fictions as rights, interests, and utility, which are “disguises for the will to power.” Ibid., p. 240. These thinkers would also agree that modern nation-states are cut off from the roots of the Western tradition. Modern political economy, with “its individualism, its acquisitiveness and its elevation of the values (...) of the market to a central social place”Ibid., p. 237. is leading us into “the coming age of barbarism and darkness.”Ibid., p. 244. MacIntyre's grim depiction of the future, which Heidegger calls “the time of the darkening of the earth” and “the flight of the gods”,Heidegger, “What Are Poets For?” in Poetry, Language, Thought. can only be met by re-appropriating our own tradition. Although Aristotle has much to tell us, I believe Heidegger is right to turn to Heraclitus for a non-anthropocentric conception of humanity's place in Nature. Other writers, however, such as Arne Naess, George Sessions, and Stuart Hampshire, argue that the writings of Spinoza may offer the most helpful vision of humanity needed to guide our efforts to find a more appropriate basis for our behavior toward each other and toward the non-human world as well.George Sessions, “Spinoza and Jeffets on Man in Nature,” Inquiry 20 (1977):481–528. Sessions' essay was criticized by Genevieve Lloyd in “Spinoza's Environmental Ethics,” Inquiry 23 (1980):293–311. In reply, Arne Naess wrote “Environmental Ethics and Spinoza's Ethics: Comments on Genevieve Lloyd's Article,” Inquiry 23 (1980):313~ 325. Cf. also Stuart Hampshire, Two Theories of Morality (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1977). Yet Aristotle, Qark, Heidegger, Heraclitus, Maclntyre, and Spinoza all agree that in order to behave fittingly, we must understand what it means to be human. At this time, I would like to acknowledge the importance of the following objection to what I have been arguing here: While it may be true that the concept of human rights is a fiction, it is nevertheless a very useful fiction for changing how human beings relate to each other. Tom Regan has frequently pointed out that even if the concept of rights proves to be ficticious, it can be helpful in protecting non-human beings from abuse by humans. Cf. his essay “Exploring the Idea of Animal Rights,” Animals' Rights - A Symposium (Sussex and London: Centaur Press Ltd., 1979); Regan, “Animal Rights, Human Wrongs,” Environmental Ethics 2 (1980):99–120. The doctrine of the rights of man justified the American and French revolutions, which brought forth new and important human freedoms. Today, most of humanity still lacks the protection afforded by constitutionally guaranteed human rights. Moreover, even in constitutional democracies there are frequent abuses of and attempts to curtail human rights. Until far more people become committed to protecting human rights, it is unlikely that there will be a big movement to extend rights to non-human beings, much less to overcome the anthropocentrism inherent in the concept of rights. What the Buddhist tradition calls “skillful means” is appropriate in our current situation.My thanks to Professor David Levin of Northwestern University for having reminded me of the importance of approaching the question of human rights in a “skillful” way. We must approach people in a way sensitive to their current self-understanding. Before we can pass on to the stage of planetary unity made possible by non-anthropocentric thinking, we need to find ways that promote mutual respect among human beings.On the topic of the relation between spiritual-psychological growth and the shift in human morality, cf. M.W. Fox, “Animal Rights and Nature Liberation,” in Animals' Rights - A Symposium. Out of such respect there can also arise respect for the non-human as well. While largely in agreement with this point of view, I would like to note that our means must be very skillful, indeed, if we are to transform our relationships to each other and to the natural world before irreparable damage is done to the earth, through nuclear war or environmental destruction. The time grows short for the transformation needed to bring us from the stage of anthropocentrism to a deeper awareness of our internal relationship to the whole world. Some people, such as Peter Russell, argue that we are witnessing the evolution of a non-anthropocentric mode of planetary consciousness that will be supported by the revolution in communications and computers. Peter Russel, The Global Brain: Speculations on the Evolutionary Leap tp Planetary Consciousness (New York: J.P. Tarcher, 1983). Other people, such as Jeremy Rifkin, maintain that the coming computer age promises ever greater intrusions into natural processes, such as the drive for control of genetic structures.Jeremy Rifkin, Algeny (New York: Viking, 1983). In my view, while it is important to extend the idea of human rights wherever possible, it is also crucial that we consider seriously the possibility that the idea of human rights is merely a transitional way of conceiving of morality. As we learn more about the interrelationship of human life with all other aspects of the earth's life, our self-understanding will no longer be in harmony with the human-centered morality we know today. We will either learn to respect all beings and act toward them in appropriate ways, or else we will continue down the road we are now headed - a road which seems to have a very disturbing destination. Learning to dwell appropriately on earth is the most pressing moral issue of the day. (shrink)
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