7,407 research outputs found
Moral Particularism and the Role of Imaginary Cases: A Pragmatist Approach
I argue that John Dewey’s analysis of imagination enables an account
of learning from imaginary cases consistent with Jonathan Dancy’s moral
particularism. Moreover, this account provides a more robust account of learning
from cases than Dancy’s own. Particularism is the position that there are no, or at
most few, true moral principles, and that competent reasoning and judgment do not
require them. On a particularist framework, one cannot infer from an imaginary
case that because a feature has a particular moral importance there, that it must
have that import in an actual case. Instead, for Dancy, cases can yield “reminders,”
and a person with a lot of experience (real or imagined) brings a “checklist” of
features that can matter to a situation. Using the Nathan-David exchange from
2 Samuel and Martha Nussbaum’s “Steerforth’s Arm” from Love’s Knowledge,
I show that this account does not explain all instances of learning from cases.
Drawing on recent work on cases, I argue that cases can be educative by serving an
exploratory function, probing what one takes to be known and provoking change
in the background one uses in evaluating a situation. I then argue that Dewey’s
work on imagination in his comments on sympathy and in A Common Faith and
Art as Experience enables such a role for cases on a particularist framework. Mark
Johnson’s recent work on metaphor further illuminates how Dewey’s account of art
can be exploratory. I contend that this account affords an exploratory role for cases
consistent with Dancy’s particularism
Young Massive Clusters: Their Population Properties, Formation and Evolution, and Their Relation to the Ancient Globular Clusters
This review summarises the main properties of Young Massive Clusters (YMCs),
including their population properties, particularly focusing on extragalactic
cluster samples. We discuss potential biases and caveats that can affect the
construction of cluster samples and how incompleteness effects can result in
erroneous conclusions regarding the long term survival of clusters. In addition
to the luminosity, mass and age distributions of the clusters, we discuss the
size distribution and profile evolution of the clusters. We also briefly
discuss the stellar populations within YMCs. The final part of the review
focusses on the connections between YMCs and the ancient globular clusters,
whether or not they are related objects and how we can use what we know about
YMC formation and evolution to understand how GCs formed in the early universe
and how they relate to galaxy formation/evolution.Comment: 33 pages. To appear in EES2015 - Stellar Clusters: benchmarks of
stellar physics and galactic evolution - eds. E. Moraux, Y. Lebreton and C.
Charbonne
Stars throw their weight in old galaxies
The observation that old, massive galaxies have a larger fraction of low-mass
stars than their younger, lower-mass counterparts adds to mounting evidence
that star formation may have been different in the early Universe.Comment: Invited Nature "News and Views" Commentary on Cappellari et al. 2012,
Nature, 484, 485; 3 pages, 1 figur
The spectre of triviality
A spectre haunts the semantics of natural language — the spectre of Triviality. Semanticists (in particular Rothschild 2013; Khoo and Mandelkern 2018a,b) have entered into a holy alliance to exorcise this spectre. None, I will argue, have yet succeeded
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