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D. Turner

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    51
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Areas of Interest
Applied Ethics
Philosophy of Law
  • All publications (51)
  •  54
    13 Religion: Illusions and liberation
    In Terrell Carver (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Marx, Cambridge University Press. pp. 1--320. 1991.
    Social and Political Philosophy
  •  75
    Winstanley, Hobbes, and the Sin of the World
    In Zoë Bennett & David B. Gowler (eds.), Radical Christian Voices and Practice: Essays in Honour of Christopher Rowland, Oxford University Press. pp. 137. 2012.
    Hobbes: Intellectual ContextHobbes: Political Context
  •  68
    Godel, Thomas Aquinas, and the Unknowability of God
    In Matthias Baaz (ed.), Kurt Gödel and the foundations of mathematics: horizons of truth, Cambridge University Press. pp. 277. 2011.
    Thomas Aquinas
  •  34
    A (Partially) Skeptical Response to Hart and Russell
    In Michał Heller & W. H. Woodin (eds.), Infinity: new research frontiers, Cambridge University Press. pp. 290. 2011.
    The Infinite
  •  11
    Integrative Physiology
    with Jonathan T. Butcher, Tim C. McQuinn, David Sedmera, and Roger R. Markwald
    Philosophy of Consciousness
  •  113
    Are We at War with Nature?
    Environmental Values 14 (1). 2005.
    A number of people, from William James to Dave Foreman and Vandana Shiva, have suggested that humans are at war with nature. Moreover, the analogy with warfare figures in at least one important argument for strategic monkeywrenching. In general, an analogy can be used for purposes of (1) justification; (2) persuasion; or (3) as a tool for generating novel hypotheses and recommendations. This paper argues that the analogy with warfare should not be used for justificatory or rhetorical purposes, b…Read more
    A number of people, from William James to Dave Foreman and Vandana Shiva, have suggested that humans are at war with nature. Moreover, the analogy with warfare figures in at least one important argument for strategic monkeywrenching. In general, an analogy can be used for purposes of (1) justification; (2) persuasion; or (3) as a tool for generating novel hypotheses and recommendations. This paper argues that the analogy with warfare should not be used for justificatory or rhetorical purposes, but that it may nevertheless have a legitimate heuristic role to play in environmental philosophy
    Environmental EthicsEthics
  •  65
    Neuroethics of Cognitive Enhancement
    with Barbara J. Sahakian
    Biosocieties 1 (1): 113--123. 2006.
    Biological Enhancement
  •  114
    Ethical questions in functional neuroimaging and cognitive enhancement
    with Barbara J. Sahakian
    Poiesis and Praxis 4 (2): 81-94. 2006.
    The new field of neuroethics has recently emerged following unprecedented developments in the neurosciences. Neuroimaging and cognitive enhancement in particular are demanding ethical debate. For example, neuroscientists are able to measure, with increasing accuracy, intimate personal biases and thoughts as they occur in the brain. Smart drugs are now available that can effectively and safely enhance mental functioning in both healthy and clinical populations. This article describes the scientif…Read more
    The new field of neuroethics has recently emerged following unprecedented developments in the neurosciences. Neuroimaging and cognitive enhancement in particular are demanding ethical debate. For example, neuroscientists are able to measure, with increasing accuracy, intimate personal biases and thoughts as they occur in the brain. Smart drugs are now available that can effectively and safely enhance mental functioning in both healthy and clinical populations. This article describes the scientific principles behind these technologies, and urges the development of ethical principles based on a clear understanding of them. Europe should take the United States’ lead in devoting resources specifically intended to examine neuroethical concerns within European healthcare and legal frameworks
    Cognitive EnhancementNeuroethics, Misc
  •  116
    Just another drug? A philosophical assessment of randomised controlled studies on intercessory prayer
    Journal of Medical Ethics 32 (8): 487-490. 2006.
    The empirical results from recent randomised controlled studies on remote, intercessory prayer remain mixed. Several studies have, however, appeared in prestigious medical journals, and it is believed by many researchers, including apparent sceptics, that it makes sense to study intercessory prayer as if it were just another experimental drug treatment. This assumption is challenged by discussing problems posed by the need to obtain the informed consent of patients participating in the studies; …Read more
    The empirical results from recent randomised controlled studies on remote, intercessory prayer remain mixed. Several studies have, however, appeared in prestigious medical journals, and it is believed by many researchers, including apparent sceptics, that it makes sense to study intercessory prayer as if it were just another experimental drug treatment. This assumption is challenged by discussing problems posed by the need to obtain the informed consent of patients participating in the studies; pointing out that if the intercessors are indeed conscientious religious believers, they should subvert the studies by praying for patients randomised to the control groups; and showing that the studies in question are characterised by an internal philosophical tension because the intercessors and the scientists must take incompatible views of what is going on: the intercessors must take a causation-first view, whereas the scientists must take a correlation-first view. It therefore makes no ethical or methodological sense to study remote, intercessory prayer as if it were just another drug.
    Biomedical EthicsMedical Ethics
  •  1
    Apophasis and the shoah : Where was Jesus Christ at auschwitz in silence and the word : Apophasis and incarnation
    with Oliver Davies
    In David Ford (ed.), Shaping theology: engagements in a religious and secular world, Blackwell. 2007.
    Philosophy of ReligionIncarnation
  •  94
    Dionysius and some late medieval mystical theologians of northern europe
    Modern Theology 24 (4): 651-665. 2008.
    Philosophy of ReligionReligious Experience
  •  138
    On Denying the Right God: Aquinas on Atheism and Idolatry
    Modern Theology 20 (1): 141-161. 2004.
    Philosophy of ReligionThe Number of GodsAtheism and Agnosticism
  •  68
    The Darkness of God and the Light of Christ: Negative Theology and Eucharistic Presence
    Modern Theology 15 (2): 143-158. 1999.
    Philosophy of ReligionIncarnation
  •  71
    The Art of Unknowing: Negative Theology in Late Medieval Mysticism
    Modern Theology 14 (4): 473-488. 1998.
    Philosophy of ReligionSpecific ReligionsJudaism
  •  26
    De‐centring theology
    Modern Theology 2 (2): 125-143. 1986.
  •  94
    “Sin is behovely” in Julian of norwich's revelations of divine love1
    Modern Theology 20 (3): 407-422. 2004.
  • Part V. Perspectives on infinity from philosophy and theology : 11. God and infinity : directions for future research / Graham Oppy ; 12. Notes on the concept of the infinite in the history of Western metaphysics / David Bentley Hart ; 13. God and infinity : theological insights from Cantor's mathematics / Robert J. Russell ; 14. A partially skeptical response to Hart and Russell (review)
    In Michał Heller & W. H. Woodin (eds.), Infinity: new research frontiers, Cambridge University Press. 2011.
    The Infinite
  •  58
    The evolution of policy arguments in teachers' negotiations
    with LindaL Putnam and SteveR Wilson
    Argumentation 4 (2): 129-152. 1990.
    Argument is a critical component in policy deliberations. In this study, negotiation is viewed as a type of policy deliberation, one characterized by attack and defense of proposals, interdependence between disputants, and mixed motives of cooperation and competition. Argument in negotiation, then, functions as a reason-giving activity to enact policy. Employing a category system based on rhetorical stasis, the researchers examine whether bargainers specialize in their use of argument types and …Read more
    Argument is a critical component in policy deliberations. In this study, negotiation is viewed as a type of policy deliberation, one characterized by attack and defense of proposals, interdependence between disputants, and mixed motives of cooperation and competition. Argument in negotiation, then, functions as a reason-giving activity to enact policy. Employing a category system based on rhetorical stasis, the researchers examine whether bargainers specialize in their use of argument types and whether this specialization remains consistent throughout a teacher-school board negotiation and whether it differs for the type of settlement of agenda items. Results of the study suggest that bargainers specialize in argument types at different times during the bargaining. In the early stages of negotiation, teachers center on harm and workability arguments to prepare their case and justify the merits of their proposals, but in the latter phases of bargaining they switch to arguments on implementation to reaffirm their demands and to prioritize issues. Board members, in the early stages, rely on disadvantage, workability, and implementation arguments to establish resistance points and to refute appeals for change, but in the latter stages of negotiation they employ harm-inherency and disadvantage arguments to weigh the costs of concessions and to rationalize the settlement. This study, then, supports the existence of phase variation in bargaining and argues for a developmental approach in deciphering how negotiators who hold antithetical positions reach mutually satisfactory settlements.
    Value Theory, Miscellaneous
  •  54
    Ethics and/or Ethics in Qualitative Social Research: Negotiating a Path around and between the Two
    with Rebecca Webb
    Ethics and Social Welfare (4): 1-14. 2012.
    This article explores the process of university Ethical Review both as lived experience and as part of institutional governance at an English university. The article uses Blackburn's distinction between ethics and Ethics (Ethics?A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2001) as a framework to examine the themes of ?vulnerability?, ?power? and ?relationships?. These themes are analysed closely both within the institutional and the fieldwork contexts, attempting to include the p…Read more
    This article explores the process of university Ethical Review both as lived experience and as part of institutional governance at an English university. The article uses Blackburn's distinction between ethics and Ethics (Ethics?A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2001) as a framework to examine the themes of ?vulnerability?, ?power? and ?relationships?. These themes are analysed closely both within the institutional and the fieldwork contexts, attempting to include the perspectives of all those involved in the research ethics process. The article does not seek to draw any definitive conclusions but rather to stimulate, and add to the iterative discussion on the process of Ethical Review within institutions. Nonetheless, it does conclude by making some suggestions concerning the way in which the lived experience of ethics could better inform the practice of institutional Ethical Review
    Applied EthicsSocial and Political PhilosophyProfessional EthicsPhilosophy of Education
  •  1
    A partially skeptical response to Hart and Russell (review)
    In Michał Heller & W. H. Woodin (eds.), Infinity: new research frontiers, Cambridge University Press. 2011.
    Bertrand RussellReligious SkepticismThe Infinite
  •  28
    On the philosophy of Karl Marx
    Scepter Books. 1968.
    Karl Marx
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