Results for 'Elizabeth Eugenia Téllez Ballesteros'

969 found
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  1.  12
    La sintiencia de los invertebrados de los phyla Mollusca, Arthropoda y Nematoda utilizados en experimentación, como argumento para vigilar su bienestar.Ameli Karla Espinosa López & Elizabeth Eugenia Téllez Ballesteros - 2023 - Revista de Filosofía (México) 55 (155):96-154.
    Los vertebrados usados en protocolos experimentales son reconocidos como sintientes, lo cual favorece su consideración desde la zooética, su protección en la legislación nacional e internacional, así como la salva- guarda de su bienestar. En consecuencia, se ha recurrido a otros modelos in vivo como los animales invertebrados para realizar investigación. Salvo casos particulares, los invertebrados no cuentan con la protección legal ni existe preocupación por su bienestar, en tanto que se les consideraba no sintientes. Por lo tanto, se realizó (...)
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  2.  19
    Beyond mystery: Putting algorithmic accountability in context.Andrea Ballestero, Baki Cakici & Elizabeth Reddy - 2019 - Big Data and Society 6 (1).
    Critical algorithm scholarship has demonstrated the difficulties of attributing accountability for the actions and effects of algorithmic systems. In this commentary, we argue that we cannot stop at denouncing the lack of accountability for algorithms and their effects but must engage the broader systems and distributed agencies that algorithmic systems exist within; including standards, regulations, technologies, and social relations. To this end, we explore accountability in “the Generated Detective,” an algorithmically generated comic. Taking up the mantle of detectives ourselves, we (...)
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  3.  15
    Behavioral Lifestyles and Survival: A Meta-Analysis.Rocío Fernández-Ballesteros, Elizabeth Valeriano-Lorenzo, Macarena Sánchez-Izquierdo & Juan Botella - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The aim of the study is to determine the association between Behavioral Lifestyles and longevity in the elderly. A search strategy was conducted in the PsycInfo, Medline, PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus databases. The primary outcome was mortality/survival. Four variables were analyzed to evaluate the role of potential moderators. Ninety-three articles, totaling more than 2,800,000 people, were included in the meta-analysis. We found that the lifestyles analyzed predict greater survival. Specifically, doing regular physical activity, engaging in leisure activities, sleeping (...)
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  4.  55
    Paradoxical Infrastructures: Ruins, Retrofit, and Risk.Cyrus Mody, Elizabeth Long, Farès el-Dahdah, Trevor Durbin, Andrea Ballestero, Elizabeth Rodwell, Akhil Gupta, Albert Pope, Matthew Schneider-Mayerson, Randal Hall, Dominic Boyer, Edward Hackett, Hannah Appel, Jessica Lockrem & Cymene Howe - 2016 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 41 (3):547-565.
    In recent years, a dramatic increase in the study of infrastructure has occurred in the social sciences and humanities, following upon foundational work in the physical sciences, architecture, planning, information science, and engineering. This article, authored by a multidisciplinary group of scholars, probes the generative potential of infrastructure at this historical juncture. Accounting for the conceptual and material capacities of infrastructure, the article argues for the importance of paradox in understanding infrastructure. Thematically the article is organized around three key points (...)
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  5.  58
    Percepción de la población frente al cambio climático en áreas naturales protegidas de Baja California Sur, México.Elizabeth Olmos Martínez, María Eugenia González Ávila & Marcela Rebeca Contreras Loera - 2013 - Polis: Revista Latinoamericana 35.
    Este trabajo muestra la percepción de la población humana asentada en las siete áreas naturales protegidas federales de Baja California Sur, desde el punto de vista del conocimiento empírico sobre los cambios en el medio ambiente y recursos naturales ante efectos del Cambio Climático (CC). Se recolectaron datos a partir de la aplicación de 250 encuestas cualitativas en 2011. Los resultados muestran que la mayor parte de la población conoce el significado de CC y que los efectos que perciben son (...)
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  6.  38
    Rousseau's Republican Romance.Elizabeth Rose Wingrove - 2000 - Princeton University Press.
    In Rousseau's Republican Romance, Elizabeth Wingrove combines political theory and narrative analysis to argue that Rousseau's stories of sex and sexuality offer important insights into the paradoxes of democratic consent. She suggests that despite Rousseau's own protestations, "man" and "citizen" are not rival or contradictory ideals. Instead, they are deeply interdependent. Her provocative reconfiguration of republicanism introduces the concept of consensual nonconsensuality--a condition in which one wills the circumstances of one's own domination. This apparently paradoxical possibility appears at the (...)
  7. Understanding and knowledge of what is said.Elizabeth Fricker - 2003 - In Alex Barber (ed.), Epistemology of language. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 325--66.
  8. Old Problems with New Measures in the Science of Consciousness.Elizabeth Irvine - 2012 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 63 (3):627-648.
    Introspective and phenomenological methods are once again being used to support the use of subjective reports, rather than objective behavioural measures, to investigate and measure consciousness. Objective measures are often seen as useful ways of investigating the range of capacities subjects have in responding to phenomena, but are fraught with the interpretive problems of how to link behavioural capacities with consciousness. Instead, gathering subjective reports is seen as a more direct way of assessing the contents of consciousness. This article explores (...)
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  9.  83
    Creating false memories.Elizabeth Loftus - manuscript
    When Cool finally realized that false memories had been planted, she sued the psychiatrist for malpractice. In March 1997, after five weeks of trial, her case was settled out of court for $2.4 million. Nadean Cool is not the only patient to develop false memories as a result of questionable therapy. In Missouri in 1992 a church counselor helped Beth Rutherford to remember during therapy that her father, a clergyman, had regularly raped her between the ages of seven and 14 (...)
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  10.  18
    Children integrate speech and gesture across a wider temporal window than speech and action when learning a math concept.Elizabeth M. Wakefield, Cristina Carrazza, Naureen Hemani-Lopez, Kristin Plath & Susan Goldin-Meadow - 2021 - Cognition 210 (C):104604.
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  11.  40
    Vulnerability in practice: Peeling back the layers, avoiding triggers, and preventing cascading effects.Elizabeth Victor, Florencia Luna, Laura Guidry-Grimes & Alison Reiheld - 2022 - Bioethics 36 (5):587-596.
    The concept of vulnerability is widely used in bioethics, particularly in research ethics and public health ethics. The traditional approach construes vulnerability as inherent in individuals or the groups to which they belong and views vulnerability as requiring special protections. Florencia Luna and other bioethicists continue to challenge traditional ways of conceptualizing and applying the term. Luna began proposing a layered approach to this concept and recently extended this proposal to offer two new concepts to analyze the concept of vulnerability, (...)
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  12. The Nick of Time: Politics, Evolution, and the Untimely.Elizabeth Grosz - 2006 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 31:69-71.
     
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  13. Bodily protentionality.Elizabeth A. Behnke - 2009 - Husserl Studies 25 (3):185-217.
    This investigation explores the methodological implications of choosing an unusual example for phenomenological description (here, a bodily awareness practice allowing spontaneous bodily shifts to occur at the leading edge of the living present); for example, the matters themselves are not pregiven, but must first be brought into view. Only after preliminary clarifications not only of the practice concerned, but also of the very notions of the “body” and of “protentionality” is it possible to provide both static and genetic descriptions of (...)
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  14. Autonomy as an educational ideal II.Elizabeth Telfer - 1975 - In Stuart C. Brown (ed.), Philosophers discuss education. London: Macmillan Press.
     
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  15. Vagueness and arbitrariness: Merricks on composition.Elizabeth Barnes - 2007 - Mind 116 (461):105-113.
    In this paper I respond to Trenton Merricks's (2005) paper ‘Composition and Vagueness’. I argue that Merricks's paper faces the following difficulty: he claims to provide independent motivation for denying one of the premisses of the Lewis-Sider vagueness argument for unrestricted composition, but the alleged motivation he provides begs the question.
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  16. How does the Humean sense of duty motivate?Elizabeth Schmidt Radcliffe - 1996 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 34 (3):383-407.
    On Hume's account, when we lack virtues that would typically prompt moral action, we can instead be motivated by the "sense of duty." Surprisingly, Hume seems to maintain that, in such cases, we are motivated by a desire to avoid the unpleasantness of "self-hatred" evoked in us when we realize we lack certain traits others possess. This account has led commentators to argue that Hume is not a moral internalist, since motivation by duty is motivation by a self-interested desire. This (...)
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  17.  29
    In need of remedy: US policy for compensating injured research participants.Elizabeth R. Pike - 2014 - Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (3):182-185.
    There is an emerging ethical consensus that injured research participants should receive medical care and compensation for their research-related injuries. This consensus is premised on notions of beneficence, distributive justice, compensatory justice and reciprocity. In response, countries around the world have implemented no-fault compensation systems to ensure that research participants are adequately protected in the event of injury. The United States, the world's leading sponsor of research, has chosen instead to rely on its legal system to provide injured research participants (...)
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  18. Moral Testimony Goes Only So Far.Elizabeth Harman - 2019 - Oxford Studies in Agency and Responsibility 6:165-185.
    This paper argues for answers to two questions, and then identifies a tension between the two answers. First, regarding the implications of moral ignorance for moral responsibility: “Do false moral views exculpate?” Does believing that one is acting morally permissibly render one blameless? It does not. Second, in moral epistemology: “Can moral testimony provide moral knowledge?” It can (even granting some worries about moral deference). The tension: If moral testimony can provide moral knowledge, then surely it can provide justified false (...)
     
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  19.  74
    The interaction of emotion and cognition: The relation between the human amygdala and cognitive awareness.Elizabeth A. Phelps - 2005 - In Ran R. Hassin, James S. Uleman & John A. Bargh (eds.), The New Unconscious. Oxford Series in Social Cognition and Social Neuroscience. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 61-76.
  20. Imitating Paul: A Discourse of Power.Elizabeth A. Castelli - 1991
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  21.  9
    “Broad” Impact: Perceptions of Sex/Gender-Related Psychology Journals.Elizabeth R. Brown, Jessi L. Smith & Doralyn Rossmann - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Because men are overrepresented within positions of power, men are perceived as the default in academia. Androcentric bias emerges whereby research by men and/or dominated by men is perceived as higher quality and gains more attention. We examined if these androcentric biases materialize within fields that study bias. How do individuals in close contact with psychology view psychology research outlets with titles including the words women, gender, sex, or feminism or contain the words men or masculinity versus psychology journals that (...)
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  22.  35
    From “Informed” to “Engaged” Consent: Risks and Obligations in Consent for Participation in a Health Data Repository.Elizabeth Bromley, Alexandra Mendoza-Graf, Sandra Berry, Camille Nebeker & Dmitry Khodyakov - 2020 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 48 (1):172-182.
    The development and use of large and dynamic health data repositories designed to support research pose challenges to traditional informed consent models. We used semi-structured interviewing to elicit diverse research stakeholders' views of a model of consent appropriate to participation in initiatives that entail collection, long-term storage, and undetermined future research use of multiple types of health data. We demonstrate that, when considering health data repositories, research stakeholders replace a concept of consent as informed with one in which consent is (...)
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  23. Infants' Rapid Learning About Self-Propelled Objects.Elizabeth S. Spelke - unknown
    Six experiments investigated 7-month-old infants’ capacity to learn about the self-propelled motion of an object. After observing 1 wind-up toy animal move on its own and a second wind-up toy animal move passively by an experimenter’s hand, infants looked reliably longer at the former object during a subsequent stationary test, providing evidence that infants learned and remembered the mapping of objects and their motions. In further experiments, infants learned the mapping for different animals and retained it over a 15-min delay, (...)
     
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  24. Doing (better) what comes naturally: Zagzebski on rationality and epistemic self-trust.Elizabeth Fricker - 2016 - Episteme 13 (2):151-166.
    I offer an account of what trust is, and of what epistemic self-trust consists in. I identify five distinct arguments extracted from Chapter 2 of Zagzebski's Epistemic Authority for the rationality and epistemic legitimacy of epistemic self-trust. I take issue with the general account of human rational self-regulation on which one of her arguments rests. Zagzebski maintains that this consists in restoring harmony in the psyche by eliminating conflict and so ending. I argue that epistemic rationality is distinct from psychic (...)
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  25. Sacred groves as sites of bio-cultural resistance and resilience in Bhutan.Elizabeth Allison - 2022 - In Chris Coggins & Bixia Chen (eds.), Sacred forests of Asia: spiritual ecology and the politics of nature conservation. New York: Routledge.
     
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  26.  24
    Cosmological Arguments.Elizabeth Burns - 2019 - The Philosophers' Magazine 86:87-92.
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  27.  32
    Life on the island.Elizabeth Corey - 2016 - Zygon 51 (4):999-1010.
    Walker Percy was both a medical doctor and a serious Catholic—a scientist and a religious believer. He thought, however, that science had become hegemonic in the twentieth century and that it was incapable of answering the most fundamental needs of human beings. He thus leveled a critique of the scientific method and its shortcomings in failing to address the individual person over against the group. In response to these shortcomings Percy postulates a religious understanding of human life, one in which (...)
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  28.  8
    Handstand (poem).Elizabeth Crowell - 2002 - Feminist Studies 28 (2):302.
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  29.  12
    Disorders of memory.Elizabeth L. Glisky - 2004 - In Jennie Ponsford (ed.), Cognitive and Behavioral Rehabilitation: From Neurobiology to Clinical Practice. Guilford Press. pp. 100--128.
  30. The body.Elizabeth Grosz - 1992 - In Elizabeth Wright (ed.), Feminism and psychoanalysis: a critical dictionary. Cambridge, Mass., USA: Blackwell. pp. 35--40.
     
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  31.  54
    Legal Issues in Human Reproduction.Elizabeth Kingdom - 1991 - Journal of Medical Ethics 17 (3):165-165.
  32.  38
    Right without might: Liberal minority politics.Elizabeth Kingdom - 1997 - Res Publica 3 (1):115-119.
  33.  33
    The Sacred Paw: The Bear in Nature, Myth and Literature: Review.Elizabeth A. Lawrence - 1986 - Between the Species 2 (2):16.
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  34. Helen Lee: The Gift.Elizabeth Lee - 2010 - Budhi: A Journal of Ideas and Culture 14 (2 & 3):345-346.
     
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  35.  13
    Contingencies.Elizabeth Rottenberg - 2015 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 5 (1):128-138.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:ContingenciesElizabeth RottenbergAnalysis does precious little, but the little it does is precious.—Therese BenedekI’d like to begin with an anecdote of a slightly confessional nature. If I mention this anecdote, it’s because it came to me by chance as an association to what French analyst and philosopher Monique David-Ménard, in her introduction to Éloge des hasards dans la vie sexuelle, calls “positive contingency” or the “positive aspect of chance” (David-Ménard (...)
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  36.  56
    Is James’s Pragmatism Really a New Name for Some Old Ways of Thinking?Elizabeth Shaw - 2012 - Essays in Philosophy 13 (1):31-53.
    Pragmatism may be the aspect of William James’s thought for which he is best known; but, at the same time, James’s pragmatism may be among the most misunderstood doctrines of the past century. There are many meanings of word “pragmatism,” even within James’s own corpus. Not a single unified doctrine, pragmatism may be better described as a collection of positions which together form a coherent philosophical system. This paper examines three interrelated uses of the term: (1) pragmatism as a temperament, (...)
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  37. The philosophy of yoga, containing the mystery of spirit and the way of eternal bliss.Elizabeth Sharpe - 1933 - London,: Luzac & co..
     
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  38. Father Interaction and Separatian Protest'.Elizabeth Spelke, Philip Zelazo & Jerome Kagan - unknown
    Thirty-six 1-year-old middle-class children with fathers who spent differential time with them at home were observed in two experimental contexts separated by 2 weeks. In the first, each infant was shown six to eight repetitions of three different nonsocial events followed by a change in..
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  39. Family size preferences.Elizabeth Thomson - 2001 - In Neil J. Smelser & Paul B. Baltes (eds.), International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences. Elsevier. pp. 2004--5347.
     
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  40. You, too, are a believer!Elizabeth Tischler - 1954 - New York,: Vantage Press.
  41.  16
    Theorizing the musically abject.Elizabeth Tolbert - 2004 - In Christopher Washburne & Maiken Derno (eds.), Bad music: the music we love to hate. New York: Routledge. pp. 104.
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  42. Personal identity and the sense of duty.Elizabeth Trott - 2001 - In William Sweet (ed.), The bases of ethics. Milwaukee: Marquette University Press.
     
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  43. The question of reading Irigaray : toward a philosophy of myth.Elizabeth Weed - 2010 - In Elena Tzelepis & Athena Athanasiou (eds.), Rewriting Difference: Luce Irigaray and ‘the Greeks’. State University of New York Press.
  44. Plain Mr. Knox.Elizabeth Whitley & James S. McEwen - 1961
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  45.  7
    Goethe's Conception of Form. Annual Lecture on a Master Mind, Henriette Hertz Trust of the British Academy, 1951. From the Proceedings of the British Academy.Elizabeth M. Wilkinson & British Academy - 1953 - G. Cumberlege.
  46.  49
    Neuroses of the Stomach.Elizabeth A. Williams - 2007 - Isis 98 (1):54-79.
    In the period 1800–1870, French physicians approached psychic illness (Philippe Pinel’s “neurosis”) within competing “cerebralist” and “visceralist” frameworks. Cerebralism, which dominated the specialty of mental medicine, sought the origins of psychic illness in lesions of the brain and central nervous system. “Visceralism,” upheld by generalists, clung to the view of the ancients that psychic disorder was seated in the abdominal viscera. The distinction enjoyed credibility thanks to widespread acceptance of Xavier Bichat’s “two lives” doctrine, which demarcated functions of the central (...)
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  47.  11
    Understanding Catholic morality.Elizabeth Willems - 1997 - New York: Crossroad.
    Grounded in human experience, this accessible introduction to principles in Catholic morality focuses on moral development, not simply the acquisition of learning. The book begins with a historical overview of moral theology and goes on to examine such issues as conscience, freedom, fundamental option, authority, law, sin, and conversion.
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  48.  8
    Chapter two. Object lessons.Elizabeth Rose Wingrove - 2000 - In Rousseau's Republican Romance. Princeton University Press. pp. 58-101.
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  49. Thoroughly postmodern feminist criticism.Elizabeth Wright - 1989 - In Teresa Brennan (ed.), Between Feminism and Psychoanalysis. New York: Routledge. pp. 141--152.
     
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  50. Making Lists : Social and Material Technologies in the Making of Seventeenth-Century British Natural History.Elizabeth Yale - 2014 - In Pamela H. Smith, Amy R. W. Meyers & Harold J. Cook (eds.), Ways of making and knowing: the material culture of empirical knowledge. New York City: Bard Graduate Center.
     
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