•  221
    Aggregation and Self-Sacrifice
    Ethics 132 (3): 730-735. 2022.
    Should harms to different individuals be aggregated? Moderate views answer yes and no. Aggregation is appropriate in some but not all cases. Such views need to determine a threshold at which aggregation switches from appropriate to inappropriate. Alex Voorhoeve proposes a method for determining this threshold which links other-regarding and self-regarding ethics. This proposal, however, implies a spurious correlation between favoring aggregation and egoism.
  •  33
    Introduction -- Why we need a holistic economic model -- What is Buddhist economics? -- Interdependent with each other -- Interdependent with our environment -- Prosperity for both rich and poor -- Measuring quality of life -- Leap to Buddhist economics.
  •  44
    Corrigendum: Construct Validity of the Sensory Profile Interoception Scale: Measuring Sensory Processing in Everyday Life
    with Winnie Dunn, Angela Breitmeyer, and Ashley Salwei
    Frontiers in Psychology 13. 2022.
  •  54
    Construct Validity of the Sensory Profile Interoception Scale: Measuring Sensory Processing in Everyday Life
    with Winnie Dunn, Angela Breitmeyer, and Ashley Salwei
    Frontiers in Psychology 13. 2022.
    Scholars and providers are coming to realize that one’s ability to notice and respond to internal body sensations contributes to an overall sense of wellbeing. Research has demonstrated a relationship between interoceptive awareness and anxiety, for example. Currently, however, tools for evaluating one’s interoception lack the conceptual foundation and clarity necessary to identify everyday behaviors that specifically reflect interoceptive awareness. Unlike existing interoceptive measures, the S…Read more
  •  29
    Christianity and Western Thought
    with Steve Wilkens and Alan G. Padgett
    InterVarsity Press. 1990.
    From Socrates and the Sophists to Kant, from Augustine to Aquinas and the Reformers, Colin Brown traces the turbulent, often tension-filled, always fascinating story of the thinkers, ideas and movements that have shaped our intellectual landscape. Is philosophy the "handmaiden of faith" or "the doctrine of demons"? Does it clarify the faith or undermine the very heart of Christian belief?Brown writes, "This book is about the changes in preconceptions, world views and paradigms that have affected…Read more
  •  142
    Campbell Brown is one of the most recent additions to our faculty. We thought we’d welcome him to the Department with some questions.
  •  41
    This article gives new information on the so-called Letter-book of John, Viscount Mordaunt beyond that in RHS Camden Series LXIX, identifies the likely scribe, and dates the transcription to late 1660. It shows how the large format book was created to record the heroic role played by Mordaunt and his wife Elizabeth in the achievement of Restoration, and how the unfinished state of the textual project adds to our knowledge of the social and political difficulties experienced by Mordaunt, a client…Read more
  •  49
    Journalists are Gatekeepers for a Reason
    Journal of Media Ethics 33 (2): 94-97. 2018.
    CNN exercised its fundamental responsibility to uphold a basic tenet of journalism—to seek the truth and report it—when it opted not to broadcast live the first official press briefing held by the...
  •  40
    Being ‘critical’ as taking a stand: One of the central dilemmas of cda
    with Betsy Rymes and Mariana Souto-Manning
    Critical Discourse Studies 2 (2): 195-198. 2005.
  •  79
    Analysing Political Discourse: Toward a cognitive approach
    with Christopher Hart, Betsy Rymes, Mariana Souto-Manning, and Allan Luke
    Critical Discourse Studies 2 (2): 189-201. 2005.
  •  34
    Can God Know what Time it is? A Working Paper
    Quaerens Deum 3 (1). 2017.
    Many thinkers hold the following five propositions are inconsistent: The dynamic theory of time is correct God is atemporal God knows tensed facts Free human actions are possible God interacts responsively with humans This working paper uses the discussion in Four Views: God and Time as a starting-point and moves towards explaining how these propositions are consistent.
  •  85
    Special Educational Needs: a Contextualised Perspective
    with Ruth Lupton and Martin Thrupp
    British Journal of Educational Studies 58 (3): 267-284. 2010.
    The paper examines variations in the extent of special education needs (SEN) in different socio-economic contexts, drawing on data from 46 English primary schools. It examines the implications of variations in SEN for individual pupils and for school organisation and processes. It reviews funding allocations for SEN and what they mean for the provision of support in different settings
  •  1
    Miracles and the Critical Mind
    Religious Studies 21 (3): 427-429. 1985.
  •  81
    The Impact of Retraction on Citation Networks
    with David Eichmann
    Science and Engineering Ethics 21 (1): 127-137. 2015.
    Article retraction in research is rising, yet retracted articles continue to be cited at a disturbing rate. This paper presents an analysis of recent retraction patterns, with a unique emphasis on the role author self-cites play, to assist the scientific community in creating counter-strategies. This was accomplished by examining the following: A categorization of retracted articles more complete than previously published work. The relationship between citation counts and after-retraction self-c…Read more
  •  32
    The First American Sublime
    In Timothy M. Costelloe (ed.), The sublime: from antiquity to the present, Cambridge University Press. 2012.
  •  157
    Explorations of lung cancer stigma for female long‐term survivors
    with Janine Cataldo
    Nursing Inquiry 20 (4): 352-362. 2013.
    Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer death in women, accompanied by greater psychological distress than other cancers. There is minimal but increasing awareness of the impact of lung cancer stigma (LCS) on patient outcomes. LCS is associated with increased symptom burden and decreased quality of life. The purpose of this study was to explore the experience of female long‐term lung cancer survivors in the context of LCS and examine how participants discursively adhere to or reject stigmatiz…Read more
  •  126
    Europe Comes to Mr Milton's Door, and Other Kinds of Visitation
    The European Legacy 17 (3): 291-307. 2012.
    Using various meanings of?visit? and?friend? this essay freely explores connections between Milton's cultivation of fame in Europe, leading to reports in the early lives of visits of scholarly foreigners to his door, and the extraordinary concentration on scenarios of human and divine visitation in the late poems. Social, political and religious strands are followed, from humanist self-presentation in the sonnets through to prophetic isolation in the late poems. Codes of friendship are rehearsed…Read more
  •  62
    Strategic Trust Building
    with Robbin Derry
    Proceedings of the International Association for Business and Society 16 243-246. 2005.
    This paper examines the linguistic strategies used by tobacco industry executives in public speeches made pre and post two important events in tobacco industry history to assess the trust building efforts of Philip Morris.
  •  131
    Cosmopolitanism, world citizenship and global civil society
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 3 (1): 7-26. 2000.
  •  107
    Anything You Can Do, God Can Do Better
    American Philosophical Quarterly 42 (3): 221-227. 2005.
    None.
  •  22
    Examines the growing popularity of alternative medicine, and discusses the mind-body connection in healing.
  •  84
    The Twentieth Century
    In Stephen Bullivant & Michael Ruse (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Atheism, Oxford University Press Uk. 2015.
    Disaffection from organized religion in the twentieth century led to rising levels of religious apathy as well as atheism. This is explored in this essay by enumerating the scale of change in a number of nations, and then by listening to the accounts of those who have lost religion. The influence of parents, childhood alienation, adult trauma, wartime combat, and scientific reasoning are each examined through the narratives of those who have left the religious tradition of family and community. …Read more
  •  33
    Beyond Truth
    Proceedings of the International Association for Business and Society 16 3-7. 2005.
    This paper explores a possibility of using discourse and text analysis to assess the business ethics of specific documents from within the tobacco industry. I argue that automated text analysis can provide important insights into the ethical discursive stance of not only a single textual communication, but also the company of origin and perhaps the industry at large.
  •  45
    Philosophy & the Christian faith
    Inter-varsity Press. 1969.
    Colin Brown surveys the thought of over four hundred philosophers from the Middle Ages to the present day. This clear and concise guide shows how various thinkers and ideas have affected Christian belief and brings together the lessons Christians can learn from philosophy.
  •  85
    Cases and commentaries
    with Duane McCallister, Susan A. Siltanen, Arthur J. Kaul, and Samuel L. Becker
    Journal of Mass Media Ethics 1 (2). 1986.
    No abstract.