Apple, James G. Undergraduate Honors Theses [manuscript], 1959-1975 and n.d.
Title:
Undergraduate Honors Theses [manuscript], 1959-1975 and n.d.
Undergraduate Honors Theses and bluebook examinations primarily from the Philosophy Department. Theses include: Foundations of Science and Morals (Apple, James G.); A study of Religion in the World from the Point of View of the Philosophy of Religion (Bennett, Alan H.); Some Considerations About the Scope and Method of Political Economy (Coon, Miles Anthony); Of the Extent of Human Knowledge (de Marco, Franklyn P., Jr.); Aesthetic Intuition: A Necessary Supplement to Dialectic (Dillon, Martin C.); Subjectivity and Science (Grinnan, St. George Tucker III); Objectification: A Study in Scientific Method (Makielski, Robert P.); Signs of Minds (Miller, Harlan B.); On Ryle and "Mapping" (Shea, James M., Jr.); The Social Contract Theory (Smith, Milton Curtis); An Essay on the Equality of Men (Stewart, Andrew); Freedom by Choice (Jones, Martin M.); Paradox and Contradiction in Religion's Language (Leshes, James Hunter); Central Ideas in Contemporary Conservatism (Horight, Kevin); Mathematics and Necessary Truth (Brown, Robert Glenn); Concerning Some Problems of the Logic of Conditional Statements (August, Richard Martin); Utilitarianism and Justice (Delaltre, Edwin J); If's and Con's (Leepel, Robert A); Morality and the Law (Kunkel, David N.); An Investigation of Ernest Cassirer's Philosophy of Symbolic Forms (Moody, Raymond A. Jr.); The Gap Between Descriptive and Evaluative Statements (Roberts, William S.); Symbolic Reference (Barney, David); Casuality and Determinism (Smith, Archie M. III); Kant and the Conflict of Duty (Scheflin, Alan Walter); Descartes' Arguments for the Existence of God: Exposition and Criticism (Reynolds, Charles F.); A Criticism of Stevenson's Emotivism (Cadotte, Bruce M.); Moore and Hare on the Naturalistic Fallacy (Catron, Phillip W.); The Identity Theory (Frye, Joseph M., Jr.); Three Forms of Rule-Utilitarianism (Lewis, S. M.); Persons (Lundgren, George E.); Hare on Universalizability (Mundy, Raymond Thomas); Prescriptivism and the Problem of Moral Weakness (Lundgren, George E.); Of Altruism, Egoism and the Categorical Imperative (Saumweber, David J. E.); Propositions About the Future (Young, Samuel R.); Criteria (Gorman, Richard Francis, III); Religion and "Seeing As" (Peele, Thomas); Some Epistemological Discussions of Methodology in the Social Sciences (Saumweber, David J. E.); [On Punishment?] (Goodall, Robert); The Justification of Legal Punishment (Ross, Thomas); The Concept of Nonsense in the Tractatus (Bogard, Hal Nance); Hearing (Brown, J. A.); Promising (Rosenberger, J. Gorman); Refutation of Behaviorism (Bush, Richard); Judgment and Sentiment in Hume's Ethics (Laughlin, Ross A.); The Concept of the Given (Redinger, Craig T.); Prolegomena to the Definition of a Work of Art (Sepper, Gregory Todd); The Concept of Self (Nichols, Brooks Ashton); Supererogation: Some Implications Concerning Duty (Williams, Daniel); How Does One Raise His Arm? (Dyer, D. W.); Analyticity (Hadley, Robert F., Jr.); Casuality (Mears, John H., III); Recent Discussions On Pleasure (Pearson, Cedric Eugene); Ayer's Crusoe and Wittgenstein's Diary-Keeper (Peele, Thomas); The Augustinian Critique of Greek Philosophy (Reynolds, Charles F., III); A Justification of Legal Punishment (Ross, Charles Randolph); On Knowledge (Ross, Charles Randolph); The Problem of Universals: A Re-evaluation (Will, Marvin); Why are the Calculi of Logic and Arithmetic Applicable to Reality? (Wilson, Stephen).
ArchivalResource:
66 items.
http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/647973710 View
View in SNAC