Results for 'Alison Melissa Moore'

962 found
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  1.  26
    Historicising Historical Theory’s History of Cultural Historiography.Alison Melissa Moore - 2016 - Cosmos and History 12 (1):257-291.
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  2.  33
    Subverting the new narrative: food, gentrification and resistance in Oakland, California.Alison Hope Alkon, Yahya Josh Cadji & Frances Moore - 2019 - Agriculture and Human Values 36 (4):793-804.
    Alternative food movements work to create more environmentally and economically sustainable food systems, but vary widely in their advocacy for social, racial and environmental justice. However, even those food justice activists explicitly dedicated to equity must respond to the unintended consequences of their work. This paper analyzes the work of activists in Oakland, CA, who have increasingly realized that their gardens, health food stores and farm-to-table restaurants play a role in what scholars have called green gentrification, the upscaling of neighborhoods (...)
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  3.  39
    Affect in the aftermath: How goal pursuit influences implicit evaluations.Sarah G. Moore, Melissa J. Ferguson & Tanya L. Chartrand - 2011 - Cognition and Emotion 25 (3):453-465.
    Previous research has shown that the activation of a goal leads to more implicit positivity toward goal-relevant stimuli. We examined how the actual pursuit of a goal influences subsequent implicit positivity toward such stimuli. Participants were consciously or non-consciously primed with a goal, or not, and then completed a goal-relevant task on which they succeeded or failed. We then measured their goal-relevant implicit attitudes. Those who were primed with the goal (consciously or non-consciously) and experienced success exhibited more implicit positivity (...)
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  4.  24
    Temporal Layering in the Long Conceptual History of Sexual Medicine: Reading Koselleck with Foucault.Alison M. Downham Moore - 2019 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 15 (1):5-27.
    This paper reflects on the challenges of writing long conceptual histories of sexual medicine, drawing on the approaches of Michel Foucault and of Reinhart Koselleck. Foucault’s statements about nineteenth-century rupture considered alongside his later-life emphasis on long conceptual continuities implied something similar to Koselleck’s own accommodation of different kinds of historical inheritances expressed as multiple ‘temporal layers.’ The layering model in the history of concepts may be useful for complicating the historical periodizations commonly invoked by historians of sexuality, overcoming historiographic (...)
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  5.  33
    Modern European sexological and orientalist assimilations of medieval Islamicate ‘ ilm al-bah to erotology.Alison M. Downham Moore - 2023 - History of the Human Sciences 36 (5):15-41.
    This article discusses the term erotology, which was applied to medieval Islamicate ‘ilm al-bah (the science of coitus), as well as other world traditions of sexual knowledge, by European sexologists of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, who contrasted it with their own forms of inquiry into sexual matters in the modern field of sexual science. It argues that the homogenisation and minimisation of all ancient and non-European forms of medical knowledge about sex, even one as substantial as the (...)
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  6.  19
    Foucault’s 1960s Lectures on Sexuality.Alison Downham Moore & Stuart Elden - 2023 - Theory, Culture and Society 40 (1-2):279-293.
    In this extended review essay we discuss the lectures on sexuality which Foucault delivered in the 1960s, published in a single volume in 2018. The first part of the volume comprises five lectures given at the University of Clermont-Ferrand in 1964 to psychology students. The second part is Foucault’s course ‘The Discourse of Sexuality’, given at the experimental University of Vincennes in 1969 in the philosophy department. We explore both the themes of the lectures, and the important editorial materials provided (...)
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  7.  14
    L’Amour morbide: how a transient mental illness became defunct.Alison M. Moore - 2019 - Intellectual History Review 29 (2):291-312.
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  8.  51
    Recovering difference in the deleuzian dichotomy of masochism-without-sadism.Alison Moore - 2009 - Angelaki 14 (3):27 – 43.
    (2009). Recovering Difference in the Deleuzian Dichotomy of Masochism-Without-Sadism. Angelaki: Vol. 14, shadows of cruelty sadism, masochism and the philosophical muse – part one, pp. 27-43.
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  9.  11
    Sean Quinlan. Morbid Undercurrents: Medical Subcultures in Postrevolutionary France. xiv + 336 pp., illus., notes, index. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 2021. $45 (cloth); ISBN 9781501758331. E-book available. [REVIEW]Alison Downham Moore - 2022 - Isis 113 (3):661-662.
  10.  15
    Effects of Combining Meditation Techniques on Short-Term Memory, Attention, and Affect in Healthy College Students.Samani Unnata Pragya, Neelam D. Mehta, Bassam Abomoelak, Parvin Uddin, Pushya Veeramachaneni, Naina Mehta, Stephanie Moore, Melissa Jean-Francois, Stephanie Garcia, Samani Chaitanya Pragya & Devendra I. Mehta - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Meditation refers to a family of self-regulation practices that focuses on training attention and awareness to foster psycho-emotional well-being and to develop specific capacities such as calmness, clarity, and concentration. We report a prospective convenience-controlled study in which we analyzed the effect of two components of Preksha Dhyāna – buzzing bee sound meditation and color meditation on healthy college students. Mahapran and leśya dhyāna are two Preksha Dhyāna practices that are based on sound and green color, respectively. The study population (...)
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  11.  28
    Patterns of characterization in folktales across geographic regions and levels of cultural complexity.Jonathan Gottschall, Rachel Berkey, Mitchell Cawson, Carly Drown, Matthew Fleischner, Melissa Glotzbecker, Kimberly Kernan, Tyler Magnan, Kate Muse, Celeste Ogburn, Stephen Patterson, Christopher Skeels, Stephanie St Joseph, Shawna Weeks, Alison Welsh & Erin Welch - 2003 - Human Nature 14 (4):365-382.
    Literary scholars are generally suspicious of the concept of universals: there are presently no candidates for literary universals that a high proportion of literary scholars would accept as valid. This paper reports results from a content analysis of patterns of characterization in folktales from 48 culture areas, aimed at identifying patterns of characterization that apply across regions of the world and levels of cultural complexity. The search for these patterns was guided by evolutionary theory and the findings are consistent with (...)
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  12.  10
    Melissa R. Klapper, Ballots, Babies, and Banners of Peace : American Jewish Women’s Activism, 1890-1940.Deborah Dash Moore - 2016 - Clio 44:317-320.
    Melissa Klapper opère plusieurs déplacements historiographiques par son histoire de l’activisme politique des femmes juives américaines au cours du demi-siècle précédant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. Tout d’abord, elle élargit la définition du politique en y incluant l’activité des organisations de femmes juives des classes moyennes engagées pour la paix après la Première Guerre mondiale et pour le développement du contrôle des naissances. Elle défie également l’assertion de nombreux historiens...
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  13.  62
    Electronic health record adoption and health information exchange among hospitals in New York State.Erika L. Abramson, Sandra McGinnis, Alison Edwards, Dayna M. Maniccia, Jean Moore & Rainu Kaushal - 2012 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 18 (6):1156-1162.
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  14.  39
    Richard Moore, Nuclear Illusion, Nuclear Reality: Britain, the United States and Nuclear Weapons 1958–64. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010. Pp. xvi+332. ISBN 978-0-230-23067-5. £65.00. [REVIEW]Melissa Smith - 2011 - British Journal for the History of Science 44 (2):309-311.
  15.  50
    Introns in UTRs: Why we should stop ignoring them.Alicia A. Bicknell, Can Cenik, Hon N. Chua, Frederick P. Roth & Melissa J. Moore - 2012 - Bioessays 34 (12):1025-1034.
    Although introns in 5′‐ and 3′‐untranslated regions (UTRs) are found in many protein coding genes, rarely are they considered distinctive entities with specific functions. Indeed, mammalian transcripts with 3′‐UTR introns are often assumed nonfunctional because they are subject to elimination by nonsense‐mediated decay (NMD). Nonetheless, recent findings indicate that 5′‐ and 3′‐UTR intron status is of significant functional consequence for the regulation of mammalian genes. Therefore these features should be ignored no longer.
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  16. Kirsten Moore-Sheeley, Nothing but Nets: A Biography of Global Health Science and Its Objects Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2023. Pp. 248. ISBN 978-1-4214-4757-5. $49.95 (hardcover). [REVIEW]Marlee Odell & Melissa Graboyes - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Science:1-2.
  17.  7
    Going Om: real-life stories on and off the yoga mat.Melissa Carroll (ed.) - 2014 - Berkeley, California: Viva Editions.
    With candid, witty, and compelling experiences of yoga from renowned memoirists, including Cheryl Strayed (author of the number-one New York Times bestseller Wild), Claire Dederer (author of national bestseller Poser: My Life in 23 Yoga Poses), Dinty W. Moore (author of The Accidental Buddhist), Neal Pollack (author of Stretch: The Making of a Yoga Dude) and many others, Going Om shares a range of observations about this popular practice. Unlike books on yoga that provide instruction on technique, Going Om (...)
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  18. Joachim Möller and Bernd Krysmanski (eds.), Creative Reception: John Locke's Impact on Literature and Pictorial Art.Bernd Krysmanski & Joachim Möller - 2024 - Dinslaken: Krysman Press.
    The authors of this volume — all of them recognized representatives of a wide range of academic disciplines — agree that Locke’s work must have had a considerable influence both on English and German literature and the visual arts of Great Britain, especially in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. From the perspective of interdisciplinarity and intertextuality, the essays presented here deal with Locke as a source of ideas for Archibald Alison, John Constable, Daniel Defoe, Henry Fielding, Oliver Goldsmith, Johann (...)
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  19. Globalizing Feminist Ethics.Alison M. Jaggar - 1998 - Hypatia 13 (2):7 - 31.
    The feminist conception of discourse offered below differs from classical discourse ethics. Arguing that inequalities of power are even more conspicuous in global than in local contexts, I note that a global discourse community seems to be emerging among feminists, and I explore the role played by small communities in feminism's attempts to reconcile a commitment to open discussion, on the one hand, with a recognition of the realities of power inequalities, on the other.
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  20. Anthropology and Cross‐Cultural Analysis.Henrietta L. Moore - 1992 - In Elizabeth Wright (ed.), Feminism and psychoanalysis: a critical dictionary. Cambridge, Mass., USA: Blackwell. pp. 3--9.
     
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  21.  15
    A Synapse by any Other Name: Could Neuronal Compartmentalization be an Evolutionary and Developmental Parallel of Immune Cell Organization?Andrew Moore - 2020 - Bioessays 42 (8):2000177.
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  22.  74
    Making the Ideal Real: Publicity and Morality in Kant.Melissa Zinkin - 2016 - Kantian Review 21 (2):237-259.
    This article discusses the concept of publicity in Kant’s moral philosophy. Insofar as the concepts of ‘public’ and ‘private’ can describe our relations with others, they can be considered to be moral concepts. I argue that we can find in Kant a moral duty not to keep our maxims of action private, or secret. Whereas Korsgaard argues that sometimes in the face of evil it is permissible to sidestep the moral law, I argue that it is rather through publicity that (...)
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  23.  12
    (1 other version)Essai sur l'esthétique de Lotze.Vida F. Moore - 1901 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 52 (6):117-118.
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  24. Kant on Evil.Melissa McBay Merritt - 2024 - In Andrew Stephenson & Anil Gomes (eds.). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
    The chapter examines Kant’s thesis about the ‘radical evil in human nature’ developed in his Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason. According to this thesis, the human moral condition is corrupt by default and yet by own deed; and this corruption is the origin (root, radix) of human badness in all its variety, banality, and ubiquity. While Kant clearly takes radical evil to be endemic in human nature, controversy reigns about how to understand this. Some assume this can only (...)
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  25.  11
    Ambivalence to Technology in Jeunet’s Le Fabuleux Destin d’Amélie Poulain.Rick Clifton Moore - 2006 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 26 (1):9-19.
    Although at one level Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s Le Fabuleux Destin d’Amélie Poulain is a sweet, attractive film about a young Parisian doing good deeds, it also offers a compelling analysis of the role of technology in our modern lives. The film paints a world where machines and a mechanistic worldview are appealing because humans have a desire to control their destinies but threatening because humans value freedom. The work of French social theorist Jacques Ellul is especially useful in analyzing these facets (...)
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  26. The Concept of Pardon in a Retributive Theory of Punishment.Kathleen Dean Moore - 1977 - Dissertation, University of Colorado at Boulder
     
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  27.  64
    The Wrongness of Third-Party Assisted Reproduction: A Natural Law Account.Melissa Moschella - 2016 - Christian Bioethics 22 (2):104-121.
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  28. Convergent Minds: Ostension, Inference, and Grice’s Third Clause.Richard Moore - 2017 - Interface Focus 7 (3).
    A prevailing view is that while human communication has an ‘ostensive-inferential’ or ‘Gricean’ intentional structure, animal communication does not. This would make the psychological states that support human and animal forms of communication fundamentally different. Against this view, I argue that there are grounds to expect ostensive communication in non-human clades. This is because it is sufficient for ostensive communication that one intentionally address one’s utterance to one’s intended interlocutor – something that is both a functional pre-requisite of successful communication (...)
     
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  29. Feminist ethics: Some issues for the nineties.Alison M. Jaggar - 1989 - Journal of Social Philosophy 20 (1-2):91-107.
  30.  50
    Gender and computer ethics.Alison Adam - 2000 - Acm Sigcas Computers and Society 30 (4):17-24.
    This paper reviews the relatively small body of work in computer ethics which looks at the question of whether gender makes any difference to ethical decisions. There are two strands of writing on gender and computer ethics. The first focuses on problems of women's access to computer technology; the second concentrates on whether there are differences between men and women's ethical decision making in relation to information and computing technologies. I criticize the latter area, arguing that such studies survey student (...)
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  31.  44
    Hegel, Naturalism and the Philosophy of Nature.Alison Stone - 2013 - Hegel Bulletin 34 (1):59-78.
    In this article I consider whether Hegel is a naturalist or an anti-naturalist with respect to his philosophy of nature. I adopt a cluster-based approach to naturalism, on which positions are more or less naturalistic depending how many strands of the clusternaturalismthey exemplify. I focus on two strands: belief that philosophy is continuous with the empirical sciences, and disbelief in supernatural entities. I argue that Hegel regards philosophy of nature as distinct, but not wholly discontinuous, from empirical science and that (...)
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  32. Murdoch and Kant.Melissa Merritt - 2022 - In Silvia Caprioglio Panizza & Mark Hopwood (eds.), The Murdochian Mind. New York, NY: Routledge. pp. 253-265.
    It has been insufficiently remarked that Murdoch deems “Kant’s ethical theory” to be “one of the most beautiful and exciting things in the whole of philosophy” in her 1959 essay “The Sublime and the Good”. Murdoch specifically has in mind the connection between Kant’s ethics and his theory of the sublime, which runs via the moral feeling of respect (Achtung). The chapter examines Murdoch’s interest in Kant on this point as a way to tease out the range of issues that (...)
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  33. The Origins of European Dissent.R. Moore - 1996 - Utopian Studies 7 (1):134-135.
  34.  29
    Martineau, Cobbe, and teleological progressivism.Alison Stone - 2020 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 29 (6):1099-1123.
    ABSTRACT In this paper, I reconstruct the views on historical progress of two nineteenth-century English-speaking philosophical women, Harriet Martineau and Frances Power Cobbe. Martineau and Cobbe put forward theories of progress which I classify as versions of teleological progressivism. Their theories are bound up with their accounts of different world civilizations and religions, and their advancement towards either Christianity, for Cobbe, or through and beyond Christianity towards secularization, for Martineau. After explaining the overall nature of teleological progressivism in the Victorian (...)
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  35.  10
    Sexual Polarity in Schelling and Hegel.Alison Stone - 2014 - In Susanne Lettow (ed.), Reproduction, Race, and Gender in Philosophy and the Early Life Sciences. State University of New York Press. pp. 259-281.
  36.  1
    High school ethics..John Howard Moore - 1912 - London,: G. Bell & sons.
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  37. Naturalism, Truth and Beauty in Mathematics.Matthew E. Moore - 2007 - Philosophia Mathematica 15 (2):141-165.
    Can a scientific naturalist be a mathematical realist? I review some arguments, derived largely from the writings of Penelope Maddy, for a negative answer. The rejoinder from the realist side is that the irrealist cannot explain, as well as the realist can, why a naturalist should grant the mathematician the degree of methodological autonomy that the irrealist's own arguments require. Thus a naturalist, as such, has at least as much reason to embrace mathematical realism as to embrace irrealism.
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  38.  58
    Operant behavior and the thesis of “selection by consequences”.J. Moore - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (3):546-547.
    Behavioral theorists such as B. F. Skinner have argued that the thesis of selection by consequences applies to behavior just as much as to morphology. This commentary specifically examines certain respects in which the thesis of “selection by consequences” applies to the development of ontogenic operant behavior.
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  39.  51
    Report on the panel discussion: Wang Yang-Ming and japanese culture.Ronald Moore - 1973 - Philosophy East and West 23 (1/2):217-224.
  40. Perception in early modern philosophy.Alison Simmons - 2015 - In Mohan Matthen (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Philosophy of Perception. New York, NY: Oxford University Press UK.
     
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  41. Heroes or sibyls? Gender and engineering ethics.Alison Adam - 2018 - In Nicholas Sakellariou & Rania Milleron (eds.), Ethics, Politics, and Whistleblowing in Engineering. Boca Raton, FL: Crc Press.
     
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  42.  39
    Being asked to tell an unpleasant truth about another person activates anterior insula and medial prefrontal cortex.Melissa M. Littlefield, Martin J. Dietz, Kasper J. des FitzgeraldKnudsen & James Tonks - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  43. Sensory Perception of Bodies: Meditation 6.5.Alison Simmons - 2014 - In . pp. 258-77.
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  44.  45
    Human Males Appear More Prepared Than Females to Resolve Conflicts with Same-Sex Peers.Joyce F. Benenson, Melissa N. Kuhn, Patrick J. Ryan, Anthony J. Ferranti, Rose Blondin, Michael Shea, Chalice Charpentier, Melissa Emery Thompson & Richard W. Wrangham - 2014 - Human Nature 25 (2):251-268.
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  45.  17
    Can a perceptual task be used to infer conceptual representations?: A reply to Glorioso, Kuznar, Pavlic, & Povinelli.Caren M. Walker & Alison Gopnik - 2021 - Cognition 214 (C):104414.
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  46.  68
    Normative orientations of university faculty and doctoral students.Melissa S. Anderson - 2000 - Science and Engineering Ethics 6 (4):443-461.
    Data from two national surveys of 4,000 faculty and doctoral students in chemistry, civil engineering, microbiology and sociology indicate that both faculty and students subscribe strongly to traditional norms but are more likely to see alternative counternorms enacted in their departments. They also show significant effects of departmental climate on normative orientations and suggest that many researchers express some degree of ambivalence about traditional norms.
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  47.  43
    Cultural and Natural Forms in the Thought of Wendell Berry.Lloyd W. J. Aultman-Moore - 1995 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 69:117-126.
  48.  39
    On the notions of progress, revolution, and freedom.Moore - 1962 - Ethics 72 (2):106-119.
  49.  25
    Effects of Visual Training of Approximate Number Sense on Auditory Number Sense and School Math Ability.Melissa E. Libertus, Darko Odic, Lisa Feigenson & Justin Halberda - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  50.  79
    Nature, continental philosophy, and environmental ethics.Alison Stone - 2005 - Environmental Values 14 (3):285-294.
    Until recently, there has been relatively little self-conscious reflection - from either environmental or continental philosophers - on the specific contributions which continental philosophy, insofar as it is a distinctive tradition, might make to environmental thought. This situation has begun to change with several recent publications, such as Charles S. Brown and Ted Toadvine's edited collection Ecophenomenology: Back to the Earth Itself, and Bruce V. Foltz and Robert Frodeman's collection Rethinking Nature: Essays in Environmental Philosophy. This special issue aims to (...)
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