Results for 'Barbara Berman'

951 found
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  1.  23
    Regulation of immunoglobulin variable region gene assembly: Development of the primary antibody repertoire.Jeffrey E. Berman, Barbara A. Malynn, T. Keith Blackwell & Frederick W. Alt - 1986 - Bioessays 5 (5):197-203.
    The immune system can generate an almost infinite number of different antibody specificities, the sum of which is the antibody repertoire. This article considers aspects of the mechanism and control of immunoglobulin variable (V) region gene assembly with a focus on how these factors may affect generation of the antibody repertoire in normal and disease states. New model systems to study the mechanism and control of V gene assembly are described, in particular the introduction of V gene recombination substrates into (...)
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  2.  27
    2005 Reviewer Acknowledgment.Bindu Arya, Ken Aupperle, Kristin Backhaus, Deborah Balser, Barbara Bartkus, Melissa Baucus, Shawn Berman, Stephanie Bertels, Janice Black & Leeora Black - 2006 - Business and Society 45 (1):5-6.
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  3. Marin county psychological association.Claudia Perez, Beth Cooper Tabakin, Barbara Berman, Fred Rozendal, Sharon Cushman, Michele Saloner, Karl Kracklauer, Nancy Haugen, Haleh Kashani & Betsy Levine-Proctor - 2004 - In John Hawthorne (ed.), Ethics. Wiley Periodicals. pp. 898-9839.
  4. (1 other version)2006 Reviewer Acknowledgement.Bindu Arya, Ruth Aguilera, Ken Aupperle, Kristin Backhaus, Deborah Balser, Tina Bansla, Barbara Bartkus, Melissa Baucus, Shawn Berman & Stephanie Bertels - 2007 - Business and Society 46 (1):4-6.
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  5.  33
    Lynda Nead. Victorian Babylon: People, Streets, and Images in Nineteenth‐Century London. x + 251 pp., frontis., illus., bibl., index.New Haven, Conn./London: Yale University Press, 2000. $35. [REVIEW]Barbara Black - 2002 - Isis 93 (1):144-146.
    In examining the visual culture of Victorian London during the years 1855–1870, Lynda Nead in her book Victorian Babylon explores the difficult and restless narrative of modernization that any of us who have read D. G. Rossetti's “The Burden of Nineveh” will recognize as crucial to the Victorian imagination. As Nead promptly establishes, Babylon for the Victorians was a trope evoking gain and loss, triumph and hubris, future and past ruination. Taking this ancient city as her titular image, then, Nead (...)
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  6.  24
    Finite computable dimension and degrees of categoricity.Barbara F. Csima & Jonathan Stephenson - 2019 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 170 (1):58-94.
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  7.  61
    Three ethical frames of reference: insights into Millennials' ethical judgements and intentions in the workplace.Barbara Culiberg & Katarina Katja Mihelič - 2015 - Business Ethics: A European Review 25 (1):94-111.
    The paper investigates the ethical decisions of Millennials, who are not only part of an expanding cohort of the workforce, but also represent potential future managers with a growing influence on work practices and employment relationships. In the conceptual model, we propose that three ethical frames of reference, represented by perceived organisational ethics, perceived employee ethics and reflective moral attentiveness, antecede ethical judgements, which further influence the ethical intentions of Millennials. Using structural equation modelling, we test the model for three (...)
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  8.  33
    Scandalous knowledge: science, truth and the human.Barbara Herrnstein Smith - 2005 - Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press.
    Chronic and current epistemological controversies, with particular attention to the development of pragmatist/historicist/constructivist reconceptions of knowledge and science in the 20th century and the scandalized responses to them by defenders of more traditional rationalist/objectivist/realist conceptions. Individual chapters deal with complex and confused relations among epistemic skepticism, relativism, and constructivist epistemology ; 20th-century "postmodern" relativism and anti-relativism; Ludwik Fleck and constructivist views of truth, science, and knowledge; attacks on and disavowals of constructivism and/or relativism by established and feminist philosophers; the Science (...)
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  9. On the proper treatment of opacity in certain verbs.Thomas Ede Zimmermann - 1993 - Natural Language Semantics 2 (1):149-179.
    This paper is about the semantic analysis of referentially opaque verbs like seek and owe that give rise to nonspecific readings. It is argued that Montague's categorization (based on earlier work by Quine) of opaque verbs as properties of quantifiers runs into two serious difficulties: the first problem is that it does not work with opaque verbs like resemble that resist any lexical decomposition of the seek ap try to find kind; the second one is that it wrongly predicts de (...)
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  10.  24
    i Beauvoir's place in philosophical thought.S. Andrew Barbara - 2003 - In Claudia Card (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Simone de Beauvoir. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 24.
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  11.  83
    Feminist Interventions in Ethics and Politics: Feminist Ethics and Social Theory.Barbara S. Andrew, Jean Clare Keller & Lisa H. Schwartzman (eds.) - 2005 - Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    This collection breaks new ground in four key areas of feminist social thought: the sex/gender debates; challenges to liberalism/equality; feminist ethics; and feminist perspectives on global ethics and politics in the 21st century. Altogether, the essays provide an innovative look at feminist philosophy while making substantive contributions to current debates in gender theory, ethics, and political thought.
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  12.  50
    Governance and Corporate Philanthropy.Barbara R. Bartkus, Sara A. Morris & Bruce Seifert - 2002 - Business and Society 41 (3):319-344.
    Although corporate decision makers may justify charitable contributions on strategic grounds, extremely large corporate philanthropic contributions may beperceived by shareholders as unnecessary. If stockholders attempt to limit corporate philanthropy, then governance mechanisms should put a cap on giving amounts. Using a matched-paired sample to control for industry and company size, theauthors compared big givers and small givers. The authors find that blockholders and institutional owners limit corporate philanthropy. This suggests that high levels of corporate philanthropy may be perceived as excessive (...)
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  13. (1 other version)Reference and quantification: The Partee effect.Barbara Abbott - unknown
    Partee (1973) discussed quotation from the perspective of the then relatively new theory of transformational grammar.2 As she pointed out, the phenomenon presents many curious puzzles. In some ways quotes seem quite separate from their surrounding text; they may be in a different dialect, as in her example in (1), (1) ‘I talk better English than the both of youse!’ shouted Charles, thereby convincing me that he didn’t. [Partee (1973):ex. 20] or even in a different language, as in (2): (2) (...)
     
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  14.  17
    Life in its fullness: Ecology, eschatology and ecodomy in a time of climate change.Barbara R. Rossing & Johan Buitendag - 2020 - HTS Theological Studies 76 (1).
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  15.  8
    Zarys logiki dla bibliotekoznawców.Barbara Stanosz - 1971 - [Warszawa]: Wydawnictwa Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego. Edited by Witold Maciszewski.
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  16. Human exceptionalism.Barbara L. Finlay & Alan D. Workman - 2013 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 17 (5):199-201.
  17.  48
    Concepts and Methods in Evolutionary Biology.Barbara L. Horan - 1998 - Philosophical Review 107 (3):483.
    This collection of essays by Robert Brandon spans two decades and most of the important problems in the philosophy of biology. Four of his five most important contributions to the philosophy of biology can be found here: the concept of relative adaptedness and its role in the propensity interpretation of fitness; the principle of natural selection; the use of the screening-off relation in defense of organismic selection; and the distinction between units of selection and levels of selection. The fifth major (...)
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  18. Being White, Being Good: White Complicity, White Moral Responsibility, and Social Justice Pedagogy.Barbara Applebaum - 2010 - Lexington Books.
    Being White, Being Good focuses on white complicity and white complicity pedagogy. It examines the shifts in our conceptualization of the subject, language and moral responsibility that are required for understanding white complicity and draws out implications for social justice pedagogy.
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  19.  64
    Time.Barbara Adam - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3):119-126.
    The article argues that the relationship to time is at the root of what makes us human and that culture arises with and from efforts to transcend death, change and the rhythmicity of the physical environment. Time can be tracked through systems of time measurement and later transformed from a process of nature into clock time, a time to human design that is abstracted from context and content. In this form time can be traded with all other times. With contemporary (...)
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  20.  30
    Disenshrining the Cartesian self.Barbara A. C. Saunders - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (1):77-78.
  21.  17
    Art for Something's Sake.Barbara Johnson - 2002 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 36 (3):28.
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  22.  32
    The Psychological Well‐being of Pregnant Women Undergoing Prenatal Testing and Screening: A Narrative Literature Review.Barbara B. Biesecker - 2019 - Hastings Center Report 49 (S1):53-60.
    Prenatal screening and testing are preference‐based health care options. They are offered so that pregnant women and their partners can learn genetic information about the developing fetus. In this literature review, I summarize studies of women’s and their partners’ psychological responses to prenatal testing and screening. These studies investigate the experiences of pregnant women, largely in the United States, who have access to health care services. Although the results indicate that these women are receptive to prenatal testing and screening and (...)
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  23.  22
    ‘Delicate’ Cutters: Gendered Self-mutilation and Attractive Flesh in Medical Discourse.Barbara Jane Brickman - 2004 - Body and Society 10 (4):87-111.
    In 1960, a relatively new ‘syndrome’ began appearing with growing frequency in psychiatric hospitals and in doctors’ offices. Eventually termed ‘delicate self-cutting’, this new model for typical self-mutilative behavior was developed in conjunction with a description of the ‘typical’ self-mutilator: young (adolescent to just post-adolescent), female, and almost always attractive. This article contends that, despite recent efforts to change the nature of research on self-mutilation, the myth of a typical mutilator, developed from a particular historical bias, continues to work in (...)
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  24. Presuppositions and common ground.Barbara Abbott - 2008 - Linguistics and Philosophy 31 (5):523-538.
    This paper presents problems for Stalnaker’s common ground theory of presupposition. Stalnaker (Linguist and Philos 25:701–721, 2002) proposes a 2-stage process of utterance interpretation: presupposed content is added to the common ground prior to acceptance/rejection of the utterance as a whole. But this revision makes presupposition difficult to distinguish from assertion. A more fundamental problem is that the common ground theory rests on a faulty theory of assertion—that the essence of assertion is to present the content of an utterance as (...)
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  25.  19
    JME Referees in 1993.Barbara Applebaum, Andrew Blair, Don Cochrane, Mike Cross, Deborah K. Deemer, John Gibbs, Mark Halstead, Charles Helwig, Marilyn Johnson & Lesley Kendall - 1994 - Journal of Moral Education 23 (2):225.
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  26.  21
    Decomposable orthologics.Barbara Jeffcott - 1975 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 16 (3):329-338.
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  27. Abilities and the Epistemology of Ordinary Modality.Barbara Vetter - 2024 - Mind 133 (532):1001-1027.
    Over the past two decades, modal epistemology has turned its attention to ordinary modal knowledge. This paper brings to the fore a neglected but central form of ordinary modal knowledge: knowledge of agentive modality, and in particular of our own abilities, which I call ‘ability knowledge’. I argue that modal epistemology as it is does not account for ability knowledge, by looking at the most promising candidate theories: perception-based, counterfactual-based, and similarity-based modal epistemologies. I then outline a more promising epistemology (...)
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  28.  24
    Nurses, nannies and caring work: importation, visibility and marketability.Barbara L. Brush & Rukmini Vasupuram - 2006 - Nursing Inquiry 13 (3):181-185.
    This paper examines nurses’ international migration within the broader context of female migration, particularly against more studied groups of women who have migrated for employment in care‐giving roles. We analyze the similarities and differences between skilled professional female migrants (nurses) and domestic workers (nannies and in‐home caretakers) and how societal expectations, meanings, and values of care and ‘women's work’, together with myriad social, cultural, economic and political processes, construct the female migrant care‐giver experience. We argue that, as the recruitment of (...)
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  29.  41
    The Statute of Liberty and the Holocaust: A Phenomenology of Semiotic Reversal.Barbara Chiarello - 2001 - American Journal of Semiotics 17 (1):85-98.
  30.  24
    Nothingness in Donne's "A Valediction: Of Weeping" and Shakespeare's Cymbeline.L. Estrin Barbara - 2017 - Philosophy and Literature 41 (1A):60-75.
    "Nothingness lies coiled in the heart of being like a worm."The John Donne of "A Valediction: Of Weeping" prefers the picture to the real. For Donne and for Jean-Paul Sartre, with whom he is aligned in this essay, the preference principally involves issues of control. As Sartre writes, "It's not enough that a certain picture which I have in mind should exist; it is necessary as well that it exist through me."1 While the more conventional predilection for the virtual over (...)
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  31. Is it possible to be seated and yet to dance? Reconsidering my formidable teacher, Elie Wiesel.Barbara Helfgott Hyett - 2018 - In Alan L. Berger, Irving Greenberg & Carol Rittner (eds.), Elie Wiesel: teacher, mentor, and friend: reflections by judges of the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity Ethics Essay contest. Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books.
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  32.  46
    Neurological bases of revitalization movements.Barbara W. Lex - 1978 - Zygon 13 (4):276-312.
  33.  29
    A Framework for Understanding Corporate Citizenship.Barbara W. Altman & Deborah Vidaver-Cohen - 2000 - Business and Society Review 105 (1):1-7.
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  34.  60
    The Effects of Context on Trust in Firm-Stakeholder Relationships: The Institutional Environment, Trust Creation, and Firm Performance.Andrew C. Wicks & Shawn L. Berman - 2004 - Business Ethics Quarterly 14 (1):141-160.
    Abstract:Recent work on the subject speaks to the importance trust has for firm performance (e.g., Hagen and Choe, 1999; Hill, 1995). Yet little work has been done to show how context affects the ability of firms to create trust in relationships with key stakeholders. This paper looks at how the institutional environment may affect the performance of different strategies for managing firm-stakeholder relationships, and in turn, how this affects firm performance. The authors put forward propositions that build on these theoretical (...)
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  35. Escaping reality: Digital imagery and the resources of photography.Barbara E. Savedoff - 1997 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 55 (2):201-214.
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  36.  45
    Catering to the Needs of an Aging Workforce: The Role of Employee Age in the Relationship Between Corporate Social Responsibility and Employee Satisfaction.Barbara Wisse, Rob van Eijbergen, Eric F. Rietzschel & Susanne Scheibe - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 147 (4):875-888.
    Contemporary organizations often reciprocate to society for using resources and for affecting stakeholders by engaging in corporate social responsibility. It has been shown that CSR has a positive impact on employee attitudes. However, not all employees may react equally strongly to CSR practices. Based on socio-emotional selectivity theory, we contend that the effect of CSR on employee satisfaction will be more pronounced for older than for younger employees, because CSR practices address those emotional needs and goals that are prioritized when (...)
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  37.  85
    Trade, Plantations, and Property: John Locke and the Economic Defense of Colonialism.Barbara Arneil - 1994 - Journal of the History of Ideas 55 (4):591-609.
  38. Becoming versus being: A critical analysis of the child in liberal theory.Barbara Arneil - 2004 - In David Archard (ed.), The moral and political status of children. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 70--96.
    The excessive faith liberal theorists have had in the power of rights and rights discourse can have deleterious consequences for children. As vulnerable and dependent beings, children need to be nurtured with love and affection in a setting in which intimate relationships between parents and children can flourish. A rights‐based discourse is conceptually ill‐equipped to accommodate the importance of establishing and supporting caring relationships. An ethic of care, emphasizing responsibilities over rights, provides a better way of conceptualizing and responding to (...)
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  39.  17
    Something is Happening: The Contemporary Consumer and Psychiatric Survivor Movement in Historical Context.Barbara Everett - 1994 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 15 (1-2):55-70.
    Despite three major reform movements over the last 300 years, the mental health system has been remarkably resistant to change. Today, another period of reform is underway, only this time, new players - dissatisfied ex-psychiatric patients - are organizing to affect the process of change. This paper discusses characteristics of previous movements and examines their similarity to and difference from the present consumer and psychiatric survivor movement. It appears that the new participants have shaped the rhetoric of reform but it (...)
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  40.  5
    Inhaltsverzeichnis.Barbara Segelken - 2010 - In Bilder des Staates: Kammer, Kasten Und Tafel Als Visualisierungen Staatlicher Zusammenhänge. Akademie Verlag. pp. 5-6.
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  41.  31
    Another Type of Bilingual Advantage? Tense-Mood-Aspect Frequency, Verb-Form Regularity and Context-Governed Choice in Bilingual vs. Monolingual Spanish Speakers with Agrammatism.O'Connor Wells Barbara & Obler Loraine - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  42.  44
    Bibliographical essay / criminal harm.Barbara Baum Levenbook - 1982 - Criminal Justice Ethics 1 (1):48-53.
  43.  34
    Human Behaviour and Long-run Change.Barbara Ingham - 2000 - African Philosophy 13 (1):33-48.
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  44.  48
    Interplay Between Scientific Theories and Researches on the Diseases of the Nervous System in the Nineteenth-Century, Paris.Jean-Gaël Barbara - 2009 - Medicine Studies 1 (4):339-352.
    In this paper, my aim is to understand the origin of experimental and scientific models of pathogeny of the diseases of the nervous system in the Salpêtrière (Paris). I will analyse the role of the contexts of cell theory, microscopy and the advances in histological techniques in the creation of various pathogenic models, based on the concept of the cell, the Wallerian degeneration and the neurone concept. I argue that, as medicine and pathology remain autonomous in their methods and goals, (...)
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  45.  19
    Worm chromosomes call for recognition!Barbara P. Rattner & Victoria H. Meller - 2004 - Bioessays 26 (7):707-710.
    Many organisms face a dilemma rooted in the unequal numbers of X chromosomes carried by the two sexes and the need to maintain equivalent expression of X‐linked genes. Several strategies have arisen to cope with this problem. All rely on accurately targeting epigenetic modifications to entire chromosomes. Targeting results from the action of recognition elements that attract modification and may rely on spreading of modification in cis along the affected chromosome. A recent report describing the first X chromosome recognition element (...)
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  46. John 7:37–39.Barbara E. Reid - 2009 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 63 (4):394-396.
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  47. Image ethics: Security and manipulation of digital images.Barbara Rockenbach - 2000 - Journal of Information Ethics 9 (2):66-71.
     
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  48.  27
    Reversal and nonreversal shift learning in normal children and retardates of comparable mental age.Barbara Sanders, Leonard E. Ross & Laird W. Heal - 1965 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 69 (1):84.
  49.  40
    Warsaw Positivism.Barbara Skarga - 2010 - Dialogue and Universalism 20 (1-2):27-33.
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  50. The Exhaustion and Transformation of State Socialism.Barbara A. Misztal - 1990 - Thesis Eleven 27 (1):63-81.
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