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  1. (2 other versions)Reason Over Passion: The Social Basis of Evaluation and Appraisal.Evan Simpson - 1979 - Waterloo, Ont.: Wilfrid Laurier Press.
    "Reason is not passion's slave." Rather, the author argues, reason appraises the cultural appropriateness of passion, thus directing our attitudinal behaviour. He refutes those theories of value which correspond philosophically to societies described by Jean-Jacques Rousseau: societies of "honour without virtue, reason without wisdom, pleasure without happiness." His argument, which takes into account traditional philosophic positions, is divided into five parts: Attitudes, Evaluation, Characterization, Culture, Morality.
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  • Spinoza, Explained.Stephen Harrop - 2022 - Dissertation, Yale University
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  • The politics of mental illness.Ronald de Sousa - 1972 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 15 (1-4):187-202.
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  • Explanation and teleology.Larry Wright - 1972 - Philosophy of Science 39 (2):204-218.
    This paper develops and draws the consequences of an etiological analysis of goal-directedness modeled on one that functions centrally in Charles Taylor's work on action. The author first presents, criticizes, and modifies Taylor's formulation, and then shows his modified formulation accounts easily for much of the fine-structure of teleological concepts and conceptualizations. Throughout, the author is at pains to show that teleological explanations are orthodox from an empiricist's point of view: they require nothing novel methodologically.
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  • Mechanisms and purposive behavior III.Larry Wright - 1974 - Philosophy of Science 41 (4):345-360.
    It is commonly thought that the dispositional view of purposiveness is itself incompatible with the programmatic claims of neurophysiologists. In this paper, various versions of four arguments for this incompatibility are examined, and rejected as unsound. Central to the argument is a rough sketch of a "mechanistic" position which seems clearly compatible with a dispositional view of purposiveness.
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  • From an intentionalist perspective.Richard L. Smith - 1974 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 17 (1-4):1 – 22.
    In order to expound and defend the intentionalist thesis that human actions are intentionally determined by persons, selves, or agents themselves I first argue that teleological explanation, even though it is consistent with physicalism and scientifically respectable in the sense of being an attempt to establish the conditions under which things and events occur and to formulate laws that express such dependencies, is not exactly coordinate with and replaceable by mechanistic explanation. Then, I argue that living human beings must be (...)
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