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Results for 'Page Widick'

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  1.  48
    The Right Hemisphere in Esthetic Perception.Bianca Bromberger,Rebecca Sternschein,PageWidick,William Smith &Anjan Chatterjee -2011 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 5.
  2.  65
    "The human prospect and the 'lord of history'": A process critique.W.Widick Schroeder -1977 -Zygon 12 (1):4-26.
  3.  33
    Flesh and the free market: (On taking Bourdieu to the options exchange). [REVIEW]RichardWidick -2003 -Theory and Society 32 (5-6):679-723.
  4. Aspects of Linguistic Behaviour Festschrift R.B. LePage.R. B. LePage &M. W. Sugathapala De Silva -1980 - Dept. Of Language, University of York.
  5.  44
    Evolution, human values and religious experience: A process perspective.W.Widick Schroeder -1982 -Zygon 17 (3):267-291.
    Abstract.This essay sketches an interpretation of human experience utilizing the perspective of’ process philosophy. Beauty is a key notion, and emergent evolution is a central theme. The following topics are addressed: the emergence of modern evolutionary thinking and alternative responses to it; the nature of human nature in a process perspective; the place of humans in nature; the immanence of laws; emergent evolution on this planet; some implications of the hierarchy of nature for the interpretation of human life, human morality, (...) and human values; and human religious experience. (shrink)
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  6.  8
    Toward Belief: Essays in the Human Sciences, Social Ethics, and Philosophical Theology.W.Widick Schroeder -1996
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  7.  33
    Unity and diversity among humans: A framework for interpretation.W.Widick Schroeder -1978 -Zygon 13 (1):65-82.
  8. The Posture of Faith.MeghanPage -2017 -Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Religion 8:227-244.
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  9.  26
    Gender at the Crossing: Ideological Travelings of US and French Thought in Montreal Feminism.Geneviève Pagé -2016 -Feminist Studies 42 (3):575.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 42, no. 3. © 2016 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 575 Geneviève Pagé Gender at the Crossing: Ideological Travelings of US and French Thought in Montreal Feminism This article recounts a story about Montreal feminism using the narrative thread of its conceptual language. It is a story of language as a political choice that guides our actions, but also language as a political issue, a barrier, a tool (...) that structures our thinking and that reflects and reproduces relations of power in knowledge production and dissemination. Gender is the central character in this story—its role representing the way US, French, and Quebec theoretical traditions are deeply in dialogue with each other; yet this dialogue is arbitrary and filled with long silences. In reviewing the dialogue, this article identifies a few elements that play a significant role in favoring or impeding the traveling of ideas and concepts, focusing, in the case of Quebec, on how part of the feminist movement, comprised of radical or “revolutionary” feminists, engages with and constructs theory. The article begins by briefly tracing the evolving meanings of gender in the United States from the 1920s to the twenty-first century. Then, turning to France, a second section identifies elements limiting the traveling of US understandings of gender in French feminist theory, especially the predominance of specific traditions of thought, namely existentialism and Marxism, leading to different ways of thinking about oppression, patriarchy, sexism, and the idea of womanhood. In a third section, I shift the focus to Quebec, particularly Francophone Montreal, to survey its feminist thought, political traditions, and 576 Geneviève Pagé translation. Its history, its people, and its geographic location put it at the convergence of US and French influences, but with a distinct added local imperative: the struggle for national liberation. The specific ways in which Quebec nationalism has foregrounded power and politics around language has had a major impact on how Quebec feminists have negotiated relations with their southern feminist neighbors. In this sense, Quebec feminism presents an excellent case study of language operating as an axis of power. Furthermore, in the context of globalization and resistances to globalizing processes, Montreal provides a perfect example by which to highlight both transnational influences and local specificities. Montreal, as a classic example of Mary Louise Pratt’s cultural and linguistic “contact zone”—the space where communities of practices interact—is a city in which one can clearly identify “the intellectual and linguistic points of contact between cultures, and make visible the political pressure that activates them.”1 I treat translations that occur in this context as the process of connecting and communicating between communities. As queer theorist Juana María Rodríguez has noted in another context, “the process of translation involves more than merely translating languages; it involves translating cultures, values, and institutions of power.”2 Similarly, translation here involves an exchange between symbolic and semiotic structures of both the original and the new communities. Zooming out of Montreal, I then address the politics of translation on a more global scale, pointing out the particular ways the production and dissemination of knowledge is especially beholden to market relations. All these reflections help us understand the traveling of ideas, concepts, and ideologies across linguistic barriers. I conclude that it is in the interest of feminists to pay particular attention to what knowledge is produced from different standpoints and in different languages and what it can teach us. 1. Mary Louise Pratt, “Arts of the Contact Zone,” Profession (1991): 34; Sherry Simon, Gender in Translation: Cultural Identity and the Politics of Transmission (New York: Routledge, 1996), 36. 2. Juana María Rodríguez, Queer Latinidad: Identity Practices, Discursive Spaces (New York: NYU Press, 2003), 19. Geneviève Pagé  577 Gender in the United States It is among US feminists that the conceptualization of the gender/sex dichotomy first developed. However, gender—the word—ironically comes to English from the French genre and shares with that word its derivation from the Latin genus, meaning “kind,” “sort,” or “type.” The derivation is most visible in the borrowing in English of the French genre, for example, in literary forms such as fiction or poetry. Similarly, both the English... (shrink)
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  10.  17
    April 22, 2004.Guardian Leader Pages -manuscript
    In our profile of Daniel Dennett (pages 20 to 23, Review, April 17), we said he was born in Beirut. In fact, he was born in Boston. His father died in 1947, not 1948. He married in 1962, not 1963. The seminar at which Stephen Jay Gould was rigorously questioned by Dennett's students was Dennett's seminar at Tufts, not Gould's at Harvard. Dennett wrote Darwin's Dangerous Idea before, not after, Gould called him a "Darwinian fundamentalist". Only one chapter in the (...) book, not four, is devoted to taking issue with Gould. The list of Dennett's books omitted Elbow Room , 1984, and The Intentional Stance, 1987. The marble sculpture, recollected by a friend, that Dennett was working on in 1963 was not a mother and child. It was a man reading a book. (shrink)
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  11.  14
    (1 other version)Philosophical Historicism and the Betrayal of First Philosophy.CarlPage -1990 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    The recent emergence, among philosophers, of the view that the activity of human reason in all its possible modes must also be historicized, including the activity of philosophizing itself, may be found in writers as diverse as Hans-Georg Gadamer, Richard Rorty, Michel Foucault, and Alasdair MacIntyre. This contemporary view of human reason contrasts with the traditional commitments of "First Philosophy," Aristotle's name for the knowledge of things through their ultimate causes and principles. This book challenges the prevailing historicist orthodoxies about (...) the nature of reason and philosophy and offers the first comprehensive analysis and critique of historicism in its current philosophical form. Can philosophical historicism reasonably justify the interpretation of human reason on which its own objections to First Philosophy are based? While CarlPage ultimately concludes that it cannot, he also seeks to rehabilitate historicism's motivating insights by showing how they derive from questions Hegel and Heidegger raised about reason's relation to history. (shrink)
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  12.  30
    BioEssays 7∕2019.Charlotte E.Page,William Leggat,Scott F. Heron,Severine M. Choukroun,Jon Lloyd &Tracy D. Ainsworth -2019 -Bioessays 41 (7):1970071.
    Graphical AbstractDriving patterns of coral bleaching over reefs are a suite of biophysical interactions where the physical environment modulates organism response through an interplay with intrinsic biological functioning. Flow conditions over reefs can mitigate the physiological impacts of thermal stress across multiple spatial scales. More details can be found in article number 1800226 by Charlotte E.Page et al., Seeking Resistance in Coral Reef Ecosystems: The Interplay of Biophysical Factors and Bleaching Resistance under a Changing Climate, DOI: 10.1002/bies.201800226.
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  13.  7
    The new philosophy: the science of physical phenomena: first explanations of electricity, gravitation, repulsion and the new atomic element rex: new explanations of sound, heat, light, cohesion, magnetism, atmosphere, astronomy, and nervous force.Calvin SamuelPage -1913 - Chicago: Science Publishing Co..
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work.This work is in the public domain in (...) the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work.As a reproduction of a historical artifact, this work may contain missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and made generally available to the public. We appreciate your support of the preservation process, and thank you for being an important part of keeping this knowledge alive and relevant. (shrink)
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  14.  32
    Richard Bergeron, Les abus de l'Église d'après Newman. Collection « Recherches », section de théologie, n° 7, Paris, Tournai, Montréal ; Desclée et Cie, Éditions Bellarmin, 1971 , 245 pages. [REVIEW]Jean-Guy Pagé -1972 -Laval Théologique et Philosophique 28 (3):312.
  15.  85
    Parental Rights.EdgarPage -1984 -Journal of Applied Philosophy 1 (2):187-203.
    ABSTRACT This paper is concerned with the philosophical foundations of parental rights. Some commonly held accounts are rejected. The question of whether parental rights are property rights is examined. It is argued that there are useful analogies with property rights which help us to see that the ultimate justification of parental rights lies in the special value of parenthood in human life. It is further argued that the idea of generation is essential to our understanding of parenthood as having special (...) value and that parental rights properly belong, in the first instance, to natural parents. (shrink)
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  16.  33
    UK clothing retailers squeezing suppliers.Alice G. Lewthwaite-Page -1998 -Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 7 (1):17–20.
    As major clothing suppliers are being forced by competition to cut costs, is this inevitably leading their suppliers to cut corners in working conditions, and what ethical considerations are relevant? The author is completing her MBA at London Business School and has a background in the textile industry.
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  17.  50
    Torture and truth.Page DuBois -1991 - New York: Routledge.
    First published in 1991, this book -- through the examination of ancient Greek literary, philosophical and legal texts -- analyses how the Athenian torture of slaves emerged from and reinforced the concept of truth as something hidden in the human body. It discusses the tradition of understanding truth as something that is generally concealed and the ideas of 'secret space' in both the female body and the Greek temple. This philosophy and practice is related to Greek views of the 'Other' (...) (women and outsiders) and considers the role of torture in distinguishing slave and free in ancient Athens. A wide range of perspectives -- from Plato to Sartre -- are employed to examine the subject. (shrink)
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  18. Aesthetics and English Studies.AdrianPage -1992 - In Stephen Regan,The Politics of pleasure: aesthetics and cultural theory. Philadelphia: Open University Press. pp. 159.
     
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  19.  26
    Dissociated dislocations in field-ion microscope images of iridium and iridium-based alloys.T. F.Page &B. Ralph -1972 -Philosophical Magazine 26 (3):601-616.
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  20.  63
    Do our observations depend upon the quantum state of the universe?Don N.Page -unknown
    Here I shall call elements (1)-(3) the quantum state (or the “state”), since they give the quantum state of the universe that obeys the dynamical laws and is written in terms of the kinematic variables, and I shall call elements (4)-(6) the probability rules (or the “rules”), since they specify what it is that has probabilities (here taken to be the results of observations, Oj, or “observations” for short), the rules for extracting these observational probabilities from the quantum state, and (...) the meaning of the probabilities. What I shall write below is largely independent of the meaning of the probabilities, though personally I view them in a rather Everettian way as objective measures for the set of observations with positive probabilities. Usually it is implicitly believed that the observational probabilities depend strongly upon the quantum state. (Sometimes the Everett interpretation [2] is taken to mean that all of physical reality is determined purely by the quantum state, without the need for any additional rules to extract probabilities, but this extreme view seems untenable [4] and will not be adopted here. Instead, I shall discuss the opposite view, that the probabilities are independent of the quantum state.) However, some advocates of inflation[5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22] often claim that our observations do not depend upon the quantum state at all, but rather that inflation acts as an attractor to give the same statistical distribution of observations from any state. In this note, I shall use the framework of state plus rules to discuss this possibility that observational probabilities might be independent of the quantum state. I shall show that this indeed is logically possible, but apparently only if the probability rules are rather ad hoc. If indeed the rules are this ad hoc, so that the probabilities of our observations do not depend upon a quantum state at all, it would seem to leave it mysterious why many of our observations can be simply interpreted as if our universe really were quantum.. (shrink)
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  21.  8
    The Consolation of Ontology: On the Substantial and Nonsubstantial Models.Benjamin B.Page (ed.) -2001 - Lexington Books.
    In the Consolation of Ontology, Czech poet-philosopher Egon Bondy examines the substantial model of reality — the notion that there is some sort of substance, some "thing", idea, being, or principle that creates, underlies, transcends, or gives meaning to the universe in which we live. He shows how the substantial model, in both its theistic and mechanical materialist versions, is logically untenable and dangerous in its consequences. From there, Bondy shows how the nonsubstantial alternative — prefigured in the thinking of (...) cultures that developed independently of Greece — is simpler and more logically consistent. More importantly, it is free from the negative consequences of the substantial model and instead opens the way toward genuine human freedom, creativity, and responsibility, toward a corresponding and supportive form of social organization, and toward an unclouded understanding of ontological reality. Previously untranslated, the book asks that we leave behind comfortable assumptions and understand how the struggles for a genuinely human future and for ontological clarity presuppose each other and are mutually interdependent. (shrink)
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  22.  5
    Norbert Elias et « l’idéal du nous ».Claire Pagès -2024 -Astérion 31 (31).
    This article traces how the sociologist Norbert Elias understands what leads an individual to say ‘we', to form a mental unit with a group, but also to refuse to form a unit or to feel part of it, or even to deny being an integral part of a ‘we’ to which close interdependent relationships nonetheless like him. His social and group theory of identity, which rejects the division between the individual and society, led Elias to develop the idea that two (...) types of image, the I-image and the We-image, organise how individuals perceive themselves, and to forge the idea that the representation they have of themselves is made up of both an I-ideal and a We-ideal. After giving a detailed presentation of this approach to identity, which, based on Freudian principles, radically alters and modifies the Freudian perspective and topic, we propose to highlight the questions it raises and, in some cases, leaves unanswered. (shrink)
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  23.  6
    Environmental Thought.EdwardPage &John L. R. Proops -2003 - Edward Elgar Publishing.
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  24. Climate Change, Justice and Future Generations.Edward A.Page -2007 -Environmental Values 16 (3):404-406.
     
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  25.  13
    Sara Forsdyke, Slaves Tell Tales.Page duBois -2014 -Klio 96 (1):256-262.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Klio Jahrgang: 96 Heft: 1 Seiten: 256-262.
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  26. Climate science debate-Response.R. W.Page -2005 - In Alan F. Blackwell & David MacKay,Power. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 149--5.
  27.  16
    David Hartley on Human Nature.A. R.Page -2001 -Enlightenment and Dissent 20:123-135.
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  28.  32
    El análisis de semejanza de las propiedades.Joan Pagès -2000 -Endoxa 1 (13):33.
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  29.  66
    Hegel ou le possible réel . La critique hégélienne des idéaux en question.Claire Pagès -2010 -PhaenEx 5 (1):92-117.
    Partant de l’analyse anthropologique des âges de la vie par Hegel dans l’Encyclopédie, on présentera sa critique des idéaux. Hegel fustige chez le jeune homme cette tendance à opposer le réel et l’idéal. Il dégage les risques à la fois individuels et collectifs que cette vision du monde fait courir et considère « l’homme fait » comme celui qui sait vouloir ce qui est. De cette analyse, suit la conclusion qu’il n’y a pas de possible en dehors du réel, pas (...) de substantialité hors du monde. Autrement dit, et contre la première impression de la plupart des hommes, possible et réel, devoir être et être, s’identifient. Pourtant, si l’aversion du réel inspirée par l’attachement aux idéaux représente, selon Hegel, un danger, le procès du devoir-être par la philosophie spéculative n’est pas non plus sans risque. Ne signe-t-il pas, comme le dira Nietzsche, la défaite de la volonté face au poids des choses ? La lecture, dans la Doctrine de l’essence, du chapitre intitulé « L’effectivité » dans la section du même nom, peut nous préserver de conclusions si déprimantes, car celui-ci vient expliquer, non que le possible est une chimère, une vue de l’esprit, mais qu’il s’identifie à l’effectif. Or, la reconnaissance de cette intimité produit d’une part en retour une conception plus riche, plus haute, plus noble du possible – elle lui donne en somme des lettres de noblesse – et, d’autre part, elle conduit à y lire une affirmation de la contingence. Notre argumentaire vise à établir qu’en disant que l’effectif est possible et que le possible est effectif, Hegel ne les détruit pas en leur ôtant leurs déterminations propres, mais leur assure une plus grande consistance. En étant possible, l’effectif cesse de se confondre avec la réalité comprise comme simple existence ou simple phénomène, comme simple il y a. En étant effectif, le possible cesse de signifier un moindre-être, un en deçà, un simplement ou seulement possible, puisqu’il est alors inscrit dans l’être, dans le monde. (shrink)
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  30.  11
    Learning and Teaching in the Early Years.JanePage &Collette Tayler (eds.) -2016 - Port Melbourne, Vic.: Cambridge University Press.
    Learning and Teaching in the Early Years provides a comprehensive, contemporary and practical introduction to early childhood teaching in Australia. A strong focus on the links between theory, policy and practice firmly aligns this text with the Early Years Learning Framework. Written for students of early childhood programs, this book covers learning and development, as well as professional practice in teaching children from birth to eight years. In recognition of the evolving role of educators, topic areas include learning, teaching, working (...) with families, leading, advocating and researching. Each chapter contains learning objectives, key terms and reflection points. Detailed case studies document the intersection between research, policy and practice, enhancing pre-service and practicing educators' appreciation of how a policy-aligned approach reinforces learning and development in the early years. This text draws on the latest research to present children's learning as a dynamic and active process requiring specific, intentional teaching behaviours. (shrink)
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  31.  15
    Neurogenetic Basis of Social Behavior.Robert E.Page Jr -2009 - In Jürgen Gadau & Jennifer Fewell,Organization of Insect Societies: From Genome to Sociocomplexity. Harvard.
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  32.  12
    Negotiating Sacred Roles: A Sociological Exploration of Priests who Are Mothers.Sarah-JanePage -2011 -Feminist Review 97 (1):92-109.
    In 1992, in a historic move, the Church of England voted to allow women's ordination to priesthood and in 1994 the first women priests started to be ordained. Despite much research interest, the experiences of priests who are mothers to dependent children have been minimally investigated. Based on in-depth interviews with seventeen mothers ordained in the Church, this paper will focus on how the sacred-profane boundary is managed. Priests who are mothers have a particular insight into the Church hierarchy as (...) they symbolically straddle the competing discourses of sacred and profane. However, instead of reifying these binaries, the experiences of these women show how such dualisms are challenged and managed in everyday life. Indeed, in terms of experience, ritual, ministry and preaching, priests who are mothers are resisting, recasting and renegotiating sacred terrain in subtle and nuanced ways. Mothers thus not only negotiate the practical and sacramental demands placed on priests, but also illuminate how the sacred domain is regulated and constructed. (shrink)
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  33. Poróżnienie Lyotarda z Habermasem i Rortym: dlaczego komunikacja oraz konsensus nie pozwalają pomyśleć wspólnoty.Claire Pages -2011 -Sztuka I Filozofia (Art and Philosophy) 38.
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  34.  9
    Who Owns the Professions?B. B.Page -1975 -Hastings Center Report 5 (5):7-8.
  35.  25
    Wim Wenders’s Road Movie Philosophy Education Without Learning: Series on Philosophies of Education in Art, Cinema and Literature, Bloomsbury Academic, 2020, ISBN: HB: 978-1-3501-1042-7.Anna Pagès -2022 -Studies in Philosophy and Education 41 (3):379-382.
  36.  56
    Symbolic Mathematics and the Intellect Militant: On Modern Philosophy's Revolutionary Spirit.CarlPage -1996 -Journal of the History of Ideas 57 (2):233-253.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Symbolic Mathematics and the Intellect Militant: On Modern Philosophy’s Revolutionary SpiritCarl PageWhat makes modern philosophy different? My question presupposes the legitimacy of calling part of philosophy “modern.” That presupposition is in turn open to question as regards its meaning, its warrant, and the conditions of its applicability. 1 Importance notwithstanding, such further inquiries all start out from the phenomenon upon which everyone agrees: philosophy running through Plato and Aristotle (...) looks significantly different from philosophy running from Descartes to Kant.My concern in this essay is with the phenomenon of the difference itself, rather than with the second-order questions associated with how properly to assign it historical meaning. I take the difference between ancient and modern philosophy to be as significant as differences in philosophy’s history can be: modern philosophy rests on a new interpretation of the nature and fulfillment of human reason, and disputes about the nature of human reason are the ultimate battles of philosophy. But the general thesis is not my main point. 2 The focus of this essay falls on what may be called the integrity of the phenomenon, on the specific interpretation of human reason that lends modern philosophy its peculiar face. [EndPage 233]Modern philosophy’s strikingly revolutionary spirit is my point of departure. When Descartes writes in the first of his Meditations that “it was necessary, once in the course of my life, to demolish everything completely and start again right from the foundations if I wanted to establish anything at all in the sciences that was stable and likely to last,” 3 he reveals the same enthusiasm for total reform later found in Kant: “This attempt to alter the procedure which has hitherto prevailed in metaphysics, by completely revolutionizing it in accordance with the example set by the geometers and physicists, forms indeed the main purpose of this critique of pure speculative reason.” 4 How exactly did philosophy become so convinced that its central tradition—a sprawling, disorganized, ugly city, as Descartes has it in the Discourse (I:116)—needed razing to the ground in the interest of some rational town-planning? Moreover, the calls for revolution have not abated, despite contemporary disillusionment with both Cartesian rationalism and Enlightenment philosophy in general; they have grown more shrill. The confidence with which rationalism, foundationalism, universalism, logocentrism, Platonism, and so on are currently set at naught for the sake of contingency, particularity, and difference reveals the same revolutionary and totalizing spirit that marks the earlier phase of philosophy’s modernity. Such enthusiasm is reason’s freedom taken to an extreme. 5 What inspires this march of the intellect militant? What, if anything, justifies its hubristic self-assertions in the domain of philosophy? These are the questions I address.Descartes is commonly identified as the father of modern philosophy. While the full story of modern philosophy’s parentage is more complicated than this, it is fair to say that in Descartes self-consciousness of a new mode of doing philosophy emerges with a focus and revolutionary sense of purpose that caught philosophical imagination in his own time and continues to do so in ours. 6 Motifs of modern philosophy may be found in many places—Machiavelli, Hobbes, Francis Bacon, Nicholas of Cusa, Giordano Bruno, Jakob Boehme—nonetheless, Descartes’s intensely single-minded, even jealous advocacy commends itself to all but the most stubborn antiquarian mentality as modernity’s almost perfect philosophical representative. [EndPage 234]That Descartes stands on a remarkable philosophical cusp is apparent in the contrast between the title and the subject matter of his most influential philosophical work: Meditationes de Prima Philosophiae (1641). To that point prima philosophia or First Philosophy had been construed as the metaphysics. It was not concerned with the critical question of how metaphysical sciences are possible and was not directly related to any doctrine of the human soul—except perhaps on the one point of the divinity of nous, the human soul’s highest part. In Descartes’s Meditations, on the other hand, the landscape has altered. Doubt, certainty, knowledge, the ego cogitans and its stream of representations are the new subject matter. What is first in philosophy is no longer what... (shrink)
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  37.  36
    Axiomatics, Hermeneutics, and Practical Rationality.CarlPage -1987 -International Philosophical Quarterly 27 (1):81-100.
    Contemporary philosophy is marked by a turn to 'practical rationality' in the face of the issues associated with relativism and foundationalism. This turn is visible in the work of gadamer and rorty (among others) and has recently been surveyed by richard bernstein. The paper shows that 'practical rationality' fails as a model for rational justification in both 'post-Empiricist' philosophy of science and philosophical hermeneutics. The popular appeal to "phronesis" is shown to be an abuse of the ancient notion.
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  38.  11
    Csepregi, Gabor (2019). In Vivo: A Phenomenology of Life-Defining Moments.Anna Pagès -2021 -Enrahonar: Quaderns de Filosofía 67:296-298.
    Csepregi, Gabor In Vivo: A Phenomenology of Life-Defining MomentsMontreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 216 p.ISBN 978-0773556638.
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  39.  51
    Confessions of an Evolutionary Biologist.Robert E.Page -2007 -Biological Theory 2 (2):207-208.
  40.  71
    (1 other version)Hope.CameronPage -2007 -Hastings Center Report 37 (6):12-12.
  41.  41
    When Poetry and Phenomenology Collide.JeremyPage -2018 -Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 5 (1):31-51.
    In recent years several scholars have wrestled with the term “poetic thought,” suggesting in various ways there is something distinctive about the nature of meaning as it occurs/unfolds through poetry. In this paper I suggest, in part following the lead of Simon Jarvis, that one of the most fruitful lines of inquiry for exploring this idea lies in a consideration of poetic works through the lens of Heidegger’s early phenomenology. Specifically, I argue that one of the keys to understanding poetic (...) thought lies in a flaw within Heidegger’s ontological divisions between substances, equipment and Dasein, as presented in Being and Time. Through an analysis of three poems by Frank O'Hara, I argue poetry that examines and represents the physical world presents a problem for Heidegger when he suggests equipment in the world must necessarily “withdraw” in order for us to engage with it authentically. To address this, the term environment-at-hand is introduced to describe the relationship between art... (shrink)
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  42. Commitments and consequences.Page Bailey -1968 - Philadelphia,: Lippincott.
  43. Focus IBBY.ElizabethPage -2009 -Journal of the History of Philosophy 47 (3):60-69.
  44. Resnik, M.-Mathematics as a Science of Patterns.J.Page -1998 -Philosophical Books 39:283-283.
     
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  45. Computational models of short-term memory: Modelling serial recall of verbal material.MikePage &Richard Henson -2001 - In Jackie Andrade,Working Memory in Perspective. Psychology Press. pp. 177--198.
     
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  46.  150
    Generalized Jarzynski Equality.Don N.Page -unknown
    The Jarzynski equality equates the mean of the exponential of the negative of the work (per fixed temperature) done by a changing Hamiltonian on a system, initially in thermal equilibrium at that temperature, to the ratio of the final to the initial equilibrium partition functions of the system at that fixed temperature. It thus relates two thermal equilibrium quantum states.
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  47.  173
    Connectionist modelling in psychology: A localist manifesto.MikePage -2000 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (4):443-467.
    Over the last decade, fully distributed models have become dominant in connectionist psychological modelling, whereas the virtues of localist models have been underestimated. This target article illustrates some of the benefits of localist modelling. Localist models are characterized by the presence of localist representations rather than the absence of distributed representations. A generalized localist model is proposed that exhibits many of the properties of fully distributed models. It can be applied to a number of problems that are difficult for fully (...) distributed models, and its applicability can be extended through comparisons with a number of classic mathematical models of behaviour. There are reasons why localist models have been underused, though these often misconstrue the localist position. In particular, many conclusions about connectionist representation, based on neuroscientific observation, can be called into question. There are still some problems inherent in the application of fully distributed systems and some inadequacies in proposed solutions to these problems. In the domain of psychological modelling, localist modelling is to be preferred. Key Words: choice; competition; connectionist modelling; consolidation; distributed; localist; neural networks; reaction-time. (shrink)
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  48.  22
    (1 other version)An Introduction to General Linguistics.R. B. LePage &Francis P. Dinneen -1968 -Philosophical Quarterly 18 (73):373.
  49.  40
    A Note on Corinna.D. L.Page -1957 -Classical Quarterly 7 (1-2):109-.
    Inc.Q,., N.S. v , i76ff., Mr. A. E. Harvey discusses the problem presented by the first ten lines of the first column of the Berlin Papyrus of Corinna, and finds the solution in the region of erroneous colometry. So far as I can judge, he is justified in claiming that he has offered ‘the most concise and satisfactory explanation of the irregularities’; but, if so, there is one further step which should be taken, and there is one obscurity in his (...) account which should be clarified. (shrink)
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  50. Chapter sixteen kl?Robert E.Page Jr,Timothy A. Linksvayer &Grov Amdam -2009 - In Jürgen Gadau & Jennifer Fewell,Organization of Insect Societies: From Genome to Sociocomplexity. Harvard.
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