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Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2016) 125 (1): 35–82.
Published: 01 January 2016
... be exported to the know-how debate. On the one hand, some of the expressivists' semantic resources can be used to deflect Stanley and Williamson's influential argument for factualism about know-how: the claim that knowing how to do something consists in knowing a fact. On the other, expressivism provides...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2001) 110 (4): 495–519.
Published: 01 October 2001
... of Experience-Based Control) is hostage to empirical fortune. It is a hostage, moreover, whose safety is in serious doubt. Thus Milner and Goodale (1995) argue for a deep and abiding dissociation between the contents of conscious seeing, on the one hand, and the resources used for the online guidance...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2000) 109 (4): 601–604.
Published: 01 October 2000
.... Dworkin, Ronald. 1981a . “What Is Equality? Part I: Equality of Welfare.” Philosophy and Public Affairs 10 : 185 -246. ____. 1981b . “What Is Equality? Part II: Equality of Resources.” Philosophy and Public Affairs 10 : 283 -345. Mandle, Jon. 2000 . What's Left of Liberalism...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2007) 116 (4): 603–632.
Published: 01 October 2007
... the concept of primary goods; Dworkin, resources; Sen, capabilities or func- tionings; and various other criteria have been proposed.1 This article examines those alternatives to well-being, most clearly Rawls’s primary goods, Sen’s capabilities, and related approaches, that share two common...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2004) 113 (4): 584–587.
Published: 01 October 2004
... proposal 584 BOOK REVIEWS for a global resource dividend that will provide a global development fund through taxing natural resource extraction (chap. 8). An unfortunate omis- sion here (though I suspect this is due more to timing...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2005) 114 (1): 142–144.
Published: 01 January 2005
... and powers. Unlike those counterparts, however, they deny that these rights entitle people to significantly unequal shares of the world’s resources. Otsuka aims to lay bare the complete system of political morality he thinks is present in Locke’s Second Treatise. He takes several crucial ideas from...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2022) 131 (4): 507–510.
Published: 01 October 2022
... invites us to entertain a different way of thinking about and connecting these topics—one with something interesting to say about the value of freedom and the psychological resources that we need to be responsible for what we make of ourselves. In addition to developing a compelling account...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2001) 110 (3): 472–475.
Published: 01 July 2001
... to separate out something like the purely visual contribution to perceptual experience in order to explain picturing in terms of this fragment rather than in terms of the unified resources of conceptually informed perception. Perceptualist approaches to ‘Hopkins also aims to use this account...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2015) 124 (2): 275–278.
Published: 01 April 2015
... operators on that Hilbert space, in a way that is unavailable in the abstract setting. Thus each interpretation suffers from limitations that the other does not. To adjudicate between the interpretations, Ruetsche takes them to the trenches, to see which provides the resources to support the actual...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2018) 127 (4): 545–550.
Published: 01 October 2018
... (criticizing Razian accounts of authority, for example). And it shows how the philosophical arguments it develops can be brought to bear on real-world problems (such as sovereign resource claims and recent moves around the world to restrict immigration). The book is wide-ranging, but its central focus...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2012) 121 (2): 285–290.
Published: 01 April 2012
...- ceeds by exploiting the resources of metaphor. “Science uses metaphor—natu- ral selection, continental drift, force, work, attraction, charm, genetic code, Oedipus complex—to structure experience and to build our models of under- standing” (21). Especially important are the “root” metaphors, which...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2012) 121 (2): 291–293.
Published: 01 April 2012
...- ceeds by exploiting the resources of metaphor. “Science uses metaphor—natu- ral selection, continental drift, force, work, attraction, charm, genetic code, Oedipus complex—to structure experience and to build our models of under- standing” (21). Especially important are the “root” metaphors, which...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2012) 121 (2): 294–298.
Published: 01 April 2012
...- ceeds by exploiting the resources of metaphor. “Science uses metaphor—natu- ral selection, continental drift, force, work, attraction, charm, genetic code, Oedipus complex—to structure experience and to build our models of under- standing” (21). Especially important are the “root” metaphors, which...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2012) 121 (2): 298–301.
Published: 01 April 2012
...- ceeds by exploiting the resources of metaphor. “Science uses metaphor—natu- ral selection, continental drift, force, work, attraction, charm, genetic code, Oedipus complex—to structure experience and to build our models of under- standing” (21). Especially important are the “root” metaphors, which...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2012) 121 (2): 302–304.
Published: 01 April 2012
...- ceeds by exploiting the resources of metaphor. “Science uses metaphor—natu- ral selection, continental drift, force, work, attraction, charm, genetic code, Oedipus complex—to structure experience and to build our models of under- standing” (21). Especially important are the “root” metaphors, which...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2012) 121 (2): 304–308.
Published: 01 April 2012
...- ceeds by exploiting the resources of metaphor. “Science uses metaphor—natu- ral selection, continental drift, force, work, attraction, charm, genetic code, Oedipus complex—to structure experience and to build our models of under- standing” (21). Especially important are the “root” metaphors, which...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2018) 127 (2): 229–232.
Published: 01 April 2018
..., such as Jörg Hardy's (2011, 179–212) solution to the paradox of inquiry. The resources of current philosophy of discovery would also have improved the book. Benson formulates the method as a two-part proof stage and a two-part confirmation stage. “In the first, or proof, stage [Pa] one seeks to identify...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2021) 130 (3): 467–471.
Published: 01 July 2021
..., but the title of this richly rewarding book is an exception. Arindam Chakrabarti’s thesis is that realism about external objects, realism about selves (as subjects of experience), and realism about the existence of other minds (other subjectivities) are interlinked. Using resources drawn from classical Indian...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2007) 116 (3): 361–399.
Published: 01 July 2007
... [1975]’s pairing of sentences with propositions. 2. They differ about which resources they will allow them- selves in characterizing the data. Lewis explicitly appeals to a coarse-grained characterization of the content of proposi- tional attitudes...
Journal Article
The Philosophical Review (2016) 125 (1): 148–151.
Published: 01 January 2016
... institutions turn natural facts about resources and territory into inequalities of wealth and power. The luck-egalitarian idea, in the last third of the book, is rendered a plausible and powerful basis for criticism of global inequality. We have reason to care about global economic inequality, since...