School of Historical and Philosophical Studies - Research Publications

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    Proofnets for S5: sequents and circuits for modal logic
    RESTALL, G ; Dimitracopoulos, C ; Newelski, L ; Normann, D ; Steel, J (Cambridge University Press, 2008)
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    Bombing and the Morality of War
    COADY, C (The New Press, 2009)
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    The paradoxes of denotation
    PRIEST, G (CSLI Publications, 2006)
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    Pathologies of Testimony
    COADY, C ; Lackey, J ; Sosa, E (Oxford University Press, 2006)
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    Restrictivism is a Covert Compatibilism
    LEVY, N (Cambridge Scholars Press, 2008)
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    MODELS FOR LIARS IN BRADWARDINE'S THEORY OF TRUTH
    Restall, G ; Rahman, S ; Tulenheimo, T ; Genot, E (SPRINGER, 2008)
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    "Playing God"
    COADY, C ; Savulescu, J ; Bostrom, N (Oxford University Press, 2009)
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    The Sources for Presocratic Philosophy
    Runia, DT ; Curd, ; Graham, W (Oxford University Press, 2009-09-02)
    Abstract Between about 2,600 and 2,400 years ago, a group of men lived whose thought formed the beginning of the discipline of philosophy. All contemporary material records of these men have disappeared, with the possible exception of a piece of a statue and some likenesses on early coins and vases. The very notion that these philosophers can be best understood as Presocratics is redolent with interpretative interventions. Although this view is not without ancient precedents, the driving force behind its dominance in the twentieth century was the great achievement of the German classical scholar Hermann Diels (1848–1922), which exercises authority to this day. The aim of this article is to examine the sources for Presocratic philosophy. It commences with the dominant legacy of Diels. Thereafter, it examines various strands of transmission streamlined by Diels. Finally, it reaches some tentative conclusions on what should be the way forward in future research.
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    How to change the past
    Jones, K ; Mackenzie, C ; Atkins, K (ROUTLEDGE, 2008)