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Abulad, Philosophy, and Intellectual Generosity
K R I T I K E An Online Journal of Philosophy Volume 13, Number 2 December 2019 ISSN 1908-7330 THE DEPARTMENT OF PHILOSOPHY University of Santo Tomas Philippine Commission on Higher Education COPYRIGHTS All materials published by KRITIKE are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License KRITIKE supports the Open Access Movement. The copyright of an article published by the journal remains with its author. The author may republish his/her work upon the condition that KRITIKE is acknowledged as the original publisher. KRITIKE and the Department of Philosophy of the University of Santo Tomas do not necessarily endorse the views expressed in the articles published. © 2007-2019 KRITIKE: An Online Journal of Philosophy | ISSN 1908-7330 | OCLC 502390973 | [email protected] ABOUT THE COVER KRITIKE: An Online Journal of Philosophy, 13:2 (December 2019) Paolo A. Bolaños, Gelassenheit, 2010. Photograph. About the Journal KRITIKE is the official open access (OA) journal of the Department of Philosophy of the University of Santo Tomas (UST), Manila, Philippines. It is a Filipino peer-reviewed, interdisciplinary, and international journal of philosophy founded by a group of UST alumni. The journal seeks to publish articles and book reviews by local and international authors across the whole range of philosophical topics, but with special emphasis on the following subject strands: • Filipino Philosophy • Oriental Thought and East-West Comparative Philosophy • Continental European Philosophy • Anglo-American Philosophy The journal primarily caters to works by professional philosophers and graduate students of philosophy, but welcomes contributions from other fields (literature, cultural studies, gender studies, political science, sociology, history, anthropology, economics, inter alia) with strong philosophical content. -
Dr. Stephen H. Daniel
DR. STEPHEN H. DANIEL Department of Philosophy email: [email protected] Texas A&M University 979-845-5619/5660 (Office) College Station, Texas 77843-4237 979-324-4199 (Cell) CURRENT POSITION Texas A&M University Presidential Professor for Teaching Excellence (2007; permanent) Thaman University Professor in Undergraduate Teaching Excellence (2019–2022) Professor of Philosophy (1993- ) RECORD OF EMPLOYMENT 1983-present: Professor of Philosophy (1993- ), Associate Department Head (2017-2018, 1986-90), Murray and Celeste Fasken Chair in Distinguished Teaching (2007-2011); Associate Professor (1986-93); Assistant Professor (1983-86), Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas. 1978-1983: Assistant Professor of Philosophy; Department Chair (1982-83), Spring Hill College, Mobile, Alabama. (1979-1980) Visiting Scholar & NEH Fellow, University of Virginia, Department of English; Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Spring Hill College (on academic leave). 1977-1978: Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Mount St. Mary’s College, Los Angeles, California. 1973-1977: Graduate Instructor in Philosophy, St. Louis University, St. Louis, Missouri. EDUCATION Ph.D., Philosophy, Saint Louis University, 1977; Dissertation: “The Philosophic Methodology of John Toland.” M.A., Philosophy, Saint Louis University, 1974; Thesis: “Individuation in Giordano Bruno.” B.A., magna cum laude, Philosophy (major), History (minor), St. Joseph Seminary College, St. Benedict, Louisiana, 1972 PUBLICATIONS (Philosophy) Books (Authored): George Berkeley and Early Modern Philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press, 2021. xii + 340 pp. How Berkeley’s philosophy—especially his novel philosophy of mind—engages views developed by his predecessors and contemporaries. Contemporary Continental Thought. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 2005. xiii + 490 pp. A survey with readings in critical theory, hermeneutics, structuralism, deconstruction, psychoanalytic feminism, poststructuralism, postcolonialism, and postmodernism. -
Table of Contents
Second Annual Report on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology in Latin America ICPCNanoNet Second annual report on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology in Latin America Second Annual Report on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology in Latin America Publication 4th June 2010 The report will be available for download at www.icpc-nanonet.org Editors Rachel Newton and Shirley Xie, Sociedade Portuguesa de Inovação (SPI) – [email protected] Author Ineke Malsch, Malsch TechnoValuation – [email protected] Acknowledgements The authors of this report would like to express their gratitude to the following individuals for their valuable feedback and information provided in the process of producing this report: Lesley and Alexey Ivanov (partners), Gerd Bachmann (VDI, Germany), Daniel Lupi (FAN, Argentina), Paulo Martins (USP, Brazil), Rolvin Salas (Costa Rica Institute of Technology) and Fernando Gomez Baquero (NanoColombia). About ICPCNanoNet The ICPCNanoNet project is funded by the European Commission under the 7th Framework Programme and aims to provide wider access to published Nanoscience and Nanotechnology research and opportunities for collaboration between organisations and scientists in the EU and International Cooperation Partner Countries (ICPC). Read more at www.icpc-nanonet.org and www.nanoarchive.org. The ICPCNanoNet consortium consists of: The Institute of Nanotechnology (UK) - www.nano.org.uk Sociedade Portuguesa de Inovação (Portugal) - www.spi.pt St. Petersburg Electrotechnical University (Russia) - www.eltech.ru Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research (India) - www.jncasr.ac.in Chinese Society of Micro-Nano Technology (China) - www.csmnt.org.cn MERIT of Universiteit Maastricht (Netherlands) - www.merit.unu.edu Malsch TechnoValuation (Netherlands) - www.malsch.demon.nl NanoAfNet (Africa) For further information please contact Lesley Tobin: [email protected] Second Annual Report on Nanoscience and Nanotechnology in Latin America Table of Contents 1. -
Taste+The+Future+Report+-+The+Potential+Of+Food+Horticulture+In+Colombia.Pdf
Disclaimer The information in this report is based on interviews and data collected from public sources. No rights can be derived from the information provided in this report. Page 2 Foreword Colombia is a country with great agricultural potential and has been called on several occasions as a future worldwide food supplier. Nevertheless, the horticultural sector in Colombia must improve its way of producing, both in the implementation of technology and certifications and in the training of producers to be able to reach its potential, and to fulfill the growing demand for safe and healthy food. This report, which was commissioned by the Netherlands Enterprise Agency - RVO, is the result of a qualitative research and literature review, validating the results of different interviews conducted throughout the chain of vegetables production and distribution in the country, from the producer to the retail stores. We would like to thank entrepreneurs, producers and entities that gave us their time and allowed us to visit them in their operations. We would like to give special thanks to the Agricultural Department of the Embassy of The Kingdom of the Netherlands in Colombia for encouraging and looking for alternatives for the improvement of the horticultural sector in Colombia. Colombia, March 2020 Maria Isabel Lopez Arno van der Maden Page 3 Index Disclaimer...................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................2 -
PDF File Issue No 21
Berkeley Studies No. 21 (2010) Editors Stephen H. Daniel, Senior Editor College Station, Texas, USA Marc A. Hight, Coordinating Editor Hampden-Sydney, Virginia, USA Silvia Parigi, Bibliographical Editor Cassino, Italy Laurent Jaffro, Book Review Editor Paris, France Tom Stoneham, News Editor York, UK Contents James Hill The Synthesis of Empiricism and Innatism in Berkeley’s Doctrine of Notions 3 Marc Hight New Berkeley Correspondence: A Note 16 Jacopo Agnesina Review: Laurent Jaffro, Geneviève Brykman, Claire Schwartz, eds, Berkeley’s Alciphron: English Text and Essays in Interpretation 22 Bertil Belfrage Review: C. George Caffentzis, Exciting the Industry of Mankind: George Berkeley’s Philosophy of Money 25 Ville Paukkonen Review: Talia Mae Bettcher, Berkeley: A Guide for the Perplexed 28 News and Announcements 32 Recent Works on Berkeley (2008-2010) 33 Berkeley Studies 21 (2010) 2 © Berkeley Studies and Contributors 2010 Berkeley Studies is sponsored by Hampden-Sydney College and the International Berkeley Society Berkeley Studies 21 (2010) 3 The Synthesis of Empiricism and Innatism in Berkeley’s Doctrine of Notions James Hill Abstract: This essay argues that Berkeley’s doctrine of notions is an account of concept-formation that offers a middle-way between empiricism and innatism, something which Berkeley himself asserts at Siris 308. First, the widespread assumption that Berkeley accepts Locke’s conceptual empiricism is questioned, with particular attention given to Berkeley’s views on innatism and ideas of reflection. Then, it is shown that Berkeley’s doctrine of notions comes very close to the refined form of innatism to be found in Descartes’ later writings and in Leibniz. -
Dr. Stephen H. Daniel
DR. STEPHEN H. DANIEL Department of Philosophy email: [email protected] Texas A&M University 979-845-5619/5660 (Office) College Station, Texas 77843-4237 979-324-4199 (Cell) CURRENT POSITION Texas A&M University Presidential Professor for Teaching Excellence (2007; permanent) Thaman University Professor for Undergraduate Teaching Excellence (2019–2022) Professor of Philosophy (1993- ) RECORD OF EMPLOYMENT 1983-present: Professor of Philosophy (1993- ), Associate Department Head (2017-2018, 1986-90), Murray and Celeste Fasken Chair in Distinguished Teaching (2007-2011); Associate Professor (1986-93); Assistant Professor (1983-86), Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas. 1978-1983: Assistant Professor of Philosophy; Department Chair (1982-83), Spring Hill College, Mobile, Alabama. (1979-1980) Visiting Scholar & NEH Fellow, University of Virginia, Department of English; Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Spring Hill College (on academic leave). 1977-1978: Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Mount St. Mary’s College, Los Angeles, California. 1973-1977: Graduate Instructor in Philosophy, St. Louis University, St. Louis, Missouri. EDUCATION Ph.D., Philosophy, Saint Louis University, 1977; Dissertation: “The Philosophic Methodology of John Toland.” M.A., Philosophy, Saint Louis University, 1974; Thesis: “Individuation in Giordano Bruno.” B.A., magna cum laude, Philosophy (major), History (minor), St. Joseph Seminary College, St. Benedict, Louisiana, 1972 PUBLICATIONS (Philosophy) Books (Authored): George Berkeley and Early Modern Philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press, 2021. xii + 338 pp. How Berkeley’s philosophy—especially his novel philosophy of mind—engages views developed by his predecessors and contemporaries. Contemporary Continental Thought. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 2005. xiii + 490 pp. A survey with readings in critical theory, hermeneutics, structuralism, deconstruction, psychoanalytic feminism, poststructuralism, postcolonialism, and postmodernism. -
RESEARCH and PUBLICATIONS Annual Report 2010
RESEARCH AND PUBLICATIONS Annual Report 2010 1 Research and Publications Annual Report 2010 2 Contents Page No. Preface 09 RESEARCH PROJECTS Corporate Strategy A1 Study on Sustainability Initiatives of Indian 11 & Policy Companies P D Jose A2 What Underpins Sustained Growth of Indian 11 IT Companies S Raghunath A3 Developing Case Studies on Creative Industries 11 J Ramachandran A4 Compensation Committee Project 12 P Rejie George, Dana Hermanson, James Tompkins, Rajaram Veliyath, and Zhongxia Ye (Kennesaw State University, USA) A5 Study on Estimating Air Travel Demand Phase 1 13 Rishikesha T Krishnan, Srinivas Prakhya and Jayaram Holla A6 GLOBINN 13 Rishikesha T Krishnan A7 Mapping ICT Innovation Trajectory in India 13 R Srinivasan (CSP) and Anjula Gurtoo (Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore) A8 Update on Chinese and Pakistani Missiles 13 S Chandrashekar, Rajaram Nagappa, N Ramani, Lalitha Sundaresan, and Manabrata Guha A9 Security of Pakistan’s Nuclear Assets 14 S Chandrashekar, Rajaram Nagappa, N Ramani, Lalitha Sundareasan, and Managrata Guha Economics & Social A10 Foreign Reserves and Macroeconomic Volatility 14 Sciences in Developing Countries Anubha Dhasmana A11 Alternative Economic Organizations in Development: 15 A Comparative Analysis of the Impact and Sustainability of Selected Successful Initiatives in Canada and India Chiranjib Sen, Darryl Reed, and Ananya Mukherjee Reed (York University, Canada) A12 Making Common Services Center Sustainable 15 in Rural Areas Gopal Naik A13 Spatial Cluster in Organic Farming: A Case Study -
Samuel C. Rickless
1 SAMUEL C. RICKLESS Philosophy Department, 0119 University of California, San Diego 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093-0119 Employment 2009- : Professor, Philosophy, University of California, San Diego 2003-2009: Associate Professor, Philosophy, University of California, San Diego 2001-2003: Assistant Professor, Philosophy, University of California, San Diego 1996-2001: Assistant Professor, Philosophy, Florida State University 1995-1996: Visiting Lecturer, Philosophy, Florida State University Affiliations 2003- : University of San Diego Institute for Law and Philosophy 2013- : University of San Diego Institute for Law and Religion 2016- : Affiliate Professor, University of San Diego School of Law 2014, 2015: Adjunct Professor, International Summer Campus, Korea University Education Ph.D., Philosophy, University of California, Los Angeles, 1996 Dissertation: “Sinn Without Guilt: A Theory of Content for Singular Terms” Committee: David Kaplan (chair), Kit Fine, Tim Stowell B.Phil., Philosophy, Oxford University, 1988 B.A., Philosophy, Harvard University, 1986 Areas of Research History of Modern Philosophy, Ethics, Philosophy of Law, Philosophy of Language, History of Ancient Philosophy Books 1. Plato’s Forms in Transition: A Reading of the Parmenides. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007. Reviewed in: Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews (2007), Rhizai: A Journal for Ancient Philosophy and Science (2007), Classical Bulletin (2007), Journal of the History of Philosophy (2008), Bryn Mawr Classical Review (2008), Greece and Rome (2008), The Review of Metaphysics (2009), Mnemosyne (2009), Classical World (2010), Gnomon (2010), Etudes Platoniciennes (2010), Universa: Recensioni di Filosofia (2011), The Ancient World (2011). 1 2 2. Berkeley’s Argument for Idealism. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013. Reviewed in: Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews (2013), Philosophical Quarterly (2013), Mind (2014), Philosophy in Review (2014), Journal of the History of Philosophy (2015), European Journal of Philosophy (2016), Hume Studies (forthcoming). -
Issue 3, September 2015
Econ Journal Watch Scholarly Comments on Academic Economics Volume 12, Issue 3, September 2015 COMMENTS Education Premiums in Cambodia: Dummy Variables Revisited and Recent Data John Humphreys 339–345 CHARACTER ISSUES Why Weren’t Left Economists More Opposed and More Vocal on the Export- Import Bank? Veronique de Rugy, Ryan Daza, and Daniel B. Klein 346–359 Ideology Über Alles? Economics Bloggers on Uber, Lyft, and Other Transportation Network Companies Jeremy Horpedahl 360–374 SYMPOSIUM CLASSICAL LIBERALISM IN ECON, BY COUNTRY (PART II) Venezuela: Without Liberals, There Is No Liberalism Hugo J. Faria and Leonor Filardo 375–399 Classical Liberalism and Modern Political Economy in Denmark Peter Kurrild-Klitgaard 400–431 Liberalism in India G. P. Manish, Shruti Rajagopalan, Daniel Sutter, and Lawrence H. White 432–459 Classical Liberalism in Guatemala Andrés Marroquín and Fritz Thomas 460–478 WATCHPAD Of Its Own Accord: Adam Smith on the Export-Import Bank Daniel B. Klein 479–487 Discuss this article at Journaltalk: http://journaltalk.net/articles/5891 ECON JOURNAL WATCH 12(3) September 2015: 339–345 Education Premiums in Cambodia: Dummy Variables Revisited and Recent Data John Humphreys1 LINK TO ABSTRACT In their 2010 Asian Economic Journal paper, Ashish Lall and Chris Sakellariou made a valuable contribution to the understanding of education in Cambodia. Their paper represents the most robust analysis of the Cambodian education premium yet published, reporting premiums for men and women from three different time periods (1997, 2004, 2007), including a series of control variables in their regressions, and using both OLS and IV methodology.2 Following a convention of education economics, Lall and Sakellariou (2010) use a variation of the standard Mincer model (see Heckman et al. -
Berkeley Studies
Berkeley Studies No. 28 (2019) Editors Stephen H. Daniel, Senior Editor College Station, Texas, USA John R. Roberts, Coordinating Editor Tallahassee, Florida, USA Silvia Parigi, Bibliographical Editor Cassino, Italy Tom Stoneham, News Editor York, UK Contents Jessica Gordon-Roth Tracing Reid’s ‘Brave Officer’ Objection Back to Berkeley—And Beyond 3 Daniel E. Flage Rickless and Passive Obedience 23 News and Announcements 47 Recent Works on Berkeley (2017-2019) 48 Berkeley Studies 28 (2019) 2 © Berkeley Studies and Contributors 2019 Berkeley Studies is sponsored by Florida State University and the International Berkeley Society Berkeley Studies 28 (2019) 3 Tracing Reid’s ‘Brave Officer’ Objection Back to Berkeley—And Beyond Jessica Gordon-Roth Abstract: Berkeley’s two most obvious targets in Alciphron are Shaftesbury and Mandeville. However, as numerous commentators have pointed out, there is good reason to think Berkeley additionally targets Anthony Collins in this dialogue. In this paper, I bolster David Berman’s claim that “Collins looms large in the background” of Dialogue VII, and put some meat on the bones of Raymond Martin and John Barresi’s passing suggestion that there is a connection between the Clarke–Collins correspondence, Alciphron, and the objection that Berkeley raises regarding persons and their persistence conditions therein. Specifically, I argue that we have evidence that Berkeley’s objection to consciousness–based views of personal identity, as found in VII.8, is a response to a challenge that Collins raises to Clarke in “An Answer to Mr. Clarke’s Third Defense of his Letter to Mr. Dodwell.” This is significant not just because this objection is usually—and consistently—taken to be an objection to Locke, but also because Berkeley’s objection works against Collins’s theory of personal identity in a way that it doesn’t against Locke’s. -
Accountability in Governance Report Second National Convention Mangalore, February 18-20, 2005
I Second National Convention Mangalore, February 18-20,2005 Them Accountability in Governance Report Second National Convention Mangalore, February 18-20, 2005 Theme Accountability in Governance Published by: Kashmira Rao, Executive Secretary INDIAN LIBERAL GROUP Sassoon Building, 1st Floor 143, Mahatma Gandhi Road, Mumbai 400 001. Phones : (0091 22) 2284 34 1 6 a 2284 1340 Fax : (0091 22) 2284 3416 E-mail : [email protected]; [email protected] Website : www.liberalsindia.com Rs. 100/-. DTP Typesetting & Printing by SHUBHAM PRINT & WEB, 59, Dr. V. B. Gandhi Marg, Fort, Mumbai 400 001 Telefax : (0091 22) 2284 26 19 a E-mail : [email protected] 500-07/2005 : 2 : Contents Preface INAUGURAL SESSION Inaugural Address: Accountability :The Road Map and Guarantee for Liberalism N. Vittal Keynote Address: Accountability in Governance S. P Sathe Address by Chief Guest: Promoting Liberalism Globally - The Mission of the FNSt Hubertus von Welck President's Address: Reviving the Liberal Dialogue in Contemporary lndia - Why lndia Needs a liberal Political Party S. V. Raiu DELEGATES' SESSION President's Report On Organisation Amendments to Constitution Organisation Strategy Election of President and two Vice Presidents LIBERAL POSITION PAPERS India's Economic Liberalisation : The Unfinished Liberal Agenda Ajit Karnik Indian Agriculture and Rural Indebtedness R. M. Mohan Rao Administration of Justice G. Giridhar Prabhu ANNEXURES 1. Strategy of the Indian Liberal Group (ILG) (2005-2010) 2. Annexure to President's Report 3. Delegates Preface We have pleasure in presenting this Report of the Second National Convention of the Indian Liberal Group held in Mangalore on February 18, 19 and 20, 2005. -
In This Issue of KRITIKE: an Online Journal of Philosophy
KRITIKE VOLUME FIVE NUMBER ONE (JUNE 2011) i-iv Editorial In this Issue of KRITIKE: An Online Journal of Philosophy Paolo A. Bolaños 011 is an important year for KRITIKE: An Online Journal of Philosophy. This year marks the transition of the journal from a purely 2 independent professional open access journal of philosophy to being the official academic journal of the Department of Philosophy of the University of Santo Tomas. This transition prompted a process of streamlining our editorial procedures and the invitation of new members to the editorial board. We welcome these developments for they are signs of the journal’s maturity. Along with this maturity are the recent recognition by Humanities International Complete™ (EBSCO Publishing) and the Modern Languages Association Directory of Periodicals, wherein KRITIKE is now abstracted and indexed. This ninth issue features papers that deal with Filipino philosophy, philosophical anthropology, issues about time and consciousness, political philosophy, hermeneutics, and aesthetics. A book review of a book about religion in the public sphere is also included. The first two essays are written in Filipino, which is the way the authors attempt to articulate, or create, what they think is Filipino Philosophy. For his part, F.P.A. Demeterio offers a recount of the respective hermeneutics of Friedrich Schleiermacher and Wilhelm Dilthey, two foundational theorists in the hermeneutical tradition, in a paper called “Ang Hermenyutika nina Friedrich Schleiermacher at Wilhelm Dilthey bilang Batayang Teoretikal sa Araling Pilipino.” The purpose of Demeterio’s recount is the attempt to contextualize the study, and use, of the hermeneutical methods of Schleiermacher and Dilthey within the broader scope of Philippine Studies, but more specifically, in the study of local texts and culture.