•  15
    Seven reasons why health professionals search clinical information‐retrieval technology (CIRT): toward an organizational model
    with Pierre Pluye, Roland M. Grad, and Joan C. Bartlett
    Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 13 (1): 39-49. 2007.
  •  48
    Temporal equilibrium logic: a survey
    with Felicidad Aguado, Pedro Cabalar, Gilberto Pérez, and Concepción Vidal
    Journal of Applied Non-Classical Logics 23 (1-2): 2-24. 2013.
    This paper contains a survey of the main definitions and results obtained to date related to Temporal Equilibrium Logic, a nonmonotonic hybrid approach that combines Equilibrium Logic (the best-known logical characterisation for the stable models semantics of logic programs) with Linear-Time Temporal Logic
  •  21
    Has the Child Welfare Profession Discovered Nepotistic Biases?
    with Gretchen Perry
    Human Nature 22 (3): 350-369. 2011.
    A major trend in foster care in developed countries over the past quarter century has been a shift toward placing children with “kin” rather than with unrelated foster parents. This change in practice is widely backed by legislation and is routinely justified as being in the best interests of the child. It is tempting to interpret this change as indicating that the child welfare profession has belatedly discovered that human social sentiments are nepotistic in their design, such that kin tend to…Read more
  •  11
    M. Annaeus Lucanus: Bellum Civile, Liber IX. Einleitung, Text und Übersetzung, and: M. Annaeus Lucanus: Bellum Civile, Liber IX. Kommentar (review) (review)
    with David Sider
    Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 101 (2): 253-254. 2008.
  •  16
    Textual Permanence: Roman Elegists and the Epigraphical Tradition (review)
    Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 103 (2): 262-264. 2010.
  •  19
    Contexts of War: Manipulation of Genre in Virgilian Battle Narrative (review)
    Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 99 (1): 85-86. 2005.
  •  45
    Multicellular behavior in bacteria: communication, cooperation, competition and cheating
    with Gary M. Dunny and Timothy J. Brickman
    Bioessays 30 (4): 296-298. 2008.
    The sociobiology of bacteria, largely unappreciated and ignored by the microbiology research community two decades ago is now a major research area, catalyzed to a significant degree by studies of communication and cooperative behavior among the myxobacteria and in quorum sensing (QS) and biofilm formation by pseudomonads and other microbes. Recently, the topic of multicellular cooperative behaviors among bacteria has been increasingly considered in the context of evolutionary biology. Here we d…Read more
  •  15
    Molecular analysis of Fanconi anaemia
    with Karl Sperling
    Bioessays 18 (7): 579-585. 1996.
    The autosomal recessive genetic disease, Fanconi anaemia, is perceived as another manifestation of defective cellular DNA repair, just as in the autosomal recessive disease Xeroderma pigmentosum. The biochemistry and cellular biology of Xeroderma pigmentosum have been convincingly elucidated, but the same has not been true for Fanconi anaemia. In this review we consider the pleiotropic nature of Fanconi anaemia, its clinical and cellular variability and its genetic heterogeneity. We take into ac…Read more
  •  5
    The Language Game of Divine Love according to Franz Rosenzweig and Karl Barth
    Neue Zeitschrift für Systematicsche Theologie Und Religionsphilosophie 55 (2): 229-242. 2013.
    Summary Language games can be opening and narrowing. On the base of this double sense my paper compares the language game of divine love according to Franz Rosenzweig and Karl Barth. They were contemporaries not only regarding their early publications. Both discovered revelation in the face of liberal theology which regarded it as a problematic, mythological concept. However, this similarity is contradicted by difference, based in the Christological dogma which can have a tendency to narrow the …Read more
  •  57
    There's no contest: Human sex differences are sexually selected
    with Nicholas Pound and Margo Wilson
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32 (3-4): 286-287. 2009.
    An evolutionary psychological perspective drawing on sexual selection theory can better explain sex differences in aggression and violence than can social constructionist theories. Moreover, there is accumulating evidence that, in accordance with predictions derived from sexual selection theory, men modulate their willingness to engage in risky and violent confrontations in response to cues to fitness variance and future prospects
  •  19
    Is there a role for “climatotherapy” in the sustainable development of mental health?
    with Catherine Duclos, Valérie Flohimont, and François Desseilles
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (5): 487-488. 2013.
    Climate, diet, lifestyle, and environmental settings have all been shown to modulate mood, play a role in mental disorders, and even pose a mental health risk. Can climatotherapy, in its adaptive approach aiming to restore balance among the economic, social, and ecological realms of human societies, situate itself as a therapeutic avenue for the promotion of sustainable mental health?
  • Grusswort
    In Jochen Bohn & Thomas Bohrmann (eds.), Religion als Lebensmacht: eine Festgabe für Gottfried Küenzlen, Evangelische Verlagsanstalt. 2010.
  •  4
    Ziel und Anliegen der Arbeit ist es, einen neuen Blick auf die Kunsttheorie der "Weimarer Klassik" zu werfen, um hinter dem Klischee einer in "edler Einfalt und stiller Größe" versteinerten Kunstlehre eine flexible und dynamische ...
  •  4
    Aufgaben und Grenzen des Sozialstaates (edited book)
    with Judith Wolf
    Schöningh. 2007.
  • In this text, I discuss the environmental education project "Legible Landscape", which aims to teach inhabitants to read their landscape and develop a closer, more engaged relationship to place. I show that the project's semiotic perspective on landscape legibility tends to hamper the understanding of the moral dimension of reading landscapes, and argue that a hermeneutical perspective is better suited to acknowledge the way that readers and texts are intimately connected.
  •  447
    Fatal Attraction
    Environmental Ethics 31 (3): 297-315. 2009.
    The concept of wildness not only plays a role in philosophical debates, but also in popular culture. Wild nature is often seen as a place outside the cultural sphere where one can still encounter instances of transcendence. Some writers and moviemakers contest the dominant romanticized view of wild nature by telling stories that somehow show a different harsher face of nature. In encounters with the wild and unruly, humans can sometimes experience the misfit between their well-ordered, human-cen…Read more
  •  27
    Ecological Restoration and Place Attachment; Emplacing nonplace?
    Environmental Values 18 (3): 285-312. 2009.
    The creation of new wetlands along rivers as an instrument to mitigate flood risks in times of climate change seduces us to approach the landscape from a 'managerial' perspective and threatens a more place-oriented approach. How to provide ecological restoration with a broad cultural context that can help prevent these new landscapes from becoming non-places, devoid of meaning and with no real connection to our habitable world. In this paper, I discuss three possible alternative interpretations …Read more
  •  58
    A Reforma em território alemão possui duas figuras, por vezes próximas entre si, por vezes muito distantes: Lutero e Tomás Müntzer. À medida que foi se envolvendo na vida de seus fiéis, Müntzer foi tomando caminhos próprios, discordando de Lutero que este tomava a “Palavra, em sua realidade objetiva, como constitutiva da Igreja, e afirmando que os verdadeiros fiéis são os que possuem a experiência subjetiva do “Espírito”. Também contra Lutero, que defende a resistência à autoridade, mas em quest…Read more
  •  38
    The Eleventh Biennial Meeting of the Hegel Society of America
    The Owl of Minerva 22 (2): 255-256. 1991.
    The meeting, hosted by McGill University, was held in Montréal, from Friday, October 12, to Sunday, October 14, 1990. Approximately 125 members and friends of the Society attended. The topic of discussion was “Hegel’s Philosophy of Religion.”
  •  42
    Negativity and Subjectivity (review)
    The Owl of Minerva 12 (1): 8-10. 1980.
    This is a rich, impressive, and important work in philosophical anthropology. It is rich and impressive in view of the wide range of literature upon which the author draws, and the interdisciplinary competencies which he exhibits. It is important because of the central issue which the work focuses on and analyzes from its interdisciplinary perspective.
  •  79
    The Prospects of Philosophy (review)
    Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 15 (2): 347-348. 1940.
  •  29
    The Paradox at Reason’s Boundary
    Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 76 125-136. 2002.
    Central to Kierkegaard’s account of religious existence is his critique of speculative reason. This critique begins with the distinction between subjective and objective reflection. Its most radical aspects appear in Kierkegaard’s discussions of the paradox. In spite of Kierkegaard’s frequent comments on this notion, it is not readily understood. I want to argue against a common reading of this notion and propose an alternative reading. This alternative reading allows for a conceptually quite pl…Read more