Results for 'Deborah Gayle Chaffin'

975 found
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  1. Hegel, Derrida, and the Sign.Deborah Chaffin - 1989 - In Hugh J. Silverman (ed.), Derrida and Deconstruction. London: Routledge. pp. 77--91.
     
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  2.  62
    Edmund Husserl, The Apodicticity of Recollection.Deborah Chaffin - 1985 - Husserl Studies 2 (1):3-32.
    The text "The Apodicticity of Recollection" dates from 1922-23, and may be viewed as Husserl's clear recognition of the extent to which the descriptive phenomenology of immediacy is bound up with a reconstructive phenomenology of justificiation. Such recognition is manifest through the original treatment he gives the analysis of internal time-consciousness, and especially memory. In addition, his remarks on the nature of the transcendental ego add much strength to the interpretation of this text as a contribution to Husserl's longstanding concern (...)
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  3. The life-world and the historicity of human existence.Ludwig Landgrebe, Deborah Chaffin & Donn Welton - 1981 - Research in Phenomenology 11 (1):111-140.
    The complex of problems suggested by the term life-world pervades contemporary thought, even though such a complex is rarely called by this name [...] Time does not allow us, however, to perform an extensive review of the secondary literature on the 'Crisis'. I will only suggest that a survey of this literature, especially the works of Brand, Merleau-Ponty and Habermas, presents us with a dilemma. It seems that there is a difficulty in Husserl's characterization of the life-world. On the one (...)
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  4.  19
    Factors Predicting Detrimental Change in Declarative Memory Among Women With HIV: A Study of Heterogeneity in Cognition.Kathryn C. Fitzgerald, Pauline M. Maki, Yanxun Xu, Wei Jin, Raha Dastgheyb, Dionna W. Williams, Gayle Springer, Kathryn Anastos, Deborah Gustafson, Amanda B. Spence, Adaora A. Adimora, Drenna Waldrop, David E. Vance, Hector Bolivar, Victor G. Valcour & Leah H. Rubin - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  5.  50
    Feminist Differings: Recent Surveys of Feminist Literary Theory and CriticismThe New Feminist Criticism: Essays on Women, Literature, and TheorySexual/Textual Politics: Feminist Literary TheoryMaking a Difference: Feminist Literary CriticismConjuring: Black Women, Fiction, and Literary TraditionFeminist Criticism and Social Change: Sex, Class, and Race in Literature and Culture. [REVIEW]June Howard, Elaine Showalter, Toril Moi, Gayle Greene, Coppelia Kahn, Marjorie Pryse, Hortense J. Spillers, Judith Newton & Deborah Rosenfelt - 1988 - Feminist Studies 14 (1):167.
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  6.  51
    A Grasshopperian Analysis of the Strategic Foul.Deborah P. Vossen - 2014 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 41 (3):325-346.
    The question of acceptability in respect to the strategic foul in sport has provoked a rich and seemingly irreconcilable dispute with normative theorists currently divided amongst three schools of thought including formalism, conventionalism and interpretivism. In this paper, I seek to transcend the three-way intellectual stalemate portrayed in the literature via a consideration as to whether or not the strategic foul qualifies as ‘Utopian’. More specifically, after demonstrating that Bernard Suits’ theory of game-playing is fully capable of embracing all three (...)
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  7.  70
    Evidence as Passing Severe Tests: Highly Probable versus Highly Probed Hypotheses.Deborah G. Mayo - 2005 - In Peter Achinstein (ed.), Scientific Evidence: Philosophical Theories & Applications. The Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 95--128.
  8. Mary Shepherd on Mind, Soul, and Self.Deborah Boyle - 2020 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 58 (1):93-112.
    the philosophical writings ofx Lady Mary Shepherd were apparently well regarded in her own time, but dropped out of view in the mid-nineteenth century.1 Some historians of philosophy have recently begun attending to the distinctive arguments in Shepherd's two books, but the secondary literature that exists so far has largely focused on her critiques of Hume and Berkeley. However, many other themes and arguments in Shepherd's writings have not yet been explored. This paper takes up one such issue, what Shepherd (...)
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  9.  23
    What is the significance of sex differences in performance asymmetries?Deborah P. Waber - 1980 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 3 (2):249-250.
  10.  55
    Good Grasshopping and the Avoidance of Game-Spoiling.Deborah P. Vossen - 2008 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 35 (2):175-192.
    Traditionally, acts of sportsmanship have been upheld as worthy of praise. The purpose of this paper is to discern whether Bernard Suits’ Grasshopper -- in "The Grasshopper: Games, Life and Utopia" -- would share this approval. The paper begins with a conceptual analysis of good sportspersonship. From this, four action categories are identified including good sportspersonship in the forms of game desertion, changing the game, not trying, and lusory self-handicapping. A strategy for evaluation is derived from the Grasshopper’s theory. Game-playing (...)
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  11. Creating and Maintaining Ethical Work Climates.Deborah Vidaver Cohen - 1993 - Business Ethics Quarterly 3 (4):343-358.
    This paper examines how unethical behavior in the workplace occurs when management places inordinately strong emphasis on goalattainment without a corresponding emphasis on following legitimate procedures. Robert Merton's theory of sodal structure and anomie provides a foundation to discuss this argument. Key factors affecting ethical climates in work organizations are also addressed. Based on this analysis, the paper proposes strategies for developing and changing aspects of organizational culture to reduce anomie, thereby creating work climates which discourage unethical practices and provide (...)
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  12.  28
    Corporate Citizenship and Managerial Motivation: Implications for Business Legitimacy.Deborah Vidaver-Cohen & Peggy Simcic Brønn - 2008 - Business and Society Review 113 (4):441-475.
    In 2000, Business and Society Review published a Special Issue of the journal to explore scholars’ ideas about how the practice of corporate citizenship would evolve in the 21st century. Contributors to the volume predicted a change in business motives for engaging in social initiatives, suggesting that managers would begin to see corporate citizenship as a strategic necessity to preserve organizational legitimacy in the face of changing social values. This article uses data from a study of corporate citizenship practices in (...)
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  13.  20
    Collective Epistemic Agency and the Need for Collective Epistemology.Deborah Tollefsen - 2006 - In Nikos Psarros & Katinka Schulte-Ostermann (eds.), Facets of Sociality. De Gruyter. pp. 309-330.
  14.  29
    Science Education for Women in Antebellum America.Deborah Warner - 1978 - Isis 69 (1):58-67.
  15.  64
    Linking international clinical research with stateless populations to justice in global health.Bridget Pratt, Deborah Zion, Khin Maung Lwin, Phaik Yeong Cheah, Francois Nosten & Bebe Loff - 2014 - BMC Medical Ethics 15 (1):49.
    In response to calls to expand the scope of research ethics to address justice in global health, recent scholarship has sought to clarify how external research actors from high-income countries might discharge their obligation to reduce health disparities between and within countries. An ethical framework—‘research for health justice’—was derived from a theory of justice (the health capability paradigm) and specifies how international clinical research might contribute to improved health and research capacity in host communities. This paper examines whether and how (...)
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  16.  36
    Beyond Subjectivity and Representation: Perception, Expression, and Creation in Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Merleau-Ponty.Deborah Carter Mullen - 1999 - Upa.
    Beyond Subjectivity and Representation extensively explores a connection in the thinking of Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Merleau-Ponty in relation to the interconnections among perception, creation, truth, and value in a way that allows the work of each author to shed light upon the others' ideas. Deborah Carter Mullen develops a non-dualistic notion of truth and value rooted in embodied, earthly existence, and considers them as ongoing happenings of metamorphosis rather than as static ideas. This idea of metamorphosis leads to an (...)
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  17. The Role of the Ergon Argument in Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics.Deborah Achtenberg - 1989 - Ancient Philosophy 9 (1):37-47.
  18.  68
    The Ways of the Wise: Hume’s Rules of Causal Reasoning.Deborah Boyle - 2012 - Hume Studies 38 (2):157-182.
    In Hume’s own day, and for nearly two hundred years after that, readers interested in his account of causal reasoning tended to focus on the skeptical implications of that account. For example, in his 1757 View of the Principal Deistical Writers of the Last and Present Century, John Leland characterized Hume as “endeavouring to destroy all reasoning, from causes to effects, or from effects to causes.”1 According to this sort of reading, as Louis Loeb describes it, “there is equal justification (...)
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  19.  35
    Big is a Thing of the Past: Climate Change and Methodology in the History of Ideas.Deborah R. Coen - 2016 - Journal of the History of Ideas 77 (2):305-321.
  20. Interdisciplinary pedagogies in higher education.Deborah DeZure - 2010 - In Robert Frodeman, Julie Thompson Klein & Carl Mitcham (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Interdisciplinarity. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 372.
     
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  21. Palliative care and requests for assistance in dying.Deborah Volker - 2016 - In Nessa Coyle (ed.), Legal and ethical aspects of care. New York, New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  22.  28
    Political Geodesy: The Army, the Air Force, and the World Geodetic System of 1960.Deborah Jean Warner - 2002 - Annals of Science 59 (4):363-389.
    Since military planners must know the size and shape of the earth if they hope to track earth-orbiting satellites and to target missiles on distant lands, geodesy was an important concern of the two superpowers during the Cold War. The most important geodetic product in the United States was a series of increasingly powerful World Geodetic Systems, the first of which was published for the Department of Defense in 1960. Although WGS 60 was created because of intense international rivalries, it (...)
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  23.  33
    The Discovery of Our Galaxy. Charles A. Whitney.Deborah Warner - 1972 - Isis 63 (3):429-429.
  24.  25
    The Tongues of Seismology in Nineteenth-Century Switzerland.Deborah R. Coen - 2012 - Science in Context 25 (1):73-102.
    ArgumentBetween 1878 and 1880, Switzerland, Italy, and Japan initiated the world's first national earthquake commissions, but only the Swiss made ordinary citizens a vital part of this undertaking. This paper examines the texture of communication between Swiss scientists and lay observers and traces the development of a language for seismology that was simultaneously scientific and vernacular. This is the story of an aborted dialogue between scientists and citizens about living with environmental risk, an alternative abandoned on the way to the (...)
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  25. Hobbes.Deborah Baumgold - 2003 - In David Boucher & Paul Joseph Kelly (eds.), Political Thinkers: From Socrates to the Present. 2nd. ed, Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 163--180.
     
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  26.  30
    The Storm Lab: Meteorology in the Austrian Alps.Deborah R. Coen - 2009 - Science in Context 22 (3):463-486.
    ArgumentWhat, if anything, uniquely defines the mountain as a “laboratory of nature”? Here, this question is considered from the perspective of meteorology. Mountains played a central role in the early history of modern meteorology. The first permanent year-round high-altitude weather stations were built in the 1880s but largely fell out of use by the turn of the twentieth century, not to be revived until the 1930s. This paper considers the unlikely survival of the Sonnblick observatory in the Austrian Alps. By (...)
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  27. Globalizing social movement theory: The case of eugenics.Deborah Barrett & Charles Kurzman - 2004 - Theory and Society 33 (5):487-527.
  28.  88
    Hobbesian Absolutism and the Paradox of Modern Contractarianism.Deborah Baumgold - 2009 - European Journal of Political Theory 8 (2):207-228.
    Hobbes's defense of absolutism involves the dual claims that consent is the foundation of legitimate authority and that sovereignty is necessarily absolute. It is a paradoxical combination of claims: If absolute government is the product of choice how can it also be the sole possible constitution? While all of Hobbes's contractarian successors have rejected his preference for absolutism, his dual claims have become commonplace. Since Hobbes, contract thinkers routinely assert that people will choose their preferred constitution and that it is (...)
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  29.  5
    Introduction.Deborah Eicher-Catt - 2013 - Listening 48 (3):187-189.
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  30.  76
    Forbidden Knowledge and Science as Professional Activity.Deborah G. Johnson - 1996 - The Monist 79 (2):197-217.
    Since the idea of forbidden knowledge is rooted in the biblical story of Adam and Eve eating from the forbidden tree of knowledge, its meaning today, in particular as a metaphor for scientific knowledge, is not so obvious. We can and should ask questions about the autonomy of science.
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  31.  34
    "Making More Sense of" Minimal Risk".Deborah Barnbaum - 2002 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 24 (3):10-13.
    The product rule has been used to calculate the risk of a research study, in which the risk of harm is calculated as the product of the degree of harm multiplied by the likelihood that the harm will occur. This article challenges the product rule, especially when used to calculate "minimal risk" studies.
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  32.  36
    Retention and transfer of morse code reception skill by novices: part-whole training.Deborah M. Clawson, Alice F. Healy, K. Anders Ericsson & Lyle E. Bourne - 2001 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 7 (2):129.
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  33. Schema, language, and two problems content.Deborah K. Heikes - 2003 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 24 (2):155-168.
    Human cognition is often taken to be a rule-governed system of representations that serve to guide our beliefs about our actions in the world around us. This view, though, has two problems: it must explain how the conceptually governed contents of the mind can be about objects that exist in a non-conceptual world, and it must explain how the non-conceptual world serves as a constraint on belief. I argue that the solution to these problems is to recognize that cognition has (...)
     
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  34.  18
    Personalization as It Relates to Nurse Suffering: How Managers Can Recognize the Phenomenon and Assist Suffering Nurses.Deborah Jezuit - 2003 - Jona's Healthcare Law, Ethics, and Regulation 5 (2):25-28.
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  35.  57
    The Anomaly of Literal Meaning in Davidson's Philosophy of Language.Deborah Knight - 1992 - Philosophy Today 36 (1):20-38.
  36.  20
    Balancing Gender Equity for Women Prisoners.Deborah Labelle & Sheryl Pimlott Kubiak - 2004 - Feminist Studies 30 (2):416-426.
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  37.  18
    The Objective Epistemic Probabilist and the Severe Tester.Deborah G. Mayo - 2011 - In Gregory J. Morgan (ed.), Philosophy of Science Matters: The Philosophy of Peter Achinstein. , US: Oxford University Press. pp. 135.
  38. Psychology's Class Blindness: Investment in the Status Quo.Deborah Piper - 1995 - In C. L. Barney Dewes & Carolyn Leste Law (eds.), This Fine Place So Far From Home: Voices of Academics From the Working Class. Temple University Press. pp. 286--296.
     
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  39.  31
    Moving Images: Fifth-Century Victory Monuments and the Athlete's Allure.Deborah Steiner - 1998 - Classical Antiquity 17 (1):123-150.
    This article treats representations of victors in the Greek athletic games in the artistic and poetic media of the early classical age, and argues that fifth-century sculptors, painters and poets similarly constructed the athlete as an object designed to arouse desire in audiences for their works. After reviewing the very scanty archaeological evidence for the original victory images, I seek to recover something of the response elicited by these monuments by looking to visualizations of athletes in contemporary vase-painting and literary (...)
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  40.  96
    Conjunction and the Identity of Knower and Known in Averroes.Deborah L. Black - 1999 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 73 (1):159-184.
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  41.  82
    Teaching Empathy in Medical Ethics.Deborah R. Barnbaum - 2001 - Teaching Philosophy 24 (1):63-75.
    Being empathetic (or compassionate) is an important trait that allows for those working in health care professions to successfully analyze cases and provide patients with adequate care. One standard and enormously important way to try and teach empathy involves the use of case studies. The case-study approach, however, has some unique limitations in teaching empathy. This paper describes an activity where students are asked to imagine that they have contracted a specific disease (one that lasts the entire semester) through a (...)
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  42.  29
    Editors’ Introduction.Leela Gandhi & Deborah L. Nelson - 2014 - Critical Inquiry 40 (4):285-297.
  43.  9
    Letters to the Editor.Jamie Kassler, Deborah Harkness & Richard Arthur - 1998 - Isis 89:320-320.
  44.  26
    Reflections on semiotics, visual culture, and pedagogy.Deborah L. Smith-Shank - 2007 - Semiotica 2007 (164):223-234.
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  45.  19
    A Note from the Editor.Deborah Baumgold - 2023 - Hobbes Studies 36 (2):123-124.
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  46.  26
    Mathematical Structure Applied to Metaethical Dialectics.Deborah C. Arangno & Lorraine Marie Arangno - 2022 - Philosophia 50 (4):1563-1577.
    This paper seeks to utilize mathematical methods to formally define and analyze the metaethical theory that is ethical reductionism. In contemporary metaethics, realist-antirealist debates center on the ontology of moral properties. Our research reflects an innovative methodology using methods from Graph Theory to clarify a debated position of Meta-Ethics, previously encumbered by intrinsic vagueness and ambiguity. We employ rigorous mathematical formalism to symbolize, parse, and thus disambiguate, particular philosophical questions regarding ethical ontological materialism of the reductionist variety. In this paper, (...)
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  47.  26
    A Communicology of "The Empty Nest Syndrome”.Deborah Bauer - 2008 - Semiotics:319-325.
  48.  13
    Para-Narratives in the Odyssey: Stories in the Frame by Maureen Alden.Deborah Beck - 2019 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 112 (2):100-101.
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  49.  64
    A Mistaken Attribution to Lady Mary Shepherd.Deborah Boyle - 2020 - Journal of Modern Philosophy 2 (1):5.
    In addition to the 1824 and 1827 books known to have been written by Lady Mary Shepherd, another philosophical treatise, published in 1819, has sometimes been attributed to her. While evidence for this attribution has so far been inconclusive, this paper provides reasons for thinking that Shepherd was not, in fact, the author of this book. New external evidence is provided to show that the author was James Milne, an Edinburgh architect and engineer.
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  50.  69
    Sustaining production and strengthening the agritourism product: Linkages among Michigan agritourism destinations.Deborah Che, Ann Veeck & Gregory Veeck - 2005 - Agriculture and Human Values 22 (2):225-234.
    Abstract.Agricultural restructuring has disproportionately impacted smaller US farms, such as those in Michigan where the average farm size is 215 acres. To keep agricultural land in production, entrepreneurial Michigan farmers are utilizing agritourism as a value-added way to capitalize on their comparative advantages, their diverse agricultural products, and their locations near large, urban, tourist-generating areas. Using focus groups, this paper illustrates how entrepreneurial farmers have strengthened Michigan agritourism by fostering producer networks through brochures and web linkages, information sharing in refining (...)
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