An outstanding reference source to the key debates in this exciting subject area and represents the first collection of its kind. Essential reading for students and researchers in philosophy of mind and psychology.
Auteur
Ian Phillips is Associate Professor and Gabriele Taylor Fellow at St. Anne's College, Oxford University, UK, and a Visiting Research Scholar in the Program in Cognitive Science at Princeton University, USA. He is also an Editor for Mind & Language and a Consulting Editor for Timing & Time Perception.
Résumé
Headlines of public service corruption scandals are painful reminders of the need for continuing education in the subjects of ethics and integrity. Public service professionals employed as government officials, forensic scientists, investigators, first responders, and those within the legal and justice systems, face daily decisions that can mean the difference between life or death and freedom or imprisonment. Sometimes, such decisions can present ethical dilemmas even to the most seasoned of professionals.Building on the success of the first edition, Ethics for the Public Service Professional, Second Edition serves as a single-source resource for the topic of ethics and ethical decision making as it relates to government service. While incorporating an examination of the history of ethics, codes and legislation, the book exposes the reader to the challenges faced by today's public service professionals and administrators in incorporating ethics within daily decisions, procedures, and duties. Key features include:Current controversies in police, forensic, and other public service sectors including: racial profiling, evidence tampering, disaster response, and auditsImportant new mechanisms of accountability, including use-of-force reporting, citizen complaint procedures, and open government Contemporary news stories throughout the book introduce the reader to a broad range of ethical issues facing leaders within the public service workplaceChapter pedagogy including key terms, learning objectives, end-of-chapter questions, a variety of boxed ethical case examples, and referencesRipped from the Headlines current event examples demonstrate actual scenarios involving the issues discussed within each chapterThis in-depth text will be essential for the foundational development and explanation of protocols used within a successful organization. As such, Ethics for the Public Service Professional, Second Edition will help introduce ethics and ethical decision-making to both those new to the realm of forensic science, criminal justice, and emergency services and those already working in the field.a
Contenu
Introduction: The significance of temporal experience Ian Phillips
Part 1: Ancient and Early Modern Perspectives
How natural is a unified notion of time? Temporal Experience in early Greek Thought Barbara Sattler
Time and temporal experience in the seventeenth century Geoffrey Gorham
Hume on temporal experience Lorne Falkenstein
Temporal experience in Kant's Critique Of Pure Reason Katherine Dunlop
Part 2: Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century Perspectives
The Hodgsonian account of temporal experience Holly Andersen
The wonder of time-consciousness John B. Brough
Bergson on temporal experience and Durée Réelle Barry Dainton
William Stern's Psychische Präsenzzeit Barry Dainton
Part 3: The Structure of Temporal Experience
The snapshot conception of temporal experiences Philippe Chuard
Atomism, Extensionalism, and Temporal Presence Oliver Rashbrook-Cooper
Rethinking the specious present Simon Prosser
Making sense of subjective time Geoffrey Lee
Part 4: Temporal Experience and the Philosophy of Mind
Temporal experience and the philosophy of perception Christoph Hoerl
Time in the dream Thomas Crowther and Matthew Soteriou
Time perception and agency: a dual model Carlos Montemayor
Temporal perception, magnitudes, and phenomenal externalism Christopher Peacocke
Part 5: Temporal Experience and Metaphysics
What is time? Michael Pelczar
Temporal experience and the A versus B debate Natalja Deng
Presentism and temporal experience Akiko Frischhut
The subjectively enduring self L. A. Paul
Part 6: Empirical Perspectives
Perceiving visual time Alan Johnston
How we "use" time Mari Riess Jones
Attentional resources and the shaping of temporal experience Scott W. Brown
Part 7: Temporal Experience and Aesthetics
Motion and the Futurists: capturing the dynamic sensation Robin Le Poidevin
On time in cinema Enrico Terrone
Dancing in time Aili Bresnahan
Music Andrew Kania.
Index