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consumer
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Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2017) 126 (2): 295–300.
Published: 01 April 2017
... of artificial ingredients, and the virtues and vices of locavorism. But PCD is particularly valuable because it teaches two lessons: Despite the many sins of industrial animal agriculture, it's hard to explain why individual consumers shouldn't purchase its products. Even if individual consumers...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2023) 132 (2): 349–353.
Published: 01 April 2023
..., a “simple economic system (SES)” is one that is constituted by a type of producer, a type of product, a type of consumer, and a type of return. For example, consider the practice of producing and consuming espresso at a local coffee shop (SES-Espresso). In SES-Espresso, baristas (producers) produce cups...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2000) 109 (4): 598–601.
Published: 01 October 2000
... of distributive justice should be “ambition-sensitive”
but not “endowment-sensitive.” That is, it will allow inequalities that reflect
the fact that some people “choose to invest rather than consume, or to
consume less expensively rather than more, or to work in more rather than
less profitable ways...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2000) 109 (4): 601–604.
Published: 01 October 2000
... equality of welfare, and in particular, he maintains that a prop-
er egalitarian theory of distributive justice should be “ambition-sensitive”
but not “endowment-sensitive.” That is, it will allow inequalities that reflect
the fact that some people “choose to invest rather than consume...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2009) 118 (1): 103–107.
Published: 01 January 2009
... the essential components of the theory are here, in a relatively accessi-
ble form, some having been refined over the years. The basic idea behind
teleosemantics will be familiar. Representations arise as causal intermediaries
between cooperating producer and consumer systems. The content of a par-
ticular...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2009) 118 (1): 108–112.
Published: 01 January 2009
... the essential components of the theory are here, in a relatively accessi-
ble form, some having been refined over the years. The basic idea behind
teleosemantics will be familiar. Representations arise as causal intermediaries
between cooperating producer and consumer systems. The content of a par-
ticular...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2009) 118 (1): 112–115.
Published: 01 January 2009
... the essential components of the theory are here, in a relatively accessi-
ble form, some having been refined over the years. The basic idea behind
teleosemantics will be familiar. Representations arise as causal intermediaries
between cooperating producer and consumer systems. The content of a par-
ticular...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2009) 118 (1): 115–121.
Published: 01 January 2009
... the essential components of the theory are here, in a relatively accessi-
ble form, some having been refined over the years. The basic idea behind
teleosemantics will be familiar. Representations arise as causal intermediaries
between cooperating producer and consumer systems. The content of a par-
ticular...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2009) 118 (1): 121–127.
Published: 01 January 2009
... the essential components of the theory are here, in a relatively accessi-
ble form, some having been refined over the years. The basic idea behind
teleosemantics will be familiar. Representations arise as causal intermediaries
between cooperating producer and consumer systems. The content of a par-
ticular...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2009) 118 (1): 127–130.
Published: 01 January 2009
... the essential components of the theory are here, in a relatively accessi-
ble form, some having been refined over the years. The basic idea behind
teleosemantics will be familiar. Representations arise as causal intermediaries
between cooperating producer and consumer systems. The content of a par-
ticular...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2009) 118 (1): 131–134.
Published: 01 January 2009
... the essential components of the theory are here, in a relatively accessi-
ble form, some having been refined over the years. The basic idea behind
teleosemantics will be familiar. Representations arise as causal intermediaries
between cooperating producer and consumer systems. The content of a par-
ticular...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2009) 118 (1): 134–138.
Published: 01 January 2009
... the essential components of the theory are here, in a relatively accessi-
ble form, some having been refined over the years. The basic idea behind
teleosemantics will be familiar. Representations arise as causal intermediaries
between cooperating producer and consumer systems. The content of a par-
ticular...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2009) 118 (1): 138–144.
Published: 01 January 2009
... the essential components of the theory are here, in a relatively accessi-
ble form, some having been refined over the years. The basic idea behind
teleosemantics will be familiar. Representations arise as causal intermediaries
between cooperating producer and consumer systems. The content of a par-
ticular...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2014) 123 (2): 244–247.
Published: 01 April 2014
... and technologies” (172). Higher-rated companies could market their goods with a ‘Fair Trade Bio’ label, much like the ‘Fair Trade’ labels that are currently used to market coffee and other consumer goods. Hassoun anticipates that this rating system could be the focus both of activism and of coordination...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2013) 122 (4): 664–667.
Published: 01 October 2013
... prevalent among, but not exclusive to, economists. It is tempting to think of trade as merely a disconnected set of discrete market exchanges between individual firms or consumers. On this picture, talk of fair distribution of the benefits and burdens of trade seems inapt: we don't usually impose fairness...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2001) 110 (1): 108–110.
Published: 01 January 2001
... of self-medication (182-84). So is an addict’s choice to consume
their drug rational or not? Elster says the matter is debatable and, in painstak-
ing detail, he examines these and other models in light of that question. In
the end he favors the view that addictive choice is irrational (147, 169...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2019) 128 (1): 63–105.
Published: 01 January 2019
... similarly ambiguous, we would expect sentences like, “The rumor, which is vicious, is that Jim consumes peyote,” and “The vicious rumor is that Jim consumes peyote,” to sound similarly bad, due to conflicting selection requirements imposed by the two predicates (cf. Pryor 2007 on desire and purchase...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2015) 124 (3): 422–425.
Published: 01 July 2015
... and their managers to take over more of the public sphere than they have already taken over. A healthy democracy is one in which citizens decide what services will be publicly provided, and how much they will tax themselves to provide those services, not one in which citizens are passive consumers of corporate...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2023) 132 (1): 155–158.
Published: 01 January 2023
... in the shadows under the burden of their all-consuming passion. The first murder in the Bible—Cain slaying Abel—is usually portrayed as being the result of envy. No wonder, then, that my friends were so horrified by the centrality of this emotion in Ferrante’s quartet. What was more surprising, in fact...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2011) 120 (4): 475–513.
Published: 01 October 2011
... by the subject’s experience (it was not, for example,
touchable by reaching out in that way). Those who are broadly sympa-
thetic to a consumer semantics (Millikan 1989), as I am, will hold that the
Davidson by Rorty in a footnote in Rorty 1989), but for a recent defense of this idea with
respect...
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