•  54
    Order and disorder in open systems
    with Alfred Hübler
    Complexity 16 (1): 6-9. 2010.
  •  13
    The effects of temporal delay and frequency alteration on the speaking rates of children
    with Richard Ham and Donald Fucci
    Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 22 (5): 418-420. 1984.
  •  28
    Book Review Section 1 (review)
    with Christopher J. Lucas, William F. Losito, Theodore R. Mitchell, and Ronald E. Butchart
    Educational Studies 15 (4): 365-390. 1984.
  •  16
    Source of variation on lingual vibrotactile thresholds: I. The influence of experimenter experience
    with Donald Fucci, Linda Petrosino, and Neal Sloane
    Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 17 (5): 231-232. 1981.
  •  13
    Source of variation on lingual vibrotactile thresholds: II. Adequate experimenter training
    with Donald Fucci, Linda Petrosino, and Neal Sloane
    Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 18 (1): 35-37. 1981.
  •  26
    Wittgenstein's theory of names
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 57 (1): 59-68. 1979.
    No abstract
  •  15
    The Myth of Exceptionalism: The History of Venereal Disease Reporting in the Twentieth Century
    with Amy L. Fairchild and Ronald Bayer
    Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 31 (4): 624-637. 2003.
    As therapeutic advances in the treatment of AIDS began to emerge in the late 1980s and public health began to have more to offer than just the threat, or the perceived threat, of quarantine or partner notification, fissures began to appear in the alliance against named HIV reporting that had emerged a few years earlier. In 1989, New York City’s Health Commissioner stated that the prospects of early clinical intervention warranted “a shift toward a disease-control approach to HIV infection along …Read more
  •  103
    Privacy, democracy and the politics of disease surveillance
    with Amy L. Fairchild and Ronald Bayer
    Public Health Ethics 1 (1): 30-38. 2008.
    Fairchild, Center for the History and Ethics of Public Health in the Department of Sociomedical Sciences at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health Abstract Surveillance is a cornerstone of public health. It permits us to recognize disease outbreaks, to track the incidence and prevalence of threats to public health, and to monitor the effectiveness of our interventions. But surveillance also challenges our understandings of the significance and role of privacy in a liberal democrac…Read more
  •  26
    Bouwsma on Moore's Proof
    Philosophical Investigations 8 (3): 189-198. 1985.
  •  36
    Bentham and Hobbes: An Issue of Influence
    Journal of the History of Ideas 63 (4): 677-696. 2002.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Ideas 63.4 (2002) 677-696 [Access article in PDF] Bentham and Hobbes:An Issue of Influence James E. Crimmins Historians of political thought commonly assume that the similarities in the thought of Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679) and Jeremy Bentham (1748-1832) are the product of Bentham's reading of Hobbes and infer that Bentham was in a certain sense a disciple of Hobbes. 1 This has been generally true through the…Read more
  •  70
    Re-examining the influence of individual values on ethical decision making
    with Saundra H. Glover, Minnette A. Bumpus, and John E. Logan
    Journal of Business Ethics 16 (12-13): 1319-1329. 1997.
    This paper presents the results of five years of research involving three studies. The first two studies investigated the impact of the value honesty/integrity on the ethical decision choice an individual makes, as moderated by the individual personality traits of self-monitoring and private self-consciousness. The third study, which is the focus of this paper, expanded the two earlier studies by varying the level of moral intensity and including the influence of demographical factors and other …Read more
  •  23
    Invariants and cues
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (1): 102-103. 2001.
    The concepts of invariants and cues are useful, as are those of dorsal and ventral streams, but Norman overgeneralizes when interweaving them. Cues are not confined to identification tasks, invariants not to action, and both can be learned
  •  65
    Criteria for basic tastes and other sensory primaries
    Behavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (1): 77-78. 2008.
    Primary, or basic, colors have been discussed for centuries. Over time, three criteria have emerged on their behalf: (a) their physical mixture yielding all other spectral colors, (b) the physiological attunement of receptors or pathways to particular wavelengths, and (c) the etymological history of the color term. These criteria can be applied usefully to taste to clarify issues
  •  5
    Book review (review)
    with Roberto Peccei, Paul Teller, and Leopold Halpern
    Foundations of Physics 20 (10): 1241-1263. 1990.
  •  64
  •  8
    Simone Martini: Complete Edition (review)
    Speculum 66 (2): 443-445. 1991.
  •  48
    Nijhawan argues that neural compensation is necessary to account for couplings of perception and action. Although perhaps true in some cases, computational tolerance for asynchronously arriving continuous information is of more importance. Moreover, some of the everyday venues Nijhawan uses to argue for the relevance of prediction and compensation can be better ascribed to skill
  •  35
    Review (review)
    Erkenntnis 21 (1). 1984.
  •  115
    Quantum theory and explanatory discourse: Endgame for understanding?
    Philosophy of Science 58 (3): 337-358. 1991.
    Empirical adequacy, formal explanation and understanding are distinct goals of science. While no a priori criterion for understanding should be laid down, there may be inherent limitations on the way we are able to understand explanations of physical phenomena. I examine several recent contributions to the exercise of fashioning an explanatory discourse to mold the formal explanation provided by quantum mechanics to our modes of understanding. The question is whether we are capable of truly unde…Read more
  •  110
    A case study of the development of quantum field theory and of S-matrix theory, from their inceptions to the present, is presented. The descriptions of science given by Kuhn and by Lakatos are compared and contrasted as they apply to this case study. The episodes of the developments of these theories are then considered as candidates for competing research programs in Lakatos' methodology of scientific research programs. Lakatos' scheme provides a reasonable overall description and a plausible a…Read more