Results for 'Catherine Jane McAllister'

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  1.  36
    Participant experience of invasive research in adults with intellectual disability.Catherine Jane McAllister, Claire Louise Kelly, Katherine Elizabeth Manning & Anthony John Holland - 2013 - Journal of Medical Ethics 39 (9):594-597.
    Clinical research is a necessity if effective and safe treatments are to be developed. However, this may well include the need for research that is best described as ‘invasive’ in that it may be associated with some discomfort or inconvenience. Limitations in the undertaking of invasive research involving people with intellectual disabilities (ID) are perhaps related to anxieties within the academic community and among ethics committees; however, the consequence of this neglect is that innovative treatments specific to people with ID (...)
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  2.  44
    Test–retest reliability and task order effects of emotional cognitive tests in healthy subjects.Thomas Adams, Zoe Pounder, Sally Preston, Andy Hanson, Peter Gallagher, Catherine J. Harmer & R. Hamish McAllister-Williams - 2016 - Cognition and Emotion 30 (7).
  3.  28
    Vies et legendes de Jacques Lacan.Jane Gallop & Catherine Clement - 1981 - Substance 10 (3):77.
  4.  42
    First page preview.James W. McAllister, Lars Bergström, James Robert Brown, Martin Carrier, Nancy Cartwright, Jiwei Ci, David Davies, Catherine Elgin, Márta Fehér & Michel Ghins - 2010 - International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 24 (4).
  5.  10
    The Whole Person: Embodying Teaching and Learning through Lectio and Visio Divina.Jane E. Dalton, Maureen P. Hall & Catherine E. Hoyser - 2019 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    This book offers a rich collection of voices from diverse settings and illustrates ways in which lectio divina as a contemplative practice can transform teaching and learning. Drawing on holistic education and embodied learning, lectio divina empowers teachers and roots students in their own meaning making.
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  6. Theory of change as a tool for tracking Intensive Family Programme developments in Whitetown.Jane Mulcahey, Catherine Naughton & Sean Redmond - 2024 - In Andrew Koleros, Marie-Hélène Adrien & Tony Tyrrell (eds.), Theories of change in reality: strengths, limitations and future directions. New York, NY: Routledge.
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  7.  94
    Individual Differences in Working Memory and the N2pc.Jane W. Couperus, Kirsten O. Lydic, Juniper E. Hollis, Jessica L. Roy, Amy R. Lowe, Cindy M. Bukach & Catherine L. Reed - 2021 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15.
    The lateralized ERP N2pc component has been shown to be an effective marker of attentional object selection when elicited in a visual search task, specifically reflecting the selection of a target item among distractors. Moreover, when targets are known in advance, the visual search process is guided by representations of target features held in working memory at the time of search, thus guiding attention to objects with target-matching features. Previous studies have shown that manipulating working memory availability via concurrent tasks (...)
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  8.  27
    Assessing the impact of Celaque National Park on forest fragmentation in western Honduras.Jane Southworth, Harini Nagendra, Laura A. Carlson & Catherine Tucker - 2004 - In Antoine Bailly & Lay James Gibson (eds.), Applied Geography: A World Perspective. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 303-322.
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  9. The biology of suffering.Natalia Murinova Daniel Krashin, Q. Howe Catherine & Jane Ballantyne - 2014 - In Ronald Michael Green & Nathan J. Palpant (eds.), Suffering and Bioethics. New York, US: Oup Usa.
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  10.  89
    Community-Based Participatory Research for Improved Mental Health.Laura Weiss Roberts, Catherine Bruss, Christiane Brems, Mark E. Johnson, Sarah Dewane & Jane Smikowski - 2009 - Ethics and Behavior 19 (6):461-478.
    Community-based participatory research (CBPR) focuses on specific community needs, and produces results that directly address those needs. Although conducting ethical CBPR is critical to its success, few academic programs include this training in their curricula. This article describes the development and evaluation of an online training course designed to increase the use of CBPR in mental health disciplines. Developed using a participatory approach involving a community of experts, this course challenges traditional research by introducing a collaborative process meant to encourage (...)
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  11.  54
    The role of philosophy in the development and practice of nursing: Past, present and future.Miriam Bender, Pamela J. Grace, Catherine Green, Jane Hopkins-Walsh, Marit Kirkevold, Olga Petrovskaya, Esma D. Paljevic & Derek Sellman - 2021 - Nursing Philosophy 22 (4):e12363.
    This article summarizes a virtual live‐streamed panel event that occurred in August 2020 and was cosponsored by the International Philosophy of Nursing Society (IPONS) and the University of California, Irvine's Center for Nursing Philosophy. The event consisted of a series of three self‐contained panel discussions focusing on the past, present and future of IPONS and was moderated by the current Chair of IPONS, Catherine Green. The first panel discussion explored the history of IPONS and the journal Nursing Philosophy. The (...)
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  12.  29
    Strange Wonder: The Closure of Metaphysics and the Opening of Awe – By Mary–Jane Rubenstein.Catherine Keller - 2010 - Modern Theology 26 (2):308-311.
  13.  20
    Using Collaborative Models to Overcome Obstacles to Undergraduate Publication in Cognitive Neuroscience.Cindy M. Bukach, Kendall Stewart, Jane W. Couperus & Catherine L. Reed - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
  14.  62
    (1 other version)An Unconventional History of Western Philosophy: Conversations Between Men and Women Philosophers.Therese Boos Dykeman, Eve Browning, Judith Chelius Stark, Jane Duran, Marilyn Fischer, Lois Frankel, Edward Fullbrook, Jo Ellen Jacobs, Vicki Harper, Joy Laine, Kate Lindemann, Elizabeth Minnich, Andrea Nye, Margaret Simons, Audun Solli, Catherine Villanueva Gardner, Mary Ellen Waithe, Karen J. Warren & Henry West (eds.) - 2008 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    This is a unique, groundbreaking study in the history of philosophy, combining leading men and women philosophers across 2600 years of Western philosophy, covering key foundational topics, including epistemology, metaphysics, and ethics. Introductory essays, primary source readings, and commentaries comprise each chapter to offer a rich and accessible introduction to and evaluation of these vital philosophical contributions. A helpful appendix canvasses an extraordinary number of women philosophers throughout history for further discovery and study.
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  15. Suspended judgment.Jane Friedman - 2013 - Philosophical Studies 162 (2):165-181.
    Abstract In this paper I undertake an in-depth examination of an oft mentioned but rarely expounded upon state: suspended judgment. While traditional epistemology is sometimes characterized as presenting a “yes or no” picture of its central attitudes, in fact many of these epistemologists want to say that there is a third option: subjects can also suspend judgment. Discussions of suspension are mostly brief and have been less than clear on a number of issues, in particular whether this third option should (...)
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  16.  65
    Jane Austen. [REVIEW]Catherine A. Sheehan - 1951 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 26 (2):314-316.
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  17.  22
    Reclaiming a Conversation: The Ideal of the Educated Woman.Jane Roland Martin - 1985 - Yale University Press.
    Examines the theories of Plato, Rousseau, Mary Wollstonecraft, Catherine Beecher, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman concerning the education of women.
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  18.  53
    Outdoor Scenes in Jane Austen's Novels.Catherine Searle - 1984 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 59 (4):419-431.
  19.  9
    The Feminine and the Sacred.Jane Marie Todd (ed.) - 2001 - Cambridge University Press.
    In November 1996, Catherine Clément and Julia Kristeva began a correspondence exploring the subject of the sacred. In this collection of those letters Catherine Clément approaches the topic from an anthropologist's point of view while Julia Kristeva responds from a psychoanalytic perspective. Their correspondence leads them to a controversial and fundamental question: is there anything sacred that can at the same time be considered strictly feminine? The two voices of the book work in tandem, fleshing out ideas and (...)
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  20.  9
    The Origins of Modern Feminism: Women in Britain, France and the United States, 1780–1860 Jane Randall. [REVIEW]Catherine Hall - 1985 - Feminist Review 20 (1):118-122.
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  21.  28
    A Pantheology of Pandemic: Sex, Race, Nature, and The Virus.Mary-Jane Rubenstein - 2022 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 43 (1):5-23.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:A Pantheology of Pandemic: Sex, Race, Nature, and The VirusMary-Jane Rubenstein (bio)I. PunitheologyThe explanations started pouring in even before the virus attained “pandemic” status in March of 2020: we were being punished. According to a vocal subset of Evangelical pastors and ultra-Orthodox rabbis, the death-dealing virus was divine retribution for the sins of (who else?) LGBT-identified people and their allies, who aggressively violated what the pastors and rabbis (...)
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  22.  59
    Odd Complaints and Doubtful Conditions: Norms of Hypochondria in Jane Austen and Catherine Belling.James Lindemann Nelson - 2014 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 11 (2):193-200.
    In her final fragmentary novel Sanditon, Jane Austen develops a theme that pervades her work from her juvenilia onward: illness, and in particular, illness imagined, invented, or self-inflicted. While the “invention of odd complaints” is characteristically a token of folly or weakness throughout her writing, in this last work imagined illness is also both a symbol and a cause of how selves and societies degenerate. In the shifting world of Sanditon, hypochondria is the lubricant for a society bent on (...)
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  23. Defining the Victorian Nation: Class, Race, Gender, and the British Reform Act of 1867. By Catherine Hall, Keith McClelland and Jane Rendall.T. W. Heyck - 2004 - The European Legacy 9:550-551.
  24.  15
    Jane Austen and the Ethics of Life.Brett Bourbon - 2022 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Jane Austen and the powers of description. Disciplines of description -- Reading ignorance into sense -- Elizabeth Bennet, the Socrates of descriptive reason -- Frank and impertinent: paradiastolic descriptions -- An excursus on Richard Rorty and Lady Catherine -- Fanny's garden thoughts -- Reasoning by description -- Coda: "Part hawk, part man" -- The apprehension of power and life. The cook and the count: a psychological anthropology of tyranny -- Is power coercive? -- A parable of action and (...)
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  25.  19
    The Epic of Genesis: Catherine Malabou and the gêne of Epigenetics.Jonathan Basile - 2023 - Derrida Today 16 (2):99-113.
    This article examines the conflicting representations of plasticity and epigenetics in the work of philosopher Catherine Malabou and evolutionary theorists Mary Jane West-Eberhard and Eva Jablonka. In order to speak of a new biological ‘paradigm’ and to attribute values of novelty or inventiveness to life itself, Malabou has to suppress the unsettled debates within the life sciences. The aporias of evolutionary narrative and causality reveal a necessary differentiality and textuality that belongs neither to life nor science itself, but (...)
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  26. The components of learnability theory.Jane Grimshaw - 1987 - In Jay L. Garfield (ed.), Modularity in Knowledge Representation and Natural-Language Understanding. MIT Press. pp. 207--220.
     
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  27. With Reference to Reference.Catherine Z. Elgin - 1983 - Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 42 (2):336-340.
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  28. Minds, brains, and indexicals.Jane Heal - manuscript
     
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  29. Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 139, 2005 Lectures.Stabler Jane - 2006
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  30.  9
    The Ancient Near East in the Walters Art Gallery.Jane C. Waldbaum & Jeanny Vorys Canby - 1976 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 96 (3):434.
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  31.  63
    Responsibility in a Global Context: Climate Change, Complexity, and the “Social Connection Model of Responsibility”.Catherine Larrère - 2018 - Journal of Social Philosophy 49 (3):426-438.
  32. Emma.Jane Austen - 1963 - Oxford University Press USA.
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  33.  24
    Imaginary Fathers: A Sentimental Perspective on the Question of Identifying Sperm Donors.Catherine Belling - 2005 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 16 (4):321-328.
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  34.  28
    Physics as an art: the German tradition and the symbolic turn in philosophy, history of art and natural science in the 1920s.Catherine Chevalley - 1996 - In Alfred I. Tauber (ed.), The elusive synthesis: aesthetics and science. Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 227--249.
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  35.  18
    Existentialism.Jane M. Howarth - 1991 - Philosophical Books 32 (4):226-227.
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  36.  47
    On food security and alternative food networks: understanding and performing food security in the context of urban bias.Jane Dixon & Carol Richards - 2016 - Agriculture and Human Values 33 (1):191-202.
    This paper offers one explanation for the institutional basis of food insecurity in Australia, and argues that while alternative food networks and the food sovereignty movement perform a valuable function in building forms of social solidarity between urban consumers and rural producers, they currently make only a minor contribution to Australia’s food and nutrition security. The paper begins by identifying two key drivers of food security: household incomes (on the demand side) and nutrition-sensitive, ‘fair food’ agriculture (on the supply side). (...)
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  37.  27
    From Treasure to Trash: The Lingering Value of Technological Artifacts.Benjamin Hale & Lucy McAllister - 2020 - Science and Engineering Ethics 26 (2):619-640.
    Electronic waste is the fastest growing form of waste worldwide, associated with a range of environmental, health, and justice problems. Unfortunately, disposal and recycling are hindered by a tendency of consumers to resist recycling their e-waste. This backlog of un-discarded e-waste poses significant challenges for the future. This paper addresses the reasons why many people might continue to value their technological artifacts and therefore to hoard them, suggesting that many of these common explanations are deficient in some way. It argues (...)
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  38. Rationality and contingency : rhetoric, practice and legitimation in Almaty, Kazakhstan.Catherine Alexander - 2007 - In Jeanette Edwards, Penelope Harvey & Peter Wade (eds.), Anthropology and science: epistemologies in practice. New York: Berg.
  39.  76
    Selves and Other Selves in Aristotle’s Eudemian Ethics vii 12.Catherine Osborne - 2009 - Ancient Philosophy 29 (2):349-371.
    Osborne argues against the idea that Aristotle thinks that friends are useful for assisting us towards self-knowledge, and defends instead the idea that friends provide an extension of the self which enables one to obtain a richer view of the shared world that we view together. She then examines similar questions about why the good person would gain from encountering fictional characters in literature, and what kinds of literature would be beneficial to the good life.
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  40.  8
    Avant-propos au texte de Gilles Ch'telet.Catherine Paoletti - 2017 - Revue de Synthèse 138 (1-4):455-463.
    Résumé L’usage du nombre par les élites constitue un mode de gestion systémique qui exploite le facteur de désintégration de chaque composante singulière. Son contre-modèle mathématique renvoie à la véritable concrétude géométrique développée par Alexandre Grothendieck. La victoire de l’homme moyen qui accompagne celle du techno-populisme, entraîne un manque de différenciation, une disparition des marges au profit de l’index des comportements sociaux visant à un équilibre, à une communication, à une sorte de pseudo-chuchotement où tout le monde serait d’accord par (...)
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  41.  98
    Ethics in clinical research.Jane Barrett - 2006 - Marlow, Buckinghamshire, U.K.: ICR.
    Chapter One: Introduction “The ethical basis of all [medical] research is that information gained from one patient's experience should, where feasible, ...
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  42.  26
    Delightful, Delovely and Externalist.Jane Duran - 1992 - Critica 24 (70):65-82.
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  43.  38
    Naturalized Foundationalism.Jane Duran - 2000 - Critica 32 (94):29-41.
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  44.  10
    Sartre: An Investigation of some Major Themes.Jane Howarth - 1988 - Philosophical Books 29 (3):135-136.
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  45. Mansfield Park.Jane Austen - 1963 - Oxford University Press USA.
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  46.  41
    Models of complexity: The example of emotions.Catherine Belzung & Catherine Chevalley - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (6):1053-1054.
    Using the example of the difficulties which emerge when trying to model complex behaviors – such as emotional expression – that result from stochastic interactions between different components, we argue that biorobotics may well describe one possible evolution of certain features of a biological system, but cannot pretend to be a simulation of the whole behavior of the system.
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  47.  8
    Science and empire in the nineteenth century: a journey of imperial conquest and scientific progress.Catherine Delmas, Christine Vandamme & Donna Spalding Andréolle (eds.) - 2010 - Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press.
    The issue at stake in this volume is the role of science as a way to fulfil a quest for knowledge, a tool in the exploration of foreign lands, a central paradigm in the discourse on and representations of Otherness. The interweaving of scientific and ideological discourses is not limited to the geopolitical frame of the British empire in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries but extends to the rise of the American empire as well. The fields of research tackled (...)
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  48.  6
    Real Life Bully Prevention for Real Kids: 50 Ways to Help Elementary and Middle School Students.Catherine DePino & Lori Evans - 2009 - R&L Education.
    Real Life Bully Prevention For Real Kids addresses the pervasive problem of bullying by offering students hands-on activities. Teachers will want to use this book in their classrooms with their students as part of the school’s anti-bullying curriculum. As an added bonus, the activities reinforce English/language arts, social studies, and health education curricular goals. Counselors, therapists, and school administrators can also use the activities in large and small group instruction. Additionally, leaders of after-school programs and youth leadership programs, such as (...)
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  49.  41
    (1 other version)Creative Expression and Human Agency.Jane Forsey - 2005 - Symposium 9 (2):289-312.
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  50.  35
    Political Theory and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples.Catherine Frost - 2002 - Contemporary Political Theory 1 (2):239-241.
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