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  1. Race: A Social Destruction of a Biological Concept.Neven Sesardic - 2010 - Biology and Philosophy 25 (2):143-162.
    It is nowadays a dominant opinion in a number of disciplines (anthropology, genetics, psychology, philosophy of science) that the taxonomy of human races does not make much biological sense. My aim is to challenge the arguments that are usually thought to invalidate the biological concept of race. I will try to show that the way “race” was defined by biologists several decades ago (by Dobzhansky and others) is in no way discredited by conceptual criticisms that are now fashionable and widely (...)
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  • Education and the Individual.Brenda Cohen - 1983 - Mind 92 (367):472-474.
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  • Education and the Individual.Patrick C. Souper - 1982 - British Journal of Educational Studies 30 (3):356-357.
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  • Against Empiricism. On Education, Epistemology, and Value.R. F. Holland - 1980 - Philosophy 57 (222):553-555.
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  • Ideology and Curriculum.Geoff Whitty & Michael W. Apple - 1982 - British Journal of Educational Studies 30 (2):248.
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  • The Ethics of Humanistic Scholarship: On Knowledge and Acknowledgement.Isaac Nevo - 2013 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 7 (3):266-298.
    My aim in this paper is to characterize the professional good served by the humanities as various academic disciplines, particularly in relation to the general academic good, namely, the pursuit of knowledge in theoretical and scholarly research, and to evaluate the public and ethical dimension of that professional good and the constraints it imposes upon practitioners. My argument will be that the humanities aim at both knowledge of objective facts and acknowledgement of the human status of their subject matter, and (...)
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