Results for 'Catherine Lerme Bendheim'

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  1.  25
    Determining Best Practice in Corporate-Stakeholder Relations Using Data Envelopment Analysis.Catherine Lerme Bendheim, Sandra A. Waddock & Samuel B. Graves - 1998 - Business and Society 37 (3):306-338.
    This article presents a study of corporate-stakeholder relationships using an empirical technique called Data Envelopment Analysis (DEA) to assess company "best practices" with respect to five primary stakeholders at an industry level of analysis. Five key stakeholder domains are considered: community relations, employee relations, environment, customer (product category), and stockholders (financial performance). These data reflect the relationships between companies and these five primary stakeholders; these relationships are considered to be important elements of corporate social performance. About 15% of companies, on (...)
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  2.  24
    Catherine Tourre-Malen, Femmes à cheval, la féminisation des sports et des loisirs équestres : une avancée?Catherine Monnot - 2009 - Clio 29.
    Cet ouvrage prend pour objet les effets de la féminisation massive des activités équestres depuis l’après-guerre, tant au niveau statistique que du point de vue du contenu des pratiques. Le sous-titre choisi établit une certaine ambigüité sur la démarche adoptée : il pose la question d’une « avancée », c’est à dire d’un progrès que constituerait ou non la présence des femmes dans le domaine équestre. « Avancée » (mise ici en doute) pour qui? Pour les femmes? Pour les chevaux? (...)
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  3.  11
    What is moral fetishism?Jessica Lerm - 2024 - South African Journal of Philosophy 43 (2):174-183.
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  4.  18
    Art and Research: A Portrait of a Humanities Faculty as an Inclusive Workspace.Christa-Maria Lerm Hayes - 2020 - Krisis 40 (1):180-202.
    At a time when monuments are falling, learning processes and discourses accelerating, it seems apposite to pay attention also to artworks commissioned by established institutions in order to give form to good intentions. This essay focuses on a commissioned portrait of female professors, on art education, Dutch art policy / politics and the former colonial site that the University of Amsterdam occupies, in order to aide this institution’s desired process to become more inclusive. It proposes Art Research as a realm (...)
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  5.  29
    Reading on a jet plane: Business Ethics & Other Paradoxes.Jessica Lerm - 2015 - African Journal of Business Ethics 9 (1).
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  6.  61
    Second-personal reasons: why we need something like them, but why there are actually no such things.Jessica Lerm - 2012 - South African Journal of Philosophy 31 (2):328-339.
    Stephen Darwall, in his book The Second -Person Standpoint, has argued for an account of morality grounded in what he calls second - personal reasons. My first aim in this paper is to demonstrate the value of an account like Darwall’s; as I read it, it responds to the need for an account of morality as ‘intrinsic’ to the person. However, I go on to argue, as my second aim in this paper, that Darwall’s account is ultimately unsuccessful. I hope (...)
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  7.  53
    The agent-relative/agent-neutral distinction: my two sense (s).Jessica Lerm - 2013 - South African Journal of Philosophy 32 (2):137-148.
    The agent-relative/agent-neutral distinction is very well established and widely employed in the metaethical literature. However, I argue that there are actually two different senses of the distinction at large: the hetero-/homogeneous sense and the dependence/independence sense. The traditional, unqualified distinction ought, therefore, to be amended, with each use of the distinction being stipulated as used in either the hetero-/homogeneous sense or the dependence/independence sense. Careful analysis of various metaethics supports that there are these two senses – analysis, in particular, of (...)
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  8.  80
    Postfeminism, popular feminism and neoliberal feminism? Sarah Banet-Weiser, Rosalind Gill and Catherine Rottenberg in conversation.Catherine Rottenberg, Rosalind Gill & Sarah Banet-Weiser - 2020 - Feminist Theory 21 (1):3-24.
    In this unconventional article, Sarah Banet-Weiser, Rosalind Gill and Catherine Rottenberg conduct a three-way ‘conversation’ in which they all take turns outlining how they understand the relationship among postfeminism, popular feminism and neoliberal feminism. It begins with a short introduction, and then Ros, Sarah and Catherine each define the term they have become associated with. This is followed by another round in which they discuss the overlaps, similarities and disjunctures among the terms, and the article ends with how (...)
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  9.  92
    Documents-essay review: On Catherine goldsteins book, un theoreme de fermat et ses lecteurs.Catherine Goldstein - 2000 - Revue d'Histoire des Sciences 53 (2):295.
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  10.  72
    The Effects of Automation on Human Performance in High-Risk Environments: A Design Research Case Study on Cockpit Automation in Commercial Aircrafts in Israel.Avner Bendheim - 2018 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
  11.  18
    Iuwers zornes unm'ze / missevellet uns sêre – Legitimität von Maßlosigkeit im mittelalterlichen Erzählkosmos.Amelie Bendheim - 2018 - Das Mittelalter 23 (1):11-28.
    Starting from the deficiencies of current approaches regarding the description of the hero in medieval narratives, this article aims to functionalise exorbitance as a new category of literary history. Unlike the conceptual and binary typing of the protagonist as ‘hero’ resp. ‘knight’, this category promotes a flexible model that operates relationally and hence enables gradual differentiations between the texts.Examples of medieval epic and romance will show the narrative treatment and stylisation of the exorbitant hero. The focus will be on the (...)
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  12. Jean Gerson D. Catherine Brown.D. Catherine Brown - 1997 - In Jill Kraye, Cambridge translations of Renaissance philosophical texts. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 3.
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  13. Claveau, François; Herfeld, Catherine (2018). Social network analysis: A complementary method of discovery for the history of economics. In: Weintraub, E Roy; Düppe, Till. A contemporary historiography of economics. London: Routledge, n/a.François Claveau, Catherine Herfeld, E. Roy Weintraub & Till Düppe (eds.) - 2018
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  14. Catherine Z. Elgin.Catherine Z. Elgin - 1998 - In Linda Alcoff, Epistemology: the big questions. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell. pp. 26.
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  15. Richard M. Lerner Catherine E. Barton.Catherine E. Barton - 2000 - In Walter J. Perrig & Alexander Grob, Control of Human Behavior, Mental Processes, and Consciousness: Essays in Honor of the 60th Birthday of August Flammer. Erlbaum. pp. 420.
     
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  16. Understanding and the facts.Catherine Elgin - 2007 - Philosophical Studies 132 (1):33 - 42.
    If understanding is factive, the propositions that express an understanding are true. I argue that a factive conception of understanding is unduly restrictive. It neither reflects our practices in ascribing understanding nor does justice to contemporary science. For science uses idealizations and models that do not mirror the facts. Strictly speaking, they are false. By appeal to exemplification, I devise a more generous, flexible conception of understanding that accommodates science, reflects our practices, and shows a sufficient but not slavish sensitivity (...)
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  17.  9
    Confronting a controlling God: Christian humanism and the moral imagination.Catherine M. Wallace - 2016 - Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books.
    Confronting fundamentalism: the dangerous God of "control and condemn" -- 1967: What the cake said -- God-talk 101: The art that is Christianity -- The Copernican turn of Christian humanism -- Quantum theology: the symbolic character of God-talk -- Theological weirdness (1): the symbolic claim that God is a person -- Poets as theologians: the moral imagination of Christian Humanist tradition -- Moses debates with a burning bush -- I AM v. I WILL BE: translation and the authority of theologians (...)
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  18. Essential religiosity in Descartes and Locke.Catherine Wilson - 2018 - In Philippe Hamou & Martine Pécharman, Locke and Cartesian Philosophy. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
  19. Art history rooms, decoloniality, and liberature: Practicing art history in the Heerenlogement at the Turfdraagsterpad.Christa-Maria Lerm Hayes - 2021 - In Helen Westgeest, Kitty Zijlmans & Thomas J. Berghuis, Mix & stir: new outlooks on contemporary art from global perspectives. Amsterdam: Valiz.
     
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  20.  35
    Plasticity and education – an interview with Catherine Malabou.Catherine Malabou & Kjetil Horn Hogstad - 2021 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (10):1049-1053.
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  21.  52
    Unchaining Solidarity: On Mutual Aid and Anarchism with Catherine Malabou.Catherine Malabou, Daniel Rosenhaft Swain, Petr Kouba & Petr Urban (eds.) - 2021 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    The concept of mutual aid is central to the anarchist tradition, but also a source of controversy. This book’s intervention is to consider solidarity and mutual aid at the intersection of politics and biology, developing out of the work of Catherine Malabou.
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  22.  39
    Metaethics from a first person standpoint: an introduction to moral philosophy.Catherine Wilson - 2016 - Cambridge, UK: Open Book Publishers.
    Metaethics from a First Person Standpoint addresses in a novel format the major topics and themes of contemporary metaethics, the study of the analysis of moral thought and judgement. Metathetics is less concerned with what practices are right or wrong than with what we mean by 'right' and 'wrong.' Looking at a wide spectrum of topics including moral language, realism and anti-realism, reasons and motives, relativism, and moral progress, this book engages students and general readers in order to enhance their (...)
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  23. The Future of Hegel: Plasticity, Temporality, Dialectic 1.Catherine Malabou - 2000 - Hypatia 15 (4):196-220.
    At the center of Catherine's Malabou's study of Hegel is a defense of Hegel's relation to time and the future. While many readers, following Kojève, have taken Hegel to be announcing the end of history, Malabou finds a more supple impulse, open to the new, the unexpected. She takes as her guiding thread the concept of “plasticity,” and shows how Hegel's dialectic—introducing the sculptor's art into philosophy—is motivated by the desire for transformation. Malabou is a canny and faithful reader, (...)
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  24. Epicureanism at the origins of modernity.Catherine Wilson - 2008 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This landmark study examines the role played by the rediscovery of the writings of the ancient atomists, Epicurus and Lucretius, in the articulation of the major philosophical systems of the seventeenth century, and, more broadly, their influence on the evolution of natural science and moral and political philosophy. The target of sustained and trenchant philosophical criticism by Cicero, and of opprobrium by the Christian Fathers of the early Church, for its unflinching commitment to the absence of divine supervision and the (...)
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  25.  53
    What should we do with our brain?Catherine Malabou - 2008 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    But in this book, Catherine Malabou proposes a more radical meaning for plasticity, one that not only adapts itself to existing circumstances, but forms a ...
  26.  5
    Leibniz's Metaphysics.Catherine Wilson - 1989 - Princeton Up.
    This study of the metaphysics of G. W. Leibniz gives a clear picture of his philosophical development within the general scheme of seventeenth-century natural philosophy. Catherine Wilson examines the shifts in Leibniz's thinking as he confronted the major philosophical problems of his era. Beginning with his interest in artificial languages and calculi for proof and discovery, the author proceeds to an examination of Leibniz's early theories of matter and motion, to the phenomenalistic turn in his theory of substance and (...)
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  27. Response to Ohad Nachtomy’s “Individuals, Worlds, and Relations: A Discussion of Catherine Wilson’s ‘Plenitude and Compossibility in Leibniz’”.Catherine Wilson - 2001 - The Leibniz Review 11:125-129.
    Ohad Nachtomy restates the main points of “Plenitude and Compossibility” with admirable fidelity and economy. His proposed revisions, based on the distinction between incomplete and complete substances and on the mind-relativity of relations, are intriguing additions to his earlier paper in Studia Leibnitiana and deserve careful consideration. Some brief remarks on the context of the problem, will, I hope, help to set the stage for the assessment of our various views.
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  28.  32
    Plasticity and education – an interview with Catherine Malabou.Malabou Horn Catherine & Kjetil Horn Hogstad - 2021 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (10):1049-1053.
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  29.  46
    Knowledge and Truth in Plato: Stepping Past the Shadow of Socrates.Catherine Rowett - 2018 - Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
    Catherine Rowett presents an in depth study of Plato's Meno, Republic and Theaetetus and offers both a coherent argument that the project in which Plato was engaging has been widely misunderstood and misrepresented, and detailed new readings of particular thorny issues in the interpretation of these classic texts.
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  30. Natural Kinds and Classification in Scientific Practice.Catherine Kendig (ed.) - 2015 - Routledge.
    This edited volume of 13 new essays aims to turn past discussions of natural kinds on their head. Instead of presenting a metaphysical view of kinds based largely on an unempirical vantage point, it pursues questions of kindedness which take the use of kinds and activities of kinding in practice as significant in the articulation of them as kinds. The book brings philosophical study of current and historical episodes and case studies from various scientific disciplines to bear on natural kinds (...)
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  31.  47
    Before tomorrow: epigenesis and rationality.Catherine Malabou & Carolyn Shread - 2016 - Malden, MA: Polity.
    Is contemporary continental philosophy making a break with Kant? The structures of knowledge, taken for granted since Kants Critique of Pure Reason, are now being called into question: the finitude of the subject, the phenomenal given, a priori synthesis. Relinquish the transcendental: such is the imperative of postcritical thinking in the 21st century. Questions that we no longer thought it possible to ask now reemerge with renewed vigor: can Kant really maintain the difference between a priori and innate? Can he (...)
  32.  47
    Windows on Sophiatown.Catherine Descheneau, Ian Gough & Wendy Gough - 1998 - The Chesterton Review 24 (1/2):147-148.
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  33.  73
    Liberal Culturalism and the National Minority/Immigrant Dichotomy.Catherine Lu - 2015 - Les ateliers de l'éthique/The Ethics Forum 10 (2):169-173.
    Catherine Lu | : Is the discrepancy between the cultural and linguistic rights of immigrants on the one hand and national groups on the other justified, with the latter group typically enjoying a fuller set of such rights than the former category? Patten presents a case for accepting some modest departures from neutrality in the treatment of immigrants’ cultural rights and that of majority and minority national groups. I challenge his thesis by asking whether such departures are justified with (...)
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  34. Women a types of Christ: Susanna and Jephthah's daughter.Catherine Brown Tkacz - 2004 - Gregorianum 85 (2):278-311.
     
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  35.  21
    Les membres de l'École française d'Athènes : étude d'une élite universitaire (1846-1992).Catherine Valenti - 1996 - Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 120 (1):157-172.
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  36. A Baby That Does Not Exist.Catherine Vanier - 2008 - Analysis (Australian Centre for Psychoanalysis) 14:233.
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  37.  14
    D. SIMIĆ-LAZAR, Kalenić et la dernière période de la peinture byzantine, Skopje, 1995.Catherine Vanderheyde - 1999 - Byzantion 69:308.
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  38.  16
    La sculpture architecturale du katholikon d'Hosios Meletios et l'émergence d'un style nouveau au début du XIIe siècle.Catherine Vanderheyde - 1994 - Byzantion 64:391-407.
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  39.  23
    R. OUSTERHOUT, Master Builders of Byzantium, Princeton/New Jersey, Princeton University Press, 1999.Catherine Vanderheyde - 2002 - Byzantion 72:566-567.
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  40. You Be My Body for Me: Body, Shape, and Plasticity in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit.Catherine Malabou & Judith Butler - 2011 - In Stephen Houlgate & Michael Baur, A Companion to Hegel. Malden, MA: Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 611–640.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Catherine Malabou : “Unbind Me” Judith Butler : What Kind of Shape Is Hegel's Body in? Catherine Malabou : What Is Shaping the Body? Judith Butler : A Chiasm between Us, but No Chasm.
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  41. On the Epistemic Costs of Friendship: Against the Encroachment View.Catherine Rioux - 2023 - Episteme 20 (2):247-264.
    I defend the thesis that friendship can constitutively require epistemic irrationality against a recent, forceful challenge, raised by proponents of moral and pragmatic encroachment. Defenders of the “encroachment strategy” argue that exemplary friends who are especially slow to believe that their friends have acted wrongly are simply sensitive to the high prudential or moral costs of falsely believing in their friends’ guilt. Drawing on psychological work on epistemic motivation (and in particular on the notion of “need for closure”), I propose (...)
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  42. The Meanings of Chimpanzee Gestures.Catherine Hobaiter & Richard W. Byrne - 2104 - Current Biology 24:1596-1600.
     
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  43.  61
    The new wounded, from neurosis to brain damage.Catherine Malabou & Steven Miller - unknown
  44. What is Intelligence For? A Peircean Pragmatist Response to the Knowing-How, Knowing-That Debate.Catherine Legg & Joshua Black - 2022 - Erkenntnis 87:2265-2284.
    Mainstream philosophy has seen a recent flowering in discussions of intellectualism which revisits Gilbert Ryle’s famous distinction between ‘knowing how’ and ‘knowing that’, and challenges his argument that the former cannot be reduced to the latter. These debates so far appear not to have engaged with pragmatist philosophy in any substantial way, which is curious as the relation between theory and practice is one of pragmatism’s main themes. Accordingly, this paper examines the contemporary debate in the light of Charles Peirce’s (...)
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  45. Aggression, Politeness, and Abstract Adversaries.Catherine Hundleby - 2013 - Informal Logic 33 (2):238-262.
    Trudy Govier argues in The Philosophy of Argument that adversariality in argumentation can be kept to a necessary minimum. On her ac-count, politeness can limit the ancillary adversariality of hostile culture but a degree of logical opposition will remain part of argumentation, and perhaps all reasoning. Argumentation cannot be purified by politeness in the way she hopes, nor does reasoning even in the discursive context of argumentation demand opposition. Such hopes assume an idealized politeness free from gender, and reasoners with (...)
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  46.  95
    Differences from somewhere: The normativity of whiteness in bioethics in the united states.Catherine Myser - 2003 - American Journal of Bioethics 3 (2):1 – 11.
    I argue that there has been inadequate attention to and questioning of the dominance and normativity of whiteness in the cultural construction of bioethics in the United States. Therefore we risk reproducing white privilege and white supremacy in its theory, method, and practices. To make my argument, I define whiteness and trace its broader social and legal history in the United States. I then begin to mark whiteness in U.S. bioethics, recasting Renee Fox's sociological marking of its American-ness as an (...)
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  47. Rationality and contingency : rhetoric, practice and legitimation in Almaty, Kazakhstan.Catherine Alexander - 2007 - In Jeanette Edwards, Penelope Harvey & Peter Wade, Anthropology and science: epistemologies in practice. New York: Berg.
  48.  1
    The challenge of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin.Catherine Aller - 1964 - New York,: Exposition Press.
  49. George Robinson and Janice Moulton, Ethical Problems in Higher Education Reviewed by.Catherine Beattie - 1986 - Philosophy in Review 6 (4):172-175.
     
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  50.  13
    Preface.Catherine Finet & Christian Michaux (eds.) - 2001
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