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  1.  42
    It's not me, it's you: Testing a moderated mediation model of subordinate deviance and abusive supervision through the self‐regulatory perspective.Samson Samwel Shillamkwese,Hussain Tariq,Asfia Obaid,Qingxiong Weng &ThomasNoelGaravan -2020 -Business Ethics 29 (1):227-243.
    Synthesizing self‐regulatory theories, we provide new insights into the antecedents of abusive supervision. We, from the perspective of supervisor's self‐regulatory resources depletion or impairment, introduce supervisor hindrance stress as an underlying mechanism of the subordinate deviance–abusive supervision relationship: this mediated relationship will be intensified at the level of high subordinate job performance. In addition, we develop a complex contingency model and propose a three‐way interaction (i.e., subordinate deviance, job performance, supervisor outcome dependence) to obtain the complete understanding of the subordinate (...) deviance–abusive supervision relationship facilitated through the supervisors’ hindrance stress. To test our moderated moderated mediation model, we gathered time‐lagged and multisource data from a large food service company located in southern China. We collected data at two different points (i.e., Time 1 and Time 2) from supervisors and their direct reports (N = 298 responses from 68 supervisors and 298 direct reports), and findings provide support for the hypothesized moderated moderated mediation model of our study. We highlight the implications of our study for theory, research, and practice. (shrink)
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  2.  57
    Visioning Eternity: Aesthetics, Politics, and History in the Early Modern Noh Theater.Thomas D. Looser,John Timothy Wixted,Charlotte von Verschuer,Kristen Lee Hunter,Noel J. Pinnington,Livia Kohn,Eiichi Kawata,A. Robert Lee &Roald Knutsen -2013 -Philosophy East and West 63 (2).
  3.  7
    Legitimating Organizational Secrecy.Nicholas Clarke,Malcolm Higgs &ThomasGaravan -forthcoming -Journal of Business Ethics:1-20.
    This paper brings into focus the concept of organizational secrecy by senior managers in the context of a major strategic change program. Underpinned by legitimation theory and utilizing a narrative methodology and a longitudinal investigation, we draw upon data from 52 interviews with 13 senior managers conducted at 3 months intervals over the course of 12 months. Our findings reveal that senior managers utilized seven discursive legitimation strategies to justify keeping secret that the organization intended to downsize, and they used (...) a different mix of legitimation strategies as the change process evolved. We labeled these discursive legitimation strategies as (1) Naturalization, (2) Rationalization, (3) Moralization, (4) Authorization, (5) Proceduralization, (6) Valorization, and (7) Demonization. Theoretically we bring a temporal perspective to understanding organizational secrecy and the central role that discursive legitimation plays. We show that the use of these discursive legitimation strategies are anchored to meta-narratives describing work practices and values associated with the organization’s culture. And that managers use discursive legitimation to manage the ethical implications of secrecy. (shrink)
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  4.  49
    Unconscious integration of multisensory bodily inputs in the peripersonal space shapes bodily self-consciousness.Roy Salomon,Jean-PaulNoel,Marta Łukowska,Nathan Faivre,Thomas Metzinger,Andrea Serino &Olaf Blanke -2017 -Cognition 166 (C):174-183.
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  5. Hobbes,Thomas and authorship of the'horae subsecivae'.Noel B. Reynolds &John L. Hilton -1993 -History of Political Thought 14 (3):361-380.
  6.  26
    Discrimination learning as a function of prior discrimination and nondifferential training.Kenneth O. Eck,Richard C.Noel &David R.Thomas -1969 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 82 (1p1):156.
  7. Un nouveau saintThomas.L.Noel -1920 -Revue de Philosophie 27:173.
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  8. Douglas Matthews.Mortimer Adler,Anna Andreevna Akhmatova,Jonathan Allen,Louis Althusser,Noel Gilroy Annan,StThomas Aquinas,Hannah Arendt,Ernst Arndt,Sergey Alekseevich Askoldov &Wystan Hugh Auden -2007 - In George Crowder & Henry Hardy,The one and the many: reading Isaiah Berlin. Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books.
     
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  9.  13
    Thomas Hobbes: Leviathan: Editorial Introduction.Noel Malcolm (ed.) -2014 - Oxford University Press.
    Thomas Hobbes's Leviathan is one of the most important philosophical texts in the English language, and one of the most influential works of political philosophy ever written. This Introduction accompaniesNoel Malcolm's long-awaited critical edition, and gives a path-breaking account of the work's context, sources, and textual history.
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  10. Is analytic philosophy the cure for film theory?Cynthia A. Freeland,Thomas E. Wartenberg,Richard Allen,Murray Smith,Noël Carroll &Oxford Clarendon -1999 -Philosophy of the Social Sciences 29 (3):416-440.
  11.  80
    Reason of State, Propaganda, and the Thirty Years' War: An Unknown Translation byThomas Hobbes.Noel Malcolm -2007 - Clarendon Press.
    Acclaimed writer and historianNoel Malcolm presents his sensational discovery of a new work byThomas Hobbes : a propaganda pamphlet on behalf of the Habsburg side in the Thirty Years' War, translated by Hobbes from a Latin original. Malcolm's book explores a fascinating episode in seventeenth-century history, illuminating both the practice of early modern propaganda and the theory of "reason of state".
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  12.  72
    Thomas Hobbes: Leviathan: 3 Volume Set.Noel Malcolm (ed.) -1996 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Thomas Hobbes's Leviathan is one of the most important philosophical texts in the English language, and one of the most influential works of political philosophy ever written. This is the first critical edition based on a full study of the manuscript and printing history. It is also the first edition to place the English text side by side with Hobbes's later Latin version of it, complete with a set of notes in which the many passages that differ in the (...) Latin are translated into English. So, for the first time, readers of Leviathan will be able to see clearly every stage of the development of the text. Both texts are fully annotated with explanatory notes. The editor's Introduction, which takes up the whole of the first volume, gives a path-breaking account of the work's context, sources, and textual history. This definitive edition will set the study of Hobbes's masterwork on a new basis. (shrink)
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  13.  18
    The Correspondence ofThomas Hobbes: The Correspondence ofThomas Hobbes: Volume I: 1622-1659.Noel Malcolm (ed.) -1994 - New York: Clarendon Press.
    Thomas Hobbes is one of the most important figures in the history of European thought. Although interest in his life and work has grown enomrously in recent years, this is the first complete edition of his correspondence. The texts of the letters are richly supplemented with explanatory notes and full biographical and bibliographical information. This landmark publication sheds new light in abundance on the intellectual life of a major thinker.
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  14.  31
    How to Be Irish in an Epidemic: A Dossier Article on HIV and AIDS in Ireland, Then and Now.Bill Foley,Erin Nugent,Noel Donnellan,Thomas Strong,Cormac O’Brien &Graham Price -2023 -Journal of Medical Humanities 44 (1):7-26.
    This dossier article contains four short and varied contributions from activists and other service and healthcare providers who have been agitating and working on the frontlines of HIV/AIDS in Ireland since the early 1980s. The dossier contains: (1) a history, by Bill Foley, of the early collective efforts of a group of gay men to provoke government action and healthcare under the umbrella of Gay Health Action (GHA) (2) a speech delivered by Dr. Erin Nugent to government officials on the (...) re-branding of HIV Ireland in 2015; (3) a brief history, recounted byNoel Donnellan, of ACT UP Dublin since it was revitalized in 2016 by a small cohort of dedicated activists from a dormant group into a vibrant collective that has achieved great legislative change with regards to pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP); and (4) a polemic, written byThomas Strong, on living with HIV as a queer man in Ireland that demonstrates the ways in which HIV stigma not only thrives in but molds and shapes twenty-first-century gay men’s communities, both in real life and online. (shrink)
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  15. The Correspondence ofThomas Hobbes: Volume Ii: 1660-1679.Noel Malcolm (ed.) -1994 - Clarendon Press.
    Thomas Hobbes is one of the most important figures in the history of European thought. Although interest in his life and work has grown enomrously in recent years, this is the first complete edition of his correspondence. The texts of the letters are richly supplemented with explanatory notes and full biographical and bibliographical information. This landmark publication sheds new light in abundance on the intellectual life of a major thinker.
     
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  16.  114
    Aspects of Hobbes.Noel Malcolm -2002 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Noel Malcolm, one of the world's leading experts onThomas Hobbes, presents a set of extended essays on a wide variety of aspects of the life and work of this giant of early modern thought. Malcolm offers a succinct introduction to Hobbes's life and thought, as a foundation for his discussion of such topics as his political philosophy, his theory of international relations, the development of his mechanistic world-view, and his subversive Biblical criticism. Several of the essays pay (...) special attention to the European dimensions of Hobbes's life, his sources and his influence; the longest surveys the entire European reception of his work from the 1640s to the 1750s. All the essays are based on a deep knowledge of primary sources, and many present striking new discoveries about Hobbes's life, his manuscripts, and the printing history of his works. Aspects of Hobbes will be essential reading not only for Hobbes specialists, but also for all those interested in seventeenth-century intellectual history more generally, both British and European. (shrink)
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  17.  92
    The Title of Hobbes's Refutation ofThomas White's De Mundo.Noel Malcolm -2011 -Hobbes Studies 24 (2):179-188.
    Hobbes's manuscript refutation ofThomas White bears no title. Some modern scholars have proposed, on the basis of references to it by Mersenne, that the work was entitled 'De motu, loco et tempore', and the abbreviated version of this, 'De motu', has become current in modern scholarship. This research note analyses Mersenne's references, and concludes that this apparent title was a descriptive phrase introduced by Mersenne himself. The full description included the term 'philosophia' ; this suggests a double focus, (...) not only on the manuscript text, but also on Hobbes's 'body' of natural philosophy more generally. (shrink)
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  18.  38
    Style and Methodologies, onNoel Carroll's Engaging the Moving Image.Thomas Wartenberg -2005 -Film-Philosophy 9 (4).
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  19.  12
    “The” Clarendon Edition of the Works ofThomas Hobbes.Noel Malcolm (ed.) -2014 - Oxford University Press.
    This is the first critical edition of Hobbes's Leviathan based on a full study of the manuscript and printing history, and the first to place the English text alongside Hobbes's later Latin version of it. Both texts are fully annotated with explanatory notes.Noel Malcolm's definitive edition sets the study of Hobbes's masterwork on a new basis.
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  20. The Correspondence ofThomas Hobbes, 2 vol., vol. I, vol. II.Noël Malcolm -1999 -Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 189 (4):561-562.
  21.  223
    The Paradox of Junk Fiction.Noël Carroll -1994 -Philosophy and Literature 18 (2):225-241.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Noël Carroll THE PARADOX OFJUNK FICTION Perhaps on your way to some academic conference, if you had no papers to grade, you stopped in die airport gift shop for something to read on the plane. You saw racks of novels authored by die likes of Mary Higgins Clark, Michael Crichton, John Grisham, Danielle Steele, Sidney Sheldon, Stephen King, Sue Grafton, Elmore Leonard, Sara Paretsky, Tom Clancy, and so on. (...) These are the kinds of novels that, when you lend them to friends, you don't care, unless you live in Bowling Green, Ohio, whether you ever get them back. They are mass, popular fictions. In another era, they would have been called pulp fictions. FollowingThomas Roberts,1 I will call diem junk fictions, under which rubric I will also include things like Harlequin romances; sci-fi, horror, and mystery magazines; comic books; and broadcast narratives on either the radio or TV, as well as commercial movies. There are a number of interesting philosophical questions diat we may ask aboutjunk fiction. We could, for example, attempt to characterize its essential features. However, for the present, I will assume that the preceding examples are enough to provide you with a rough-andready notion of what I am calling junk fiction, and I will attempt to explore anotiier feature of the phenomenon, viz., what I call the paradox ofjunk fiction. Thejunk fictions that I have in mind are all narratives. Indeed, dieir story dimension is die most important thing about diem. Stephen King, for instance, makes diis point by saying that he is primarily a story teller rather than a writer. Junk fictions aspire to be page-turners—the blurb on the cover of Stillwatch by Mary Higgins Clark says that it is "designed to be read at breatiitaking speed"—and what motivates turning die page so quickly is our interest in what happens next. We do not dawdle Philosophy and Literature, © 1994, 18: 225-241 226Philosophy and Literature over Clark's diction as we might over Updike's nor do we savor die complexity of her sentence structure, as we do widi Virginia Woolfs. Radier, we read for story. Moreover, junk fictions are die sort of narratives that commentators are wont to call formulaic. That is, junk fictions generally belong to well-entrenched genres, which diemselves are typified by tiieir possession of an extremely limited repertoire of story-types. For example, as John Cawelti has pointed out, one such recurring Western narrative is diat of the recendy pacifist gunfighter, like Shane, who is forced by circumstances to take up his pistols again, widi altogedier devastating effect.2 Junk fictions tell diese generic stories again and again with minor variations. Sometimes diese variations may be quite clever and unexpected. Agatiia Christie was the master of this; she was able to use the conventions of the mystery genre in order to "hide" her murderers. In TheMurderofRogerAckroyd, she "secrets" the murderer in the personage of the narrator; in Ten Little Indians, die murderer is a "dead man"; while in Murder on the Orient Express, all the suspects did it. In each of these cases, Christie's brilliance hinges upon her playing (and preying) upon conventional expectations. Neverdieless, even diese surprising variations require a well-established background of narrative forms. That is, in order to appreciate diese variations, die reader must in some sense know die standard story already. And with junk fiction, it is generally fair to say that in some sense, the reader—or, at least, the reader who has read around in die genre before—knows in rough oudine how die story is likely to go. Readers and/or viewers of Jurassic Park surmised, once die dinosaur enclosures were described, diat in fairly short order die dinosaurs would trample them down and go on the rampage—after all we had already seen or read The Lost World, King Kong, and their progeny. So, junk fictions are formulaic. They rehearse certain narrative formats again and again. And, furthermore, in some very general sense, the audience already knows die story in question. But this knowledge on die part of die audience provokes a question, specifically, why if the reader, viewer or listener already... (shrink)
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  22. David Bordwell and Noël Carroll, eds., Post-Theory: Reconstructing Film Studies Reviewed by.Thomas E. Wartenberg -1998 -Philosophy in Review 18 (2):85-87.
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  23. Hobbes and Spinoza.Noel Malcolm -1991 - Cambridge University Press.
     
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  24.  19
    Noël Carroll, Philosophy and the Moving Image. [REVIEW]Thomas E. Wartenberg -2022 -Film and Philosophy 26:143-148.
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  25. (1 other version)Hobbes and the Royal society.Noel Malcolm -1988 - In Graham Alan John Rogers & Alan Ryan,Perspectives on Thomas Hobbes. New York: Oxford University Press.
  26.  13
    Three Discourses: A Critical Modern Edition of Newly Identified Work of the Young Hobbes.Noel B. Reynolds &Arlene W. Saxonhouse (eds.) -1995 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    For the first time in three centuries, this book brings back into print three discourses now confirmed to have been written by the youngThomas Hobbes. Their contents may well lead to a resolution of the long-standing controversy surrounding Hobbes's early influences and the subsequent development of his thought. The volume begins with the recent history of the discourses, first published as part of the anonymous seventeenth-century work, _Horae Subsecivae_. Drawing upon both internal evidence and external confirmation afforded by (...) new statistical "wordprinting" techniques, the editors present a compelling case for Hobbes's authorship. Saxonhouse and Reynolds present the complete texts of the discourse with full annotations and modernized spellings. These are followed by a lengthy essay analyzing the pieces' significance for Hobbes's intellectual development and modern political thought more generally. The discourses provide the strongest evidence to date for the profound influences of Bacon and Machiavelli on the young Hobbes, and they add a new dimension to the much-debated impact of the scientific method on his thought. The book also contains both introductory and in-depth explanations of statistical "wordprinting.". (shrink)
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  27.  16
    Leviathan.Noel Malcolm (ed.) -2014 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Thomas Hobbes's Leviathan is one of the most important philosophical texts in the English language, and one of the most influential works of political philosophy ever written. This is the first critical edition based on a full study of the manuscript and printing history. It is also the first edition to place the English text side by side with Hobbes's later Latin version of it, complete with a set of notes in which the many passages that differ in the (...) Latin are translated into English. So, for the first time, readers of Leviathan will be able to see clearly every stage of the development of the text. Both texts are fully annotated with explanatory notes. The editor's Introduction, which takes up the whole of the first volume, gives a path-breaking account of the work's context, sources, and textual history. This definitive edition will set the study of Hobbes's masterwork on a new basis. (shrink)
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  28.  29
    Book Review Section 3. [REVIEW]Patrick D. Lynch,Dan Landis,Ronald Schwartz,William B. Moody,Daniel P. Keating,E. S. Marlow Iii,Allen H. Kuntz,Thomas M. Sherman,Virginia M. Macagnoni,Noele Krenkel,Joseph E. Schmeidicke,Jeremy D. Finn,Gaea Leinhardt &Phyllis A. Katz -unknown
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  29.  11
    Leviathan: 3 Volume Set.Noel Malcolm (ed.) -1996 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Thomas Hobbes's Leviathan is one of the most important philosophical texts in the English language, and one of the most influential works of political philosophy ever written. This is the first critical edition based on a full study of the manuscript and printing history. It is also the first edition to place the English text side by side with Hobbes's later Latin version of it, complete with a set of notes in which the many passages that differ in the (...) Latin are translated into English. So, for the first time, readers of Leviathan will be able to see clearly every stage of the development of the text. Both texts are fully annotated with explanatory notes. The editor's Introduction, which takes up the whole of the first volume, gives a path-breaking account of the work's context, sources, and textual history. This definitive edition will set the study of Hobbes's masterwork on a new basis. (shrink)
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  30.  28
    The Correspondence ofThomas Hobbes.Tom Sorell &Noel Malcolm -1995 -Philosophical Quarterly 45 (181):521.
  31. Science and Humanism in the Renaissance: Regiomontanus's Oration on the Dignity and Utility of the Mathematical Sciences.Noel Swerdlow -1993 - In Paul Horwich,World Changes: Thomas Kuhn and the Nature of Science. MIT Press. pp. 131--168.
  32.  39
    Analytic Aesthetics Today, Explored through Ten Conversations.Thomas Leddy -2019 -Journal of Aesthetic Education 53 (2):102-122.
    Hans Maes has collected a number of conversations he has had with major figures in philosophical aesthetics over the last ten years in Conversations on Art and Aesthetics. These include, in order of appearance, Jerrold Levin-son, Arthur Danto, Cynthia Freeland, Carolyn Korsmeyer, Jenefer Robinson, Roger Scruton, Gregory Currie, Paul Guyer, Noël Carroll, and Kendall Walton. This book will be of interest to anyone who wishes to see some important living figures in this essential subdiscipline of philosophy in action. As with (...) all efforts of this sort, however, certain choices had to be made. The book is explicitly limited to philosophers in the Anglo-American tradition, largely American (including eight past... (shrink)
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  33.  29
    Inverted Moderate Moralism.MegThomas -2023 -Film and Philosophy 27:105-125.
    This article contributes to the philosophical debate over whether and how different forms of value interact—more specifically, moral and aesthetic value. Whereas much of the debate has been preoccupied with how moral value might affect aesthetic value, this article explores the interaction from the opposite direction. To consider the plausibility of an interaction in this direction, I first expand upon Robert Stecker’s brief discussion of the reverse affective response argument. Following this, I propose an alternative description of an aesthetic-moral interaction (...) that might be more accurately described as “inverted moderate moralism.” Inverted moderate moralism (an inverted version of Noël Carroll’s moderate moralism) argues that aesthetic value sometimes affects moral value; sometimes aesthetic flaws yield moral flaws in works, and sometimes aesthetic merits yield moral merits. I defend inverted moderate moralism as one plausible account of aesthetic-moral value interaction, but this article hopes to illustrate that an interaction in this direction is not only plausible but warrants further consideration more generally. (shrink)
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  34.  37
    Books briefly noted.Teresa Iglesias,Maire O'Neill,Victor E. Taylor,Thomas Docherty,Pauline Hyde,Joseph S. O'Leary,Vasilis Politis &Mark Dooley -1995 -International Journal of Philosophical Studies 3 (2):383 – 392.
    Bioethics in a Liberal Societ By Max Charlesworth, Cambridge University Press, 1993. Pp. 172. ISBN 0?521?44952?9. £9.95 pbk. The Logical Universe: The Real Universe ByNoel Curran Avebury, 1994. Pp. 158. ISBN 1?85628?863?3. £32.50. Beyond Postmodern Politics: Lyotard, Rorty, Foucault By Honi Fern Haber Routledge, 1994. Pp.viii + 160. ISBN 0?415?90823?X. $15.95. Baudrillard's Bestiary: Baudrillard and Culture By Mike Gane Routledge, 1991, Pp. 184. ISBN 0?415?06307?8. £10.99 pbk. Truth, Fiction and Literature: A Philosophical Perspective By Peter Lamarque and Stein (...) Haugom Olsen Clarendon Press, 1994. Pp. 456. ISBN 0?19?824082?1. £45.00. Milton and the Drama of History: Historical Vision, Iconoclasm, and the Literary Imagination By David Loewenstein Cambridge University Press, 1990. Pp. x + 197. ISBN 0?521?37253?4. £25.00. Philosophy and Knowledge: A Commentary on Plato's Theaetetus Ronald M. Polansky Associated University Presses, 1992. Pp. 260. ISBN 0?8387?5215?2. £29.95. Heidegger and French Philosophy: Humanism, Antihumanism and Being By Tom Rockmore Routledge, 1995. Pp. xx + 250. ISBN 0?415?11181?1. £14.99 pbk. Living Poetically: Kierkegaard's Existential Aesthetics By Sylvia Walsh The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1994. Pp. 294. ISBN 0?271?01328?1. (shrink)
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  35. Noel Malcolm, ed., The Correspondence ofThomas Hobbes.A. P. Martinich -1995 -Journal of the History of Philosophy 33 (4):686-687.
     
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  36.  23
    Review ofNoel Malcolm,Reason of State, Propaganda, and the Thirty Years' War: An Unknown Translation byThomas Hobbes[REVIEW]A. P. Martinich -2007 -Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007 (9).
  37.  26
    Leviathan, 3 vols., edited byNoel Malcolm, The Clarendon Edition of the Works ofThomas Hobbes, written byThomas Hobbbes.Juhana Lemetti -2015 -Hobbes Studies 28 (2):184-189.
  38.  32
    Two books onThomas Hobbes.Perez Zagorin -1999 -Journal of the History of Ideas 60 (2):361-371.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Two Books onThomas HobbesPerez ZagorinQuentin Skinner, Reason and Rhetoric in the Philosophy of Hobbes (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), xvi, 477p.The Correspondence ofThomas Hobbes, ed.Noel Malcolm, 2 vols. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994), lxxxv, 1008p.The literature on Hobbes in English and other European languages has grown so large in the past two decades that it has become almost unmanageable by students of the philosopher. (...) No one who is interested in Hobbes, however, can afford to overlook the two books that are reviewed here, the first, Quentin Skinner’s study of the relationship of Hobbes to rhetoric, and the second,Noel Malcolm’s edition of Hobbes’s correspondence.Skinner is well known not only as a leading British Hobbes scholar and historian of early modern political thought but likewise for his ideas concerning the correct method of studying the history of political philosophy. In a view akin to R. G. Collingwood’s he maintains that there are no permanent or perennial questions in political philosophy and that a historical approach based on a thorough comprehension of context is the only way to grasp what political philosophers are doing and saying when they write their texts. In implementing this prescription, he argues that to understand a historical text it is necessary to reconstruct its author’s intentions and the meaning of his ideas by ascertaining the linguistic conventions and usages and the intellectual currents and back-ground that form its context. He offers the present study both as an exem-plification of this method and as a new interpretation of the principles of Hobbes’s political philosophy which takes rhetoric as its focal theme. His aim, he tells us, is to situate Hobbes’s theory and practice of civil science within its intellectual context and to depict the philosopher less as the author of a philosophical system than as a contributor to a series of debates about the moral sciences within Renaissance culture. Our judgment of the success of his work will accordingly depend on whether or not we are satisfied that rhetoric possessed for Hobbes and his philosophy the crucial significance that Skinner claims for it [End Page 361].In recent years a number of scholars have discussed Hobbes’s attitude to rhetoric, and there have been at least two books on the subject. 1 Commensurate, however, with its ambitious goal of proffering a new interpretation of Hobbes’s work on politics, Skinner’s treatment of his involvement with rhetoric is much richer and far more learned than preceding studies. By rhetoric most people nowadays mean no more than a writer’s literary strategy, but this is not what Skinner intends by the term. He deals with rhetoric precisely as Hobbes would have understood it and in the sense it bore in the ancient world and the Renaissance, when it signified a major discipline of knowledge concerned with the various figures of speech and devices of language that constituted an art of persuasion and eloquence indispensable in the education of the orator, the statesman, the writer, and the gentleman.Skinner perceives Hobbes’s mind as formed in the early years of his career by his classical education and immersion in the literary-rhetorical culture of English Renaissance humanism derived from Greco-Roman antiquity and ancient authors on rhetoric like Aristotle, Cicero, and Quintilian. Starting from this point, he pictures Hobbes’s intellectual evolution as consisting of three successive stages: a humanist, a scientific, and a scientific-humanist. In the first, as a late Renaissance intellectual, Hobbes’s initial interest in politics as a civil science was shaped by his involvement in the humanistic disciplines of rhetoric, history, poetry, and moral and political philosophy. The result was the publication in 1629 of his English translation of Thucydides’ History, with the observations contained in his introduction. In the second stage he turned against the literary-rhetorical character of Renaissance culture and its approach to politics. This shift, which occurred in the 1630s, was caused by his discovery of the geometrical method, his pursuit of his scientific interests through his association with Sir Charles Cavendish and his friends, and his introduction to the Parisian scientific circle of Marin... (shrink)
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  39.  201
    Perspectives onThomas Hobbes.Graham Alan John Rogers &Alan Ryan (eds.) -1988 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This is the first in a series of occasional volumes of original papers on predefined themes. The Mind Association will nominate an editor or editors for each collection, and may join with other organizations in the promotion of conferences or other scholarly activities in connection with each volume. This collection, published to coincide with the 400th anniversary ofThomas Hobbes's birth, focuses on central themes in his life and work. Including essays by David Gauthier,Noel Malcolm, Arrigo Pacchi, (...) David Raphael, Tom Sorrell, Francois Tricaud, and Richard Tuck, the book testifies to Hobbes's enduring importance as a major philosopher and helps to unravel those aspects of his intellectual biography that are relevant to a proper appreciation of his philosophy. (shrink)
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  40.  24
    The Correspondence ofThomas Hobbes. [REVIEW]Paul A. Clark -1996 -Review of Metaphysics 49 (4):926-928.
    This is the first complete collection of the correspondence of Hobbes and as such fills an important gap in the published writing of the man who is probably the most important political philosopher of the modern age.Noel Malcolm has done an admirable job of assembling and annotating the correspondence. The work contains complete critical apparatus including a detailed index, an extensive bibliography, and a biographical register providing a short description of each of Hobbes's correspondents. Each entry is printed (...) in the original language as well as in English translation. While this pushes the edition over into two volumes, it is certainly well justified in making the work useful for professional philosophers as well as accessible to students. The letters are transcribed as precisely as possible, including margin notes and interliniations. The editor also shows good judgement in excluding certain treatises which appear in epistolary form but which have previously appeared in print. (shrink)
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  41.  50
    Hobbes's correspondence.Karl Schuhmann -1997 -British Journal for the History of Philosophy 5 (1):121 – 149.
    Thomas Hobbes, The Correspondence edited byNoel Malcolm. Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1994, pp. lxxvi-1008. ISBN 0-19-824065-1, 0-19-824099-6. 60.00 each.
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  42.  30
    Treatise on the Virtues.Thomas Aquinas -2022 - Prentice-Hall.
    In his Treatise on the Virtues, Aquinas discusses the character and function of habit; the essence, subject, cause, and meaning of virtue; and the separate intellectual, moral, cardinal, and theological virtues. His work constitutes one of the most thorough and incisive accounts of virtue in the history of Christian philosophy. John Oesterle's accurate and elegant translation makes this enduring work readily accessible to the modern reader.
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  43.  31
    Hobbes on the Grand Tour: Paris, Venice, or London?Linda Levy Peck -1996 -Journal of the History of Ideas 57 (1):177-183.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Hobbes on the Grand Tour: Paris, Venice, or London?Linda Levy PeckHobbes scholars have long been frustrated by how little contemporary evidence exists for the period when, after graduating from University in 1608, Hobbes was appointed by Lord Cavendish as tutor to his son Sir William Cavendish. Based on a license to travel granted in February 1610 1 and a parenthetical date in a late seventeenth-century source, 2 scholars from (...) George Croom Robertson (1886) to John Stoye (1952 and 2nd ed. 1989), Miriam Reik (1977),Noel Malcolm (1981), Arnold A. Rogow (1986), Richard Tuck (1989 and 1993), and Johann Sommerville (1992) have asserted that Hobbes and Cavendish left on the Grand Tour in 1610. Scholars have claimed that the trip to France, Italy, and perhaps Germany lasted anywhere from three to five years, and they have speculated as to where Hobbes and Cavendish went and whom they met. Robertson wroteThe first journey, which lay through France, Germany, and Italy, was begun in the year when France and Europe were thrown into consternation by the deed by Ravaillac; and so readily does the fanatic’s name slip from his pen even half a century later, that we may well suppose the future apostle of the inviolability of the sovereign to have been moved by what he may have heard or seen of the tragic event and its consequences at the time. 3 [End Page 177]Arnold A. Rogow inThomas Hobbes, Radical in the Service of Reaction, expands on Robertson’s point by suggesting thatthe tour of 1610, close in time to the murder of Henry IV, if not overlapping it, may have been decisive in convincing Hobbes of the dangers to society and civil peace of religious fanaticism. Guy Fawkes and his coconspirators in the 1605 Gunpowder Plot and François Ravaillac were all fanatical Catholics, and Hobbes, although he wrote nothing about these conspiracies at the time, may have decided when still a young man that the single most important condition for domestic order and stability was the total and absolute submission of religion to political authority. 4While noting that the first forty years were the “dark years” in Hobbes life, Miriam Reik agrees on the date of the trip: “In 1610, the Baron sent his son for that indispensable part of a seventeenth century nobleman’s education, the Grand Tour; Hobbes went along as an escort the journey receives scant notice in his writing.” 5 Stoye commented that “Perplexed biographers can only state that Hobbes accompanied Cavendish on a journey to France and Italy, commencing in the year 1610.” 6Noel Malcolm tried to establish a chronology for the Grand Tour in his article “Hobbes, Sandys and the Virginia Company,” 7 demonstrating that Cavendish was back in England for the Parliament of 1614 to which he was elected although he was soon back in Venice on a second trip. 8 Later, in his De Dominus (1984), 9 Malcolm suggested in a footnote that the account book of the first Earl of Devonshire (Chatsworth, Hardwick Ms. 29), supported only one trip between 1614 and 1615 but he provided no detailed evidence. In his edition ofThomas Hobbes: The Correspondence (1994) Malcolm remains cautious and does not address the issue. Richard Tuck, however, is more confident: he writes that “And when Lord Cavendish sent his son off on what would later be called ‘the Grand Tour’ between 1610 and 1615, Hobbes accompanied him as a tutor.” 10 Tuck argues that Hobbes and Cavendish met Paolo Sarpi and other Venetian controversialists at the height of the Venetian interdict controversy between 1610 and 1615. [End Page 178]Between 1610 and 1615 Hobbes accompanied Cavendish as his tutor... on a tour of Europe in which Venice seems to have been a particularly important stopping-place. (Noel Malcolm (1981, pp. 319–20) claims that Cavendish sat in the 1614 Parliament, and that therefore the tour must have been interrupted; but it is probable that Cavendish’s cousin (also called William), later the Earl of New-castle, was elected for both East Retford and the county of Derbyshire, and that he was the only William Cavendish in the 1614 Parliament... (shrink)
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  44. Latent impulse in history and politics.RobertNoel Bradley -1911 - London,: Murray & Evenden.
     
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  45. That in View of Which.Pierre-Noèl Mayaud -1986 -Epistemologia 9 (2):309-342.
  46.  14
    Introduction to semantics: an essential guide to the composition of meaning.Thomas Ede Zimmermann -2013 - Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
    This textbook introduces undergraduate students of language and linguistics to the basic ideas, insights, and techniques of contemporary semantic theory. The book starts with everyday observations about word meaning and use and then gradually zooms in on the question of how speakers manage to meaningfully communicate with phrases, sentences, and texts they have never come across before. Extensive English examples provide ample illustration.
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  47.  19
    Overcoming Uncertainty in Ancient Greek Political Philosophy.J.Noel Hubler -2021 - Springer Verlag.
    Overcoming Uncertainty in Ancient Greek Political Philosophy makes an historical and theoretical contribution by explaining the role of opinion in ancient Greek political philosophy, showing its importance for Aristotle’s theory of deliberation, and indicating a new model for a deliberative republic. Currently, there are no studies of opinion in ancient Greek political theory and so the book breaks new historical ground. The book establishes that opinion is key for the political theories of Plato, Aristotle, and the Stoics because each sees (...) uncertainty as a problem that needs to be overcome if one is to establish a virtuous polity. Since they have different notions of the nature of the uncertainty of opinion, they develop very different political strategies to overcome it. The book explains that Plato’s and the Stoics’ analyses of uncertainty support oligarchy and monarchy, respectively, and that theoretical support for deliberate politics requires a more nuanced understanding of uncertainty that only Aristotle provides. (shrink)
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  48.  285
    Philosophy and Film: Bridging Divides.Christina Rawls,Diana Neiva &Steven S. Gouveia (eds.) -2019 - New York: Routledge Press, Research on Aesthetics.
    This volume collects twenty original essays on the philosophy of film. It uniquely brings together scholars working across a range of philosophical traditions and academic disciplines to broaden and advance debates on film and philosophy. The book includes contributions from a number of prominent philosophers of film including Noël Carroll, Chris Falzon, Deborah Knight, Paisley Livingston, Robert Sinnerbrink, Malcolm Turvey, andThomas Wartenberg. While the topics explored by the contributors are diverse, there are a number of thematic threads that (...) connect them. Overall, the book seeks to bridge analytic and continental approaches to philosophy of film in fruitful ways. Moving to the individual essays, the first two sections offer novel takes on the philosophical value and the nature of film. The next section focuses on the film-as-philosophy debate. Section IV covers cinematic experience, while Section V includes interpretations of individual films that touch on questions of artificial intelligence, race and film, and cinema's biopolitical potential. Finally, the last section proposes new avenues for future research on the moving image beyond film. This book will appeal to a broad range of scholars working in film studies, theory, and philosophy. (shrink)
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  49.  19
    John Duns Scotus: Selected Writings on Ethics.Thomas Williams (ed.) -2017 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Thomas Williams presents the most extensive collection of John Duns Scotus's work on ethics and moral psychology available in English. This accessible and philosophically informed translation includes extended discussions on divine and human freedom, the moral attributes of God, and the relationship between will and intellect.
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  50.  13
    Journalistes : ce qui se dit, ce qui se passe.Jean-noël Darde -1998 -Hermes 22:121.
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