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  Found 25 text references:



1." Collegium members and associate members, signatories of the Appeal, are scientists, philosophers and present and former Heads of State and Government, recognized for their probity, expertise and unquestionable dedication to ethical values."

Source:  Goldman, Sacha. "An ethical think-link" UN Chronicle 41.1 Mar. 1 2004: 75-76

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2." This book will appeal most to analytic philosophers and philosophers of music."

Source:  H. SAVAGE, ROGER W. "Of Mind and Music" Notes 56.3 Mar. 1 2000: 683

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3."... matrix" that is by definition hidden from view, making historical intelligibility dependent on a desiccated remnant of Foucault's episteme, a concept the philosopher himself came to reject as too conventionally rational."

Source:  Kale, Steven. "Goodness Beyond Virtue: Jacobins During the French Revolution" Historian 62.4 June 22 2000: 920

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4." His arguments seem to me conclusive against the one, but not against the other...." He even appeals to the authority of Leibniz in this, assuming that the German philosopher's..."

Source:  MILNES, TIM. "Seeing in the Dark: Hazlitt's Immanent Idealism" Studies in Romanticism 39.1 Mar. 22 2000: 3

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5." The 19th-century Danish philosopher S[oslash{o}]ren Kirkegaard said that, whatever choice a person makes, there will always be others, just as good, perhaps better, which by definition cannot be made."

Source:  Cairncross, Frances. "The curse of the Chinese menu" New Statesman (1996) 129.4496 July 24 2000: 25

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6."... Nonsense!(51) We might continue to flesh out the history of racial discourse by appealing to the work of the philosopher and doyen of the Harlem renaissance, Alain Locke."

Source:  Taylor, Paul C. "Appiah's Uncompleted Argument: W.E.B. Du Bois and the Reality of Race" Social Theory and Practice 26.1 Mar. 22 2000: 103

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7." The definition of experiential learning used in the present study is based on the writings of the American philosopher John Dewey."

Source:  Wikstrom, Britt-Maj. "Nursing Education at an Art Gallery" Journal of Nursing Scholarship 32.2 June 22 2000: 197

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8." This book will appeal to other philosophers of consciousness, who are lionized throughout it, but it does not provide the ideal starting point for those..."

Source:  Domhoff, G. William. "Meaningful Byproducts" American Scientist 88.3 May 1 2000: 282

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9." From the viewpoint of the classical philosopher, the one thing philosophy must avoid is to accept "the ends of the demos as beyond appeal." Yet it was precisely such an inward submission that Christianity..."

Source:  Merrill, Clark A. "Leo Strauss's Indictment of Christain Philosophy" Review of Politics 62.1 Jan. 1 2000: 77

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10."... philosopher Robert Nozick's minimalist definition of a government as an organization providing basic protection to citizens from disorder.(22) They do not do this, nor do they allow others to do this, because..."

Source:  RENO, WILLIAM. "Clandestine Economies, Violence and States in Africa" Journal of International Affairs 53.2 Mar. 22 2000: 433

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11." The human capital advocates appeal to mainstream economists, bankers, including the World Bank, and technocrats; the human capability advocates to the churches, NGOs, action groups, idealists, and moral and political philosophers."

Source:  STREETEN, PAUL. "Freedom and Welfare: A Review Essay on Amartya Sen, Developmentas Freedom [*]" Population and Development Review 26.1 Mar. 1 2000: 153

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12." Analytic philosophers appeal to "a covering law model of explanation for all human action" (393), in which the presumed timeless regularity of the universe, properly articulated in logical or mathematical laws, gives them the permanent truth about things."

Source:  Auxier, Randall E. "The Humbling of the Pride" Humanitas 12.2 Sept. 22 1999: 114

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13." Hart was aware that some philosophers had purported to "solve" difficult substantive controversies about the justification of punishment by resorting to definitions."

Source:  HUSAK, DOUGLAS N. "Philosophical Analysis and the Limits of the Substantive Criminal Law" Criminal Justice Ethics 18.2 June 22 1999: 58

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14."... not coherent and so philosophers should feel free to appeal to the social nature of reason in their accounts of moral normativity. "The only reasons that are possible are the reasons we can share,"(10) according to Korsgaard."

Source:  Cholbi, Michael J. "Egoism and the Publicity of Reason: A Reply to Korsgaard" Social Theory and Practice 25.3 Sept. 22 1999: 491

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15." In one of his last public appearances, he tried once again to set the record straight, striving as always to escape labels and definitions, denying he was either an intellectual or a philosophe. "I'm..."

Source:  Mathy, Jean-Philippe. "Albert Camus: A Life" Cross Currents 48.4 Dec. 22 1998: 552-556

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16." Henotheism encourages "healthy speculation," a trait that Meyers seems to assume his intended audience (comparative philosophers, Western-trained) will find appealing."

Source:  Nelson, Lance E. "Let the Cow Wander: Modeling the Metaphors in Veda and Vedanta" Philosophy East and West v48.n3 July 1 1998: 541-544

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17." Hogarth's robust appeal to plain common sense harmonizes with the way the great British philosophers of his age spoke, without obscurity or jargon, to honest men and women who have no problems with how the world is unless corrupted by philosophy: "We have..."

Source:  Danto, Arthur. "Discourses on Art" Artforum International v36.n10 June 22 1998: 10-13

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18."... physicalistic modern medicine to a fuller appreciation of each whole human life as unique and irreplaceable from conception on. Definition, sense, nonsense, and hermeneutics are matters known to philosophers more than to physicians."

Source:  Sheridan, Edward J. "Tymieniecka, Anna-Teresa, and Evandro AGAZZI, editors. Life--Interpretation and the Sense of Illness within the Human Condition: Medicine and Philosophy in a Dialogue" Review of Metaphysics 57.2 Dec. 1 2003: 443-446

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19."... thinks itself free but is in chains, and must be appealed to by the philosopher-king (and poet) who is free but must pretend to be in chains, and at the mercy of the audience-city" (p. 63)."

Source:  Johnson, J. Scott. "Shakespeare and the Good Life: Ethics and Politics in DramaticForm" American Political Science Review 92.4 Dec. 1 1998: 933-935

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20." It should be also said that, unfortunately, any attempt to narrow down this definition inevitably makes the term's actual use by philosophers, literary critics, and cultural historians similar..."

Source:  Sobolev, Dennis. "Gerard Manley Hopkins and the language of mysticism" Christianity and Literature 53.4 June 22 2004: 455-481

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21." Byline: Frank Gaffney Jr., THE WASHINGTON TIMES Philosopher George Santayana said, "Fanaticism consists in redoubling your effort when you have forgotten your aim." By that definition, there seems to be an outbreak of fanaticism in official Washington..."

Source:  . "Deforming intelligence" Washington Times Dec. 7 2004: 19

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22." For the critic as well as for the philosopher, definitions are most productively thought of as arguments: "even uncontroversial definitions function as claims about how part of the world should be conceptualized; how part of the world is" (Schiappa, 1993, p. 404)."

Source:  Broda-Bahm, Kenneth T. "Finding protection in definitions: the quest for environmental security" Argumentation and Advocacy 35.4 Mar. 22 1999: 159-160

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23." The task of the political philosopher, as Rawls presented it, was to find principles that underlay our settled convictions of justice and then use these principles in turn to settle more difficult problems."

Source:  Rogers, Ben. "The good life" New Statesman (1996) 128.4454 Sept. 20 1999: 55

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24." In fact+ while admitting the existence of many versions of conservative or right-wing thought, McMahon concentrates on the anti-philosophes, who in his definition are those individuals whose fundamental premise lay in an opposition to the Enlightenment."

Source:  Censer, Jack R. "Enemies of the Enlightenment: The French Counter-Enlightenment and the Making of Modernity" Journal of Social History 36.2 Dec. 22 2002: 528-531

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25."... where to draw the line between science and technology or between the natural philosopher who discovered principles and the inventor who built machines."

Source:  Hunt, Bruce J. "Did Nike Say to `Just Do It" American Scientist 87.5 Sept. 1 1999: 475

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