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The Philosopher Among Philosophers

Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies, 2014
Hiram J. McLendon (1919–2000) was an American philosopher who taught at Berkeley, Harvard and New York University. Awarded Harvard’s Sheldon Traveling Fellowship for 1946–47, he studied with Bertrand Russell that year at Trinity College, Cambridge. His assistance with the manuscript of Human Knowledge was acknowledged.
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The philosophical basis of medicine as a philosophical question

Theoretical Medicine, 1987
The question of the philosophical basis of medical science and medical practice is considered under three closely related themes: (i) the doctor-patient relationship, (ii) the structure of the medical-ethical discourse, and (iii) the problem of philosophical founding in relation to medical conduct.
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Dewey and Peirce, the Philosopher's Philosopher

Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education, 2001
Three arguments are presented in this article that point to discontinuity rather than continuity in John Dewey's philosophical views. First, the author examines and critiques the most comprehensive current account of the development of Dewey's thinking early to late based on the assumption of continuity.
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What is Philosophical in Philosophical Counselling?

Journal of Applied Philosophy, 1996
After a short description of the nature of philosophical counselling, this paper suggests that what makes philosophical counselling philosophical is that it helps the counsellee in philosophical self‐investigations. These are critical non‐empirical investigations of the fundamental principles underlying the counsellee's ‘lived understanding’(i.e ...
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Philosopher Defying the Philosophers

2019
Descartes’s life was marked by a series of remarkable innovations in mathematics, science, and philosophy, as much as by the philosopher’s frequent changes of environment. In 1628 he returned to the Netherlands, where he had begun his philosophical journey ten years earlier, and where he was soon to embark on writing a mechanistic system of the world ...
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Mushrooms and philosophers

Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 1981
Abstract The fifth-century philosopher Socrates was satirized by his contemporary, the comic poet Aristophanes, in the Birds as conducting a rite of necromancy in the company of a group of people called the “Shade-foots”, a fabulous tribe from India who were thought to jump about on a single foot that could also be used as a parasol. The historical
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Philosophical Expertise

Philosophy Compass, 2014
Abstract Recent work in experimental philosophy has indicated that intuitions may be subject to several forms of bias, thereby casting doubt on the viability of intuition as an evidential source in philosophy. A common reply to these findings is the ‘expertise defense’ – the claim that although biases may be found in the intuitions of
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