Now showing items 35-45 of 45

    • The Aesthetic Appreciation of Ruins 

      Scarbrough, Elizabeth Anne
      It is the goal of my dissertation to explain our peculiar aesthetic fascination with architectural ruins and to show why ruins are worthy of our time and aesthetic appreciation. I propose a model of aesthetic appreciation ...
    • The Mismeasure of Woman: The Epistemic and Social Impacts of Gendered Citation Practices 

      McCusker, Darcy
      This dissertation will explore the philosophical problems that arise from the finding that women are cited less frequently than men in a number of sciences, what I’ll call gendered citation practices. Gendered citation ...
    • The priority of being to truth according to Aristotle 

      Miller, Fred D. (1969)
      There appears to be a difficulty in the account which Aristotle offers of being and truth in the Categories and De Interpretatione. In general terms, Aristotle's position is the "realist" one that "propositions are true ...
    • The Resurrection of Radical Pacifism: A Defense 

      Hereth, Stephen Blake
      Within the ethics of self-defense, the predominant view is that there are liability justifications for harming. A minority position, which I call radical pacifism, denies that there are liability justifications for harming. ...
    • Toward a linguistic conception of thought 

      Stenberg, Benjamin J (2006)
      The traditional, and still most common, view of the relationship between language and thought is that language is merely a tool for expressing thoughts. I argue that this view is mistaken and that language is the very thing ...
    • Toward a Pragmatic Ontology of Scientific Concepts 

      Robus, Olin Matthew
      I argue that current projects in 'naturalized metaphysics' fail to be properly naturalistic, and thereby fail in their stated aim to take one's metaphysics from science. I argue that naturalism must involve the idea of ...
    • Tower to Agora: Insularity and Philosophical Methodology 

      Addington, Dustyn Stone
      Academic philosophy sits at a methodological crossroads, facing threats to its foundational practices, well-justified challenges to its lack of diversity across several axes, and fears of irrelevancy in response to modern ...
    • Troubling Others and Tormenting Ourselves: The Nature and Moral Significance of Jealousy 

      Fredericks, Rachel (2013-02-25)
      Jealousy is an emotion that arises in diverse circumstances and is experienced in phenomenologically diverse ways. In part because of this diversity, evaluations of jealous subjects tend to be conflicting and ambiguous. ...
    • Understanding White Superagency 

      Dout, Cody Charles
      According to the dominant structuralist view of racism, racist outcomes can be explained by a combination of the following behaviors and phenomena: policies, rules, norms, institutional acts and objects, and implicit bias. ...
    • Virtuous Activity Is Sufficient for Happiness and Some Minimally Favorable Circumstances Are Necessary for Virtuous Activity 

      Hole, Benjamin Visscher
      I argue for a nontraditional sufficiency thesis: virtuous activity is sufficient for happiness and some minimally favorable circumstances are necessary for virtuous activity. This view satisfies two intuitions from the ...
    • Wilderness for Wildness: Saving the Wild in a Post-Natural World 

      Obst, Arthur
      Humanity stands at a crossroads. We are at the brink of a planetary crisis of our own making. Carbon emissions threaten a level of climate instability not seen in this epoch. Accelerating species loss invites the possibility ...