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  1. Mar 15, 2018 · Abstract ‘Genius, cannot be taught,’ Ralph Waldo Emerson reports, reiterating Socrates’s conclusion in Plato’s Meno.This article considers this claim and its significance for moral education, specifically in modern science, by focusing on Emerson’s account of genius and the virtue of self-trust that perfects it.

    • Emily Dumler-Winckler
    • 2018
  2. Feb 9, 2023 · Here, then, philosophy and progress in philosophy are treated in full analogy with the arts and their progress, and both become related to the progress of the sciences. 4 KANT ON VIRTUES, INNOVATION, AND MORAL APATHY. Kant did indeed change our understanding of the philosopher, the artist, and the scientist.

    • Plot
    • Characters
    • Notes
    • Episode Tie-Ins

    While on a trip in an artificial forest, Pious Scouts (among whom are Orel and Doughy) are told about the "evils" of Darwinism – in a form of a „spooky story” about an evil scientist living on a desolate, dark island. The next day, Orel and Doughy stumble across a hominid frozen in a block of ice (which should take care of their "coincidence badges...

    Major characters

    1. Orel Puppington 2. Link McMissions(first and only appearance)

    Minor characters

    1. Reverend Putty 2. Clay Puppington 3. Doughy Latchkey 4. Bloberta Puppington 5. Block Posabule 6. Agnes Sculptham 7. Principal Fakey 8. Mr. Cartsen 9. Florence Papermouth(cameo) 1. Castings Palpable (first and only appearance)

    Intro gag: Orel holds out a signature book and pen. Then a lightning bolt hits the book and "GOD" is signed on a page.
    At the end of this episode, a scale-up reveals that Moralton has completely taken over the United States, and the U.S. is the only country remaining on Earth.
    Dino Stamatopoulos thought that he had "dropped the ball" on this episode as head writer.
    The promotional advertisements for this episode used the song "Bang a Gong (Get It On)" by T. Rex.
  3. Jun 8, 2013 · The fourth thing of note, it seems to me, is that "geniuses" often seem willing to go very big, even if it involves going beyond what they can do very well. Kant and Heidegger seem to me to be the best philosophical examples of this. Kant tried to understand *all* of human reasoning, even though his arguments often fail.

  4. Nov 12, 2014 · The freedom of the fine artist is such only to the extent that it resembles nature, and ‘it does so precisely because, free and pure, it does not depend on natural laws’. 9 Genius is the agency which ensures this creative freedom, and it is a structural necessity for Kant’s philosophy of art; for, granted the injunction that art must be as free from constraint as if it were simply given ...

    • Michael Haworth
    • 2014
  5. Sep 2, 2014 · These issues occur in many different types of research disciplines, including biology, medicine, physics, chemistry, engineering, psychology, sociology, anthropology, economics, mathematics, and the humanities (including philosophy). Research ethics is a type of professional ethics, similar to medical or legal ethics (Shamoo and Resnik, 2009).

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  7. Jul 29, 2020 · A theoretical virtue in science is a property of a scientific theory that is considered desirable. Standard theoretical virtues include testability, empirical accuracy, simplicity, unification, consistency, coherence, and fertility. First highlighted by Thomas S. Kuhn in a seminal paper in 1977, theoretical virtues have come to play an ...

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