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Howison and book
The Personal Idealism of Howison was explained in his book " The Limits of Evolution and Other Essays Illustrating the Metaphysical Theory of Personal Idealism ".

Howison and Other
Other proponents include George Holmes Howison and J. M. E. McTaggart.
Other film-related books featuring his work are The Book of Lists: Horror ( edited by Amy Wallace, Del Howison and Scott Bradley ), Nebula Awards Showcase 2009 ( edited by Ellen Datlow ), If Looks Could Kill ( edited by Marketa Uhlirova ), The Famous Monsters Chronicles ( edited by Dennis Daniel ), Horror: Another 100 Best Books ( edited by Stephen Jones and Kim Newman ), The BFI Companion to Horror ( edited by Kim Newman ), The Shape of Rage: The Films of David Cronenberg ( edited by Piers Handling ), The Eyeball Companion ( edited by Stephen Thrower ), The Hong Kong Filmography by John Charles ( with a foreword by Lucas ), José Mojica Marins: 50 anos de carreira ( edited by Eugenio Puppo ) and Obsession: The Films of Jess Franco.

Howison and Personal
George Holmes Howison taught a metaphysical theory called Personal Idealism which was also called " California Personalism " by others to distinguish it from another type of Personalism called " Boston Personalism "( see above ) which was taught by Borden Parker Bowne.

Howison and created
Howison created a radically democratic notion of personal idealism that extended all the way to God, who was no more the ultimate monarch, no longer the only ruler and creator of the universe, but the ultimate democrat in eternal relation to other eternal persons.

Howison and personal
Howison found few disciples among the religious, for whom his thought was heretical ; the non-religious, on the other hand, considered his proposals too religious ; only J. M. E. McTaggart's idealist atheism or Thomas Davidson's Apeirionism seem to resemble Howisons personal idealism.

Howison and idealism
Howison maintained that both impersonal, monistic idealism and materialism run contrary to the experience of moral freedom.
However, Howison attacked Royce ’ s doctrine for having left no ontological standing for the individual over against the Absolute, rendering Royce's idealism a kind of pernicious impersonalism, according to Howison.
Howison maintained that both impersonal, monistic idealism and materialism run contrary to the moral freedom experienced by persons.

Howison and God
A benchmark in Royce ’ s career and thought occurred when he returned to California to speak to the Philosophical Union at Berkeley, and ostensibly to defend his concept of God from the criticisms of George Holmes Howison, Joseph Le Conte, and Sidney Mezes, a meeting the New York Times called “ a battle of the giants .” There Royce offered a new modal version of his proof for the reality of God based upon ignorance rather than error, based upon the fragmentariness of individual existence rather than its epistemological uncertainty.

book and Limits
In his book Knowledge and its Limits, Williamson argues that the concept of knowledge cannot be analyzed into a set of other concepts — instead, it is sui generis.
Kushner also wrote a response to Simon Wiesenthal's question of forgiveness in the book The Sunflower: On the Possibilities and Limits of Forgiveness.
In his 1791 book On the Limits of State Action, classical liberal thinker Wilhelm von Humboldt explained how " whatever does not spring from a man's free choice, or is only the result of instruction and guidance, does not enter into his very nature ; he does not perform it with truly human energies, but merely with mechanical exactness " and so when the laborer works under external control, " we may admire what he does, but we despise what he is.
The Limits to Growth is a 1972 book about the computer modeling of unchecked economic and population growth with finite resource supplies.
" Andrew Bacevich's book The Limits of Power: The End of American Exceptionalism refers to Niebuhr 13 times.
She is best known as lead author of the influential book The Limits to Growth, which made headlines around the world.
In 1972 she was on the MIT team that produced the global computer model " World3 " for the Club of Rome and provided the basis for the book, Limits to Growth.
Beyond the Limits is a 1992 book continuing the modeling of the consequences of a rapidly growing global population that was started in Limits to Growth.
Beyond the Limits ( Chelsea Green Publishing Company ) and Earthscan addressed many of the criticisms of the Limits of Growth book, but still has caused controversy and mixed reactions.
The Club of Rome raised considerable public attention with its report Limits to Growth, which has sold 12 million copies in more than 30 translations, making it the best-selling environmental book in world history.
Also adapted in Winner's book " The Whale and the Reactor: A Search for Limits in an Age of High Technology ", University of Chicago Press, 1986.
As he would argue years later in his book The Limits of Social Policy, Great Society programs were not really the answer because " the breakdown of traditional modes of behavior is the chief cause of our social problems " and he did not think that breakdown could be addressed by government.
It was originally produced and used by a Club of Rome study that produced the model and the book The Limits to Growth.
Since World3 was originally created it has had minor tweaks to get to the World3 / 91 model used in the book Beyond the Limits, later improved to get the World3 / 2000 model distributed by the Institute for Policy and Social Science Research and finally the World3 / 2004 model used in the book Limits to growth: the 30 year update.
A detailed criticism of the model is in the book Models of Doom: A Critique of the Limits to Growth.
Bill Emmott also wrote the best-selling book The Sun Also Sets: The Limits to Japan's Economic Power as well as 20: 21 Vision: Twentieth-Century Lessons for the Twenty-First Century, Japanophobia: The Myth of the Invincible Japanese and his most recent book Rivals: How the Power Struggle Between China, India and Japan Will Shape our Next Decade.
( See Williamson's book, Knowledge and Its Limits ( Oxford UP, 2000 ).
It was adapted into " The Sandkings ," an episode of the new The Outer Limits, as well as a 1987 graphic novel, published by DC Comics as the seventh and last book of the DC Science Fiction Graphic Novel line, adapted by Doug Moench, Pat Broderick, and Neal McPheeters.

book and Evolution
Such cooperative behaviors have sometimes been seen as arguments for left-wing politics such by the Russian zoologist and anarchist Peter Kropotkin in his 1902 book Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution and Peter Singer in his book A Darwinian Left.
S Haldane's book, The Causes of Evolution, reestablished natural selection as the premier mechanism of evolution by explaining it in terms of the mathematical consequences of Mendelian genetics.
* In 2001, Peter Ward mentioned an escaped clanking replicator destroying the human race in his book Future Evolution.
Such was the time taken in peer-reviewing the paper for Nature that this was preceded by a 1972 essay by Maynard Smith in a book of essays titled On Evolution.
Maynard Smith explains further in his 1982 book Evolution and the Theory of Games.
* The ESS was first used in the social sciences by Robert Axelrod in his 1984 book The Evolution of Cooperation.
He published a popular Penguin book, The Theory of Evolution, in 1958 ( with subsequent editions in 1966, 1975, 1993 ).
This area of research culminated in his 1982 book Evolution and the Theory of Games.
Maynard Smith published a book entitled The Evolution of Sex which explored in mathematical terms, the notion of the " two-fold cost of sex ".
Together they wrote an influential 1995 book The Major Transitions in Evolution, a seminal work which continues to contribute to ongoing issues in evolutionary biology.
Jean Philippe Rushton ( born December 3, 1943 ) is a Canadian psychology professor at the University of Western Ontario who is most widely known for his work on racial group differences, such as research on race and intelligence, race and crime, and the application of r / K selection theory to humans in his book Race, Evolution and Behavior ( 1995 ).
Rushton's book Race, Evolution, and Behavior ( 1995 ) uses r / K selection theory to explain how East Asians consistently average high, blacks low, and whites in the middle on an evolutionary scale of characteristics indicative of nurturing behavior.
In a 1995 review of Rushton's Race, Evolution and Behavior, anthropologist and population geneticist Henry Harpending expressed doubt as to whether all of Rushton's data fit the r / K model he proposed, but nonetheless praised the book for its proposing of a theoretical model that makes testable predictions about differences between human groups.
The biological anthropologist C. Loring Brace criticized Rushton in his 1996 review of the book, Race, Evolution and Behavior ( 1996 ):
* Creative Evolution ( book )
The first reason is that such groups may extend group identity and cooperation beyond the limited of family and kinship out of reciprocal altruism, in the belief that helping other individuals will produce an advantageous situation for both the sender and receiver of that help, this tendency has been noted in studies by Robert Axelrod that are summarized in his book The Evolution of Cooperation ( 1984 ).
* Johnson, George " Evolution Between the Ears ", " New York Times ," April 19, 1992, accessed April 16, 2007 ( a critical review of Gerald Edelman's 1992 book Brilliant Air, Brilliant Fire )
In his book, The Greatest Show on Earth: The Evidence for Evolution, biologist Richard Dawkins grapples with the question of why pain has to be so very painful.
In his book Icons of Evolution, Wells alleges that peppered moth studies, and in particular Kettlewell's experiments, were erroneous.
Following his death, the publishers of the Old Earth creationism book " Who Was Adam " issued a news release that said: " Evolution has just been dealt its death blow.
Wilson had actually founded the field ) in his book Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution, although focusing more on altruism than aggression, suggesting that anarchist societies were feasible because of an innate human tendency to cooperate.
Jerry Coyne, author of the book Why Evolution is True ( ISBN 0199230846 ) and its related blog, called for a boycott of the magazine, which was supported by prominent evolutionary biologists Richard Dawkins and P. Z. Myers.
Another criticism of the book, made by the philosopher Mary Midgley in her book Evolution as a Religion, is that it discusses philosophical and moral questions that go beyond the biological arguments that Dawkins makes.

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