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The Ethics of Belief

2007
Abstract This chapter is concerned with criminal liability in cases where the defendant had mistaken beliefs about the outcome of his or her actions. It is sometimes argued, by subjectivists, that we can be responsible for causing a certain outcome only if we were aware of at least the risk of that outcome coming about.
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The Ethics of Belief Reconsidered

The Journal of Religion, 1979
In the decades following the Enlightenment, it must have been particularly disturbing to the Christian intellectual to be told that faith itself is an irresponsible act. The assumption lying behind this accusation was, of course, that the genuine lover of truth is a person who does not entertain any proposition with a greater degree of assurance than ...
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Ethical Beliefs of Psychotherapists: Scientific Findings

Journal of Contemporary Psychotherapy, 1998
Psychotherapists from the four primary mental health professions (counselors, psychiatrists, psychologists, and social workers) were surveyed regarding the ethicality of 83 psychotherapy-related behaviors. Results indicated a relatively high degree of consensus among psychotherapists of various disciplines regarding their ethical beliefs about the ...
Andrew Pomerantz   +3 more
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Ethical Practices and Beliefs of Psychopathology Researchers

Ethics & Behavior, 1995
Ethical guidelines are vague concerning how situations should be handled when researchers encounter participants in preexisting psychological distress. Ethical issues of beneficence, autonomy, and the nature of informed consent may arise in these situations.
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The Ethics of Belief and the Ethics of Teaching

Journal of Philosophy of Education, 1998
Notwithstanding its obvious educational importance, the idea of an ethics of belief has been little explored by educational philosophers. The notion turns out to be more complex and to involve more difficulties than is usually supposed. Exploring these complexities and difficulties opens up many avenues of philosophical and educational inquiry.
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Falsafa as Ethics of Belief

2016
In this chapter, I begin to make the case for considering the great, medieval Islamic philosophers—the falasifa—through the prism of contemporary, Western scholarship on the ethics of belief. Within the Islamic intellectual movement, I identify three types of thought that can be classified as Evidentialist, non-Evidentialist and anti-Evidentialist.
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Firth and the Ethics of Belief

Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 1991
I trust that I may begin on a personal note. It was one September day in 1938 that I first met Rod Firth when we both enrolled in Ralph Barton Perry's seminar on "The General Theory of Value." Firth and I began almost at once to discuss and to argue about philosophy and we continued to do this for almost fifty years. I am honored and deeply moved to be
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The Ethics of Alien Beliefs

2014
People do not always really believe what they take themselves to believe [1]. A person may sincerely say that a certain racist belief is definitively false, but still hold such a belief. When asked what she believes about something, it is likely that she simply expresses her opinion about the issue in question, and this reveals what she takes herself ...
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Ethical Beliefs of Marketing Managers

Journal of Marketing, 1978
O. C. Ferrell   +3 more
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