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Jack (Not Jackie)
$17.99
The Message of Philippians
$25.99
The Message of 1 Corinthians
$30.99
The Best Thing You Can Steal
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The Archer at Dawn
$10.99
A Year of Simple Family Food
$29.95
Fullness: A Memoir
$11.11
It's in Her Kiss
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Killer Instinct
$9.99
Planting Peanuts
$34.22
Rasta Bible
$17.98
Strung Out
$18.99
Pastoral Theology
$26.99
The Case for Gay Reparations
$27.99
When the Earl Met His Match
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Stuck with You
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Qoheleth
$18.00
Outshine
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Wing Chun Made Easy
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Description
What is the difference between a wink and a blink? The answer is important not only to philosophers of mind, for significant moral and legal consequences rest on the distinction between voluntary and involuntary behavior. However, "action theory"--the branch of philosophy that has traditionally articulated the boundaries between action and non-action, and between voluntary and involuntary behavior--has been unable to account for the difference.
About the Author
Alicia Juarrero is Professor of Philosophy at Prince George's Community College, Maryland. She is a member of the National Council on the Humanities, the governing board of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Alicia Juarrero argues that a mistaken, 350-year-old model of cause and explanation--one that takes all causes to be of the push-pull, efficient cause sort, and all explanation to be prooflike--underlies contemporary theories of action. Juarrero then proposes a new framework for conceptualizing causes based on complex adaptive systems. Thinking of causes as dynamical constraints makes bottom-up and top-down causal relations, including those involving intentional causes, suddenly tractable. A different logic for explaining actions--as historical narrative, not inference--follows if one adopts this novel approach to long-standing questions of action and responsibility.
About the Author
Alicia Juarrero is Professor of Philosophy at Prince George's Community College, Maryland. She is a member of the National Council on the Humanities, the governing board of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
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