Nutrition Today
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SCImago
Q3
SJR
0.327
CiteScore
3.2
Categories
Nutrition and Dietetics
Areas
Nursing
Years of issue
1966-2025
journal names
Nutrition Today
Top-3 citing journals

Journal of the American Dietetic Association
(401 citations)

Nutrients
(384 citations)

Nutrition Today
(270 citations)
Top-3 organizations

Pennsylvania State University
(15 publications)

Tufts University
(9 publications)

University of Minnesota
(6 publications)

Georgetown University
(2 publications)

University of Southern California
(2 publications)

Pennsylvania State University
(1 publication)
Most cited in 5 years
Found
Publications found: 433
Q1
Can Constancy Mechanisms Draw the Limits of Intentionality?
de Souza Filho S.F.
Abstract
What are the minimal conditions for intentionality that a sensory state should satisfy for it to constitute a representational state? That is, what are the limits of intentionality? This is the problem of demarcation. The goal of this paper is to assess a specific demarcation proposal for the minimal conditions of intentionality—the constancy mechanism proposal. Accordingly, it is a minimal condition for the intentionality of a given state that the sensory system should employ a constancy mechanism in the production of this state. First of all, I introduce the problem of demarcation and show its relevance for the debate on the viability of naturalist theories of mental representation. After that, I present the explanatory role requirement for the positing of representational states by intentional explanations of behaviour and show how it constitutes a criterion for the assessment of demarcation proposals for the limits of intentionality. Finally, I assess the constancy mechanism proposal and show that its viability is seriously jeopardised by the minimal distance problem.
Q1
Dispositions and the Least Action Principle
Benitez F., Maltrana D.
Abstract
This work deals with obstacles hindering a metaphysics of laws of nature in terms of dispositions, i.e., of fundamental properties that are causal powers. A recent analysis of the principle of least action has put into question the viability of dispositionalism in the case of classical mechanics, generally seen as the physical theory most easily amenable to a dispositional ontology. Here, a proper consideration of the framework role played by the least action principle within the classical image of the world allows us to build a consistent metaphysics of dispositions as charges of interactions. In doing so we develop a general approach that opens the way towards an ontology of dispositions for fundamental physics also beyond classical mechanics.
Q1
Barren Worlds
Benitez F.
Abstract
This work explores issues with the eliminativist formulation of ontic structural realism. An ontology that totally eliminates objects is found lacking by arguing, first, that the theoretical frameworks used to support the best arguments against an object-oriented ontology (quantum mechanics, relativity theory, quantum field theory) can be seen in every case as physical models of empty worlds, and therefore do not represent all the information that comes from science, and in particular from fundamental physics, which also includes information about local interactions between objects. Secondly, by giving a critical assessment of the role of symmetries in these fundamental physical theories; and, lastly, by warning about unfounded metaphysical assumptions. An argument is made for a moderate form of structural realism instead, one in which objects play the fundamental role of representing symmetries and bearing their conserved charges, and of participating in the network of interactions observed in the world.
Q1
The Information-Theoretic Account of Knowledge, Closure and the KK Thesis
Mattingly J.
Abstract
One common objection to Dretske’s Information Theoretic Account of Knowledge (ITAK) is that it violates closure. I show that it does not, and that extant arguments attempting to establish that it does rely instead on the KK thesis. That thesis does fail for ITAK. I show moreover that an interesting consequence of ITAK obeying the closure principle after all is that on this view if skepticism is false, we can have a great deal of empirical knowledge, but it is in principle impossible to know that skepticism is false. In short, a proper understanding of how ITAK closes off the KK thesis shows that we can 1) take seriously the skeptic, we can 2) respond to her appropriately that we do have knowledge and we can 3) keep closure.
Q1
Disagreement and a Functional Equal Weight View
Vogel C.A.
Abstract
If a colleague of mine, whose opinion I respect, disagrees with me about some claim, this might give me pause regarding my position on the matter. The Equal Weight view proposes that in such cases of peer disagreement I ought to give my colleague’s opinion as much weight as my own, and decrease my certainty in the disputed claim. One prominent criticism of the Equal Weight view is that treating higher-order (indirect) evidence in this way invariably swamps first-order (direct) evidence. While the opinions of our peers matter in our deliberations, the Equal Weight view counter-intuitively requires that evidence of mere disagreement is more important than standard kinds of evidence. I offer a proposal for how we should idealize epistemic agents that identifies the variable feature of disagreements that accounts for the shifting significance of direct and indirect evidence in different disagreement contexts. Specifically, by idealizing epistemic agents as deriving functions that characterize the non-subjective relationship between a body of evidence and the reasonableness of believing the various propositions supported by that evidence, we can accommodate the intuition to compromise that motivates the Equal Weight view, without accepting the counter-intuitive results.
Q1
In Defence of Discrete Plural Logic (or How to Avoid Logical Overmedication When Dealing with Internally Singularized Pluralities)
Picazo G.
Abstract
In recent decades, plural logic has established itself as a well-respected member of the extensions of first-order classical logic. In the present paper, I draw attention to the fact that among the examples that are commonly given in order to motivate the need for this new logical system, there are some in which the elements of the plurality in question are internally singularized (e.g. ‘Whitehead and Russell wrote Principia Mathematica’), while in others they are not (e.g. ‘Some philosophers wrote Principia Mathematica’). Then, building on previous work, I point to a subsystem of plural logic in which inferences concerning examples of the first type can be adequately dealt with. I notice that such a subsystem (here called ‘discrete plural logic’) is in reality a mere variant of first-order logic as standardly formulated, and highlight the fact that it is axiomatizable while full plural logic is not. Finally, I urge that greater attention be paid to discrete plural logic and that discrete plurals are not used in order to motivate the introduction of full-fledged plural logic—or, at least, not without remarking that they can also be adequately dealt with in a considerably simpler system.
Q1
Higher-Order Skolem’s Paradoxes and the Practice of Mathematics: a Note
Hosseini D., Kimiagari M.
Abstract
We will formulate some analogous higher-order versions of Skolem’s paradox and assess the generalizability of two solutions for Skolem’s paradox to these paradoxes: the textbook approach and that of Bays (2000). We argue that the textbook approach to handle Skolem’s paradox cannot be generalized to solve the parallel higher-order paradoxes, unless it is augmented by the claim that there is no unique language within which the practice of mathematics can be formalized. Then, we argue that Bays’ solution to the original Skolem’s paradox, unlike the textbook solution, can be generalized to solve the higher-order paradoxes without any implication about the possibility or order of a language in which mathematical practice is to be formalized.
Q1
Three Arguments against Constitutive Norm Accounts of Assertion
Cull M.J.
Abstract
In this article I introduce constitutive norm accounts of assertion, and then give three arguments for giving up on the constitutive norm project. First I begin with an updated version of MacFarlane’s Boogling argument. My second argument is that the ‘overriding response’ that constitutive norm theorists offer to putative counterexamples is unpersuasive and dialectically risky. Third and finally, I suggest that constitutive norm theorists, in appealing to the analogy of games, actually undermine their case that they can make sense of assertions that fail to follow their putative constitutive norm. These considerations, I suggest, together show that the constitutive norm project founders not because any single norm is not descriptively correct of our assertion practices, but rather, because giving a constitutive norm as the definition of assertion alone is insufficient.
Q1
Necessarily the Old Riddle Necessary Connections and the Problem of Induction
Backmann M.
Abstract
In this paper, I will discuss accounts to solve the problem of induction by introducing necessary connections. The basic idea is this: if we know that there are necessary connections between properties F and G such that F -ness necessarily brings about G-ness, then we are justified to infer that all, including future or unobserved, F s will be Gs. To solve the problem of induction with ontology has been proposed by David Armstrong and Brian Ellis. In this paper, I will argue that these attempts to solve the problem of induction fail. Necessary connections fail to reliably imply the respective regularities for two main reasons: Firstly, according to an argument originally presented by Helen Beebee, the respective necessary connections might be time-limited, and hence do not warrant inferences about future cases. As I will discuss, arguments against the possibility or explanatory power of time-limited necessary connections fail. Secondly, even time-unlimited necessary connections do not entail strict or non-strict regularities, and nor do they allow inferences about individual cases, which is an important function of inductive reasoning. Moreover, the proposed solution to the problem of induction would only apply to a tiny minority of inductive inferences. I argue that most inductive inferences are not easily reducible to the proposed inference pattern, as the vast majority of everyday inductive inferences do not involve necessary connections between fundamental physical properties or essences.
Q1
Assessing the Ethos Theory of Music
Young J.O.
Abstract
The view that music can have a positive or negative effect on a person’s character has been defended throughout the history of philosophy. This paper traces some of the history of the ethos theory and identifies a version of the theory that could be true. This version of the theory can be traced to Plato and Aristotle and was given a clear statement by Herbert Spencer in the nineteenth century. The paper then examines some of the empirical literature on how music can affect dispositions to behave and moral judgement. None of this evidence provides much support for the ethos theory. The paper then proposes a programme of research that has the potential to confirm the ethos theory.
Q1
Ethical Issues on Musical Appropriation
Puy N.G.
Abstract
This paper aims to shed light on the question of whether musical appropriation is ethically unobjectionable. James Young (2021) has recently advanced a position on this topic, according to which, whereas the appropriation of a whole work is uncontroversially non-permissible, the appropriation of parts of a work is usually permissible. He grounds this view in ontological matters and in a criterion of fair use in terms of economic harm to the source work’s composer. I argue that, pace Young, we cannot make general ethical claims about musical appropriation because their truth is sensitive to the musical genres that the involved works belong to. First, I clarify the scope of musical appropriation by means of considerations on musical practices and ontology. This will reveal that versions and covers are not genuine cases of musical appropriation. In a second step, I consider a specific kind of musical appropriation: using the first measures of a source work as the first measures of a secondary work. I show that, even if we assume Young’s ontological framework and his criterion on fair use, the instances of this kind of musical appropriation count as fair or unfair depending on the musical genres of the involved works due to their normative implications for the composition and appreciation of those works.
Q1
Aesthetic Understanding and Epistemic Agency in Art
Dammann G., Schellekens E.
Abstract
Recently, cognitivist accounts about art have come under pressure to provide stronger arguments for the view that artworks can yield genuine insight and understanding. In Gregory Currie’s Imagining and Knowing: Learning from Fiction, for example, a convincing case is laid out to the effect that any knowledge gained from engaging with art must “be judged by the very standards that are used in assessing the claim of science to do the same” (Currie 2020: 8) if indeed it is to count as knowledge. Cognitivists must thus rally to provide sturdier grounds for their view. The revived interest in this philosophical discussion targets not only the concept of knowledge at the heart of cognitivist and anti-cognitivist debate, but also highlights a more specific question about how, exactly, some artworks can (arguably) afford cognitive import and change how we think about the world, ourselves and the many events, persons and situations we encounter. This paper seeks to explore some of the ways in which art is capable of altering our epistemic perspectives in ways that might count as knowledge despite circumventing some standards of evidential requirement. In so doing we will contrast two alternative conceptions of how we stand to learn from art. Whereas the former is modelled on the idea that knowledge is something that can be “extracted” from our experience of particular works of art, the latter relies on a notion of such understanding as primarily borne out of a different kind of engagement with art. We shall call this the subtractive conception and cumulative conception respectively. The cumulative conception, we shall argue, better explains why at least some insights and instances of knowledge gained from art seem to elude the evidential standards called for by sceptics of cognitivism.
Q1
Schiller on the Aesthetic Constitution of Moral Virtue and the Justification of Aesthetic Obligations
von Plato L.
Abstract
Friedrich Schiller’s notion of moral virtue includes self-determination through practical rationality as well as sensual self-determination through the pursuit of aesthetic value, i.e., through beauty. This paper surveys conceptual assumptions behind Schiller’s notions of moral and aesthetic perfections that allow him to ground both, moral virtue and beauty on conceptions of freedom. While Schiller’s notions of grace and dignity describe relations between the aesthetic and the moral aspects of certain determining actions, the ‘aesthetic condition’ conceptualises human beings from the perspective of aesthetic self-determinability. Schiller thereby provides a normative aesthetic standard that not only affects the moral nature of our motives and actions, but also of what we, as human beings, want to and should be conceived of in the first place. As I argue in this paper, considering this aesthetic self-determinability from a moral perspective results in an aesthetic constitution of moral virtue, which in turn justifies aesthetic obligations. Schiller thereby merges the perfections of the two normative domains for an extended anthropological conception of aesthetically infused notion of moral virtue while assuring the conceptual autonomy of each normative domain. Giving aesthetic demands a practical normative role by partly constituting moral virtue and thereby still maintain their aesthetic normative source is a move that opens up many resources for current research on the interactions between various normative demands, such as aesthetic reasons for moral or legal judgements and action, aesthetic obligations or weighing varying sources and elements of normative authority and hegemony against each other.
Q1
Is There an Aesthetics of Political Song?
Guerreiro V.
Abstract
Some think politics and art should not mix. The problem with this view is that politics and art were always entwined. Human experience is structured politically, even if much of it is not. Here, I illustrate this with a series of artistic examples that take us from work songs in a Mississippi 1940s forced labour camp to a desolate dead forest landscape in a former Krasnoyarsk gulag, evocative of a Paul Nash World War I painting. Powerful artworks help us to come to grips with human experience, more than merely “expressing emotion”. I treat songs as representations, looking for a way their political significance is part of their aesthetic value. To do this, I defend James Young’s (2001) concept of “illustrative representation” as bridging the gap between formalism and contextualism. But instead of Young’s “Wollheimian” (resemblance between experiences) approach to how such representation works I draw on Kulvicki’s (2020) notion of “syntactic parts”, combining it with Carroll’s (2016) concept of form as the “ensemble of artistic choices”, and Black’s (1954-55) frame-and-focus model of meaning in metaphor. Hopefully, in the end I will have clarified the ways in which (some) songs are both politically and aesthetically meaningful.
Q1
The Value of Aesthetic Value: Aesthetics, Ethics, and The Network Theory
Matravers D.
Abstract
The standard discussion of the relation between aesthetics and ethics tends to avoid the fundamental question: how are those two values ranked against each other in terms of importance. This paper looks at two arguments, the ‘resource allocation argument’ and the ‘relative weight argument’. It puts forward the view that any theory of aesthetic value should characterise aesthetic value in a way that allows for the existence of these arguments. It argues that hedonism does that successfully, but the more recent approaches to aesthetic value—in particular Dominic McIver Lopes’s ‘Network Theory’ have more of a struggle.
Top-100
Citing journals
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Journal of the American Dietetic Association
401 citations, 3.84%
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Nutrients
384 citations, 3.68%
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Nutrition Today
270 citations, 2.59%
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Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior
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22 citations, 0.21%
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Revista de Nutricao
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Citing publishers
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Elsevier
2400 citations, 23%
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Springer Nature
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MDPI
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Eco-Vector LLC
3 citations, 0.03%
|
|
American College of Allergy, Asthma, & Immunology
3 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Veterinary World
3 citations, 0.03%
|
|
American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.
3 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Japan Society on Water Environment
3 citations, 0.03%
|
|
Oriental Scientific Publishing Company
3 citations, 0.03%
|
|
University of Toronto Press Inc. (UTPress)
3 citations, 0.03%
|
|
XMLink
3 citations, 0.03%
|
|
The Korean Nutrition Society and The Korean Society of Community Nutrition
3 citations, 0.03%
|
|
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO)
2 citations, 0.02%
|
|
Show all (70 more) | |
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
|
Publishing organizations
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
|
|
Pennsylvania State University
15 publications, 0.39%
|
|
Tufts University
9 publications, 0.23%
|
|
University of Minnesota
6 publications, 0.16%
|
|
Cornell University
4 publications, 0.1%
|
|
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
4 publications, 0.1%
|
|
Purdue University
4 publications, 0.1%
|
|
University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
4 publications, 0.1%
|
|
University of Southern California
3 publications, 0.08%
|
|
Johns Hopkins University
3 publications, 0.08%
|
|
Harvard University
3 publications, 0.08%
|
|
University of Washington
3 publications, 0.08%
|
|
Harokopio University of Athens
3 publications, 0.08%
|
|
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
3 publications, 0.08%
|
|
Michigan State University
2 publications, 0.05%
|
|
Georgetown University
2 publications, 0.05%
|
|
George Washington University
2 publications, 0.05%
|
|
Ohio State University
2 publications, 0.05%
|
|
Massachusetts General Hospital
2 publications, 0.05%
|
|
University of California, San Diego
2 publications, 0.05%
|
|
Vanderbilt University
2 publications, 0.05%
|
|
Emory University
2 publications, 0.05%
|
|
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences
2 publications, 0.05%
|
|
University of Delaware
2 publications, 0.05%
|
|
Creighton University
2 publications, 0.05%
|
|
Mashhad University of Medical Sciences
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Imperial College London
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Yale University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Auckland
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Boston University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Illinois at Chicago
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
George Mason University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Oregon State University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Oregon Health & Science University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Brigham and Women's Hospital
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of California, Davis
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Arizona
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Aegean University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Children's Nutrition Research Center at Baylor College of Medicine
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Baylor College of Medicine
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Minnesota Medical Center
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
St. Catherine University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Rhenish Friedrich Wilhelm University of Bonn
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Göttingen
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Food and Drug Administration
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Leeds
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Wisconsin–Madison
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Maryland, Baltimore
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Maryland, College Park
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
East Carolina University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Temple University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Baylor University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Western University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Guelph
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Miami
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Boise State University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Louisiana State University
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Colorado Denver
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Indiana University Bloomington
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Alabama at Birmingham
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
National Institutes of Health Clinical Center
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
1 publication, 0.03%
|
|
Show all (38 more) | |
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
|
Publishing organizations in 5 years
1
2
|
|
University of Southern California
2 publications, 0.59%
|
|
Georgetown University
2 publications, 0.59%
|
|
Pennsylvania State University
1 publication, 0.29%
|
|
Tufts University
1 publication, 0.29%
|
|
University of California, Davis
1 publication, 0.29%
|
|
University of Minnesota
1 publication, 0.29%
|
|
Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis
1 publication, 0.29%
|
|
Boise State University
1 publication, 0.29%
|
|
Indiana University Bloomington
1 publication, 0.29%
|
|
1
2
|
Publishing countries
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
|
|
USA
|
USA, 98, 2.55%
USA
98 publications, 2.55%
|
Greece
|
Greece, 3, 0.08%
Greece
3 publications, 0.08%
|
Germany
|
Germany, 2, 0.05%
Germany
2 publications, 0.05%
|
United Kingdom
|
United Kingdom, 2, 0.05%
United Kingdom
2 publications, 0.05%
|
Italy
|
Italy, 2, 0.05%
Italy
2 publications, 0.05%
|
Canada
|
Canada, 2, 0.05%
Canada
2 publications, 0.05%
|
Belgium
|
Belgium, 1, 0.03%
Belgium
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Iran
|
Iran, 1, 0.03%
Iran
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Netherlands
|
Netherlands, 1, 0.03%
Netherlands
1 publication, 0.03%
|
New Zealand
|
New Zealand, 1, 0.03%
New Zealand
1 publication, 0.03%
|
Republic of Korea
|
Republic of Korea, 1, 0.03%
Republic of Korea
1 publication, 0.03%
|
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
|
Publishing countries in 5 years
2
4
6
8
10
12
|
|
USA
|
USA, 11, 3.24%
USA
11 publications, 3.24%
|
Italy
|
Italy, 1, 0.29%
Italy
1 publication, 0.29%
|
2
4
6
8
10
12
|