Results for 'Elizabeth Presa'

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  1. Sculpture installation : Garden of small nuptials.Elizabeth Presa - 2019 - In Paulo de Assis & Paolo Giudici (eds.), Aberrant nuptials: Deleuze and artistic research 2. Leuven (Belgium): Leuven University Press.
     
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  2.  96
    Beside(s): Elizabeth Presa with Jacques Derrida.Dimitris Vardoulakis - 2009 - Derrida Today 2 (2):200-209.
    This paper explores the way that Elizabeth Presa's artworks respond to Jacques Derrida's thought. By examining how the particularity (the beside) and its supplements (the besides) operate in Presa's works, it is shown how this movement between beside and besides is also central to Derrida's thought.
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  3.  56
    Consumer reactions to unethical service recovery.Elizabeth C. Alexander - 2002 - Journal of Business Ethics 36 (3):223 - 237.
    Ethical business practices have been widely prescribed, but why? Consumers views on unethical business practices have been studied, but possibly more important to marketers and researchers are consumer actions and reactions to unethical business practices and the businesses themselves. Do consumers react negatively, or in such a way as to "punish" the unethical business? If so, what is the nature and extent of the punishment? This research seeks answers to these questions by examining consumer reactions, such as complaining and switching, (...)
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  4. The Irrelevance of Moral Uncertainty.Elizabeth Harman - 2015 - Oxford Studies in Metaethics 10.
    Suppose you believe you’re morally required to φ‎ but that it’s not a big deal; and yet you think it might be deeply morally wrong to φ‎. You are in a state of moral uncertainty, holding high credence in one moral view of your situation, while having a small credence in a radically opposing moral view. A natural thought is that in such a case you should not φ‎, because φ‎ing would be too morally risky. The author argues that this (...)
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  5.  25
    Becoming undone: Darwinian reflections on life, politics, and art.Elizabeth Grosz - 2011 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    The inhuman in the humanities : Darwin and the ends of man -- Deleuze, Bergson, and the concept of life -- Bergson, Deleuze, and difference -- Feminism, materialism, and freedom -- The future of feminist theory : dreams for new knowledges -- Differences disturbing identity : Deleuze and feminism -- Irigaray and the ontology of sexual difference -- Darwin and the split between natural and sexual selection -- Sexual difference as sexual selection : Irigarayan reflections on Darwin -- Art and (...)
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  6.  24
    Jacques Lacan: a feminist introduction.Elizabeth A. Grosz - 1990 - New York: Routledge.
    Grosz gives a critical overview of Lacan's work from a feminist perspective. Discussing previous attempts to give a feminist reading of his work, she argues for women's autonomy based on an indifference to the Lacanian phallus.
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  7.  16
    Introduction.Elizabeth F. Cohen - 2022 - European Journal of Political Theory 21 (3):585-586.
    European Journal of Political Theory, Volume 21, Issue 3, Page 585-586, July 2022. Ayelet Shachar's lead essay in The Shifting Border draws out dramatic transformations of bordering practices currently taking place worldwide. These have yielded spatial relocations for bordering, a privatization of enforcement, and legal innovations that tie the border to individual people as they move, among many other changes. Shachar argues in favor of a form of reciprocity, in which states that shape shift their borders are also compelled to (...)
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  8. Notes and News.Elizabeth Kemper Adams - 1906 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 3 (16):448.
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  9. Notes and News.Elizabeth Kemper Adams - 1909 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 6 (17):475.
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  10.  42
    The Aesthetic Experience: Its Meaning in a Functional Psychology.Elizabeth Kemper Adams - 1907 - Philosophical Review 16:660.
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  11.  12
    Note from the book review editor.Elizabeth Higginbotham - 1996 - Gender and Society 10 (3):230-231.
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  12.  17
    Adam wodeham on the intentionality of cognitions.Elizabeth Karger - 2001 - In Dominik Perler (ed.), Ancient and medieval theories of intentionality. Leiden: Brill. pp. 76--283.
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  13.  23
    Troubled belonging: Lived experience and the responsibility of citizenship.Elizabeth Kenyon - 2019 - Journal of Social Studies Research 43 (1):47-56.
    Using data from course artifacts and interviews with three pre-service social studies teachers, I first look at how experiences from their past both reveal and shape their sense of citizenship, and then I explore how the participants hoped to use their social studies teaching to foster a particular type of citizenship.
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  14. Recent Thinking about Sexual Harassment: A Review Essay.Elizabeth Anderson - 2006 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 34 (3):284-312.
  15.  15
    Science, magic and gods.Elizabeth Colwill - 1998 - Metascience 7 (3):503-514.
  16. Virtue's wintry reward: Pietro Testa's etchings of the seasons.Elizabeth Cropper - 1974 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 37 (1):249-279.
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  17.  91
    Hume’s Psychology of the Passions: The Literature and Future Directions.Elizabeth S. Radcliffe - 2015 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 53 (4):565-605.
    in a recent article entitled “Hume on the Passions,” Stephen Buckle opens with the claim that Hume’s theory of the passions has largely been neglected. “Apart from a couple of famous sections in the Treatise concerning the sources of action,” he writes, “the subject matter has rarely excited interest.”1 His analysis of why the subject of the passions in Hume has been uninspiring points to the fact that readers have largely misunderstood the point of Hume’s theory. They usually regard the (...)
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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. When is Failure to Realize Something Exculpatory?Elizabeth Harman - 2017 - In Philip Robichaud & Jan Wieland (eds.), Responsibility - The Epistemic Condition. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 117-126.
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  20. Sartre and Lonergan on consciousness.Elizabeth A. Murray - 2010 - In Adrian Mirvish & Adrian Van den Hoven (eds.), New perspectives on Sartre. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Press. pp. 64.
     
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  21.  10
    Ressentiment and Redemption.Elizabeth Murray Morelli - 1998 - Lonergan Workshop 14:197-227.
  22.  49
    Mechanisms of Moral Disengagement in the Endorsement of Asylum Seeker Policies in Australia.Elizabeth M. Greenhalgh, Susan E. Watt & Nicola S. Schutte - 2015 - Ethics and Behavior 25 (6):482-499.
    Moral disengagement is a process whereby the self-regulatory mechanisms that would otherwise sanction unethical conduct can be selectively disabled. The present research proposed that moral disengagement might be adopted in the endorsement of asylum seeker policies in Australia, and in order to test this, a scale was developed and was validated in two studies. Factor analysis demonstrated that a 2-factor, 16-item structure had the best fit, and the construct validity of the scale was supported. Results provide evidence for the use (...)
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  23.  14
    Are we all Pussy Riot? On narratives of feminist return and the limits of transnational solidarity.Elizabeth Groeneveld - 2015 - Feminist Theory 16 (3):289-307.
    On Friday 17 August 2012, members of the feminist collective Pussy Riot were sentenced to two years in jail after their staging of a musical protest in a Russian Orthodox church. This article analyses Western news media responses to the Pussy Riot affair. It first examines how the event has resonated across various news media, activist, and social media networks. Focusing on the phrase, ‘We are all Pussy Riot’, which became a Twitter hashtag following the incarceration of Pussy Riot members, (...)
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  24.  49
    Nishida and the Historical World: An Examination of Active Intuition, the Body, and Time.Elizabeth McManaman Grosz - 2014 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 6 (2):143-157.
    This article will examine the phase of Nishida’s thought in which he turns to the historical world and present the benefits of this turn to his overall philosophical project. In “The Philosophy of History in the ‘Later’ Nishida,” Woo-Sung Huh claims that Nishida Kitaro’s attempt to integrate history into his earlier writings on self-consciousness is a “wrong turn.” I will demonstrate how Huh’s criticism of Nishida’s writings on history stems from Huh’s own ontological assumption that consciousness and the historical world (...)
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  25.  3
    Blame and the Metaphysics of Practical Reason.Elizabeth A. Oljar - 2002 - Disputatio 1 (13):17-33.
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  26.  6
    Acerca de la inconmensurabilidad y traducción.Elizabeth Padilla - 1999 - Tópicos 7:97-112.
    Kuhn propone en “Conmensurabilidad, comparabilidad y comunicabilidad” la estrategia de distinguir entre interpretación y traducción para responder a las críticas realizadas a su tesis de la inconmensurabilidad entre teorías científicas sucesivas. Esto lo lleva a considerar que la tradición analítica -ejemplificada en Quine de Palabra y Objeto- confunde ambos procesos. Me propongo revisar si es que puede atribuírsele a este autor la confusión señalada, para evaluar a partir de ello la pertinencia de las características que Kuhn le atribuye a la (...)
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  27.  23
    Augustine's Confessions: The Concrete Referent.Elizabeth Hanson-Smith - 1978 - Philosophy and Literature 2 (2):176-189.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Elizabeth Hanson-Smith AUGUSTINE'S CONFESSIONS: THE CONCRETE REFERENT The chief problem facing critics who would consider the Confessions as both a literary work and a philosophical treatise remains the connection between the first nine books, the autobiography, and the last four, the metaphysical speculations on time, eternity, epistemology, and theology. A persistent desire to justify the work as an aesthetic whole has led critics on a search for thematic (...)
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  28.  5
    Letters on the Elementary Principles of Education.Elizabeth Hamilton - 2014 - Cambridge University Press.
  29.  30
    Matter, Life, and Other Variations.Elizabeth Groz - 2011 - Philosophy Today 55 (Supplement):17-27.
  30.  18
    ERISA Reform as Health Reform: The Case for an ERISA Preemption Waiver.Elizabeth Y. McCuskey - 2020 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 48 (3):450-461.
    If federal health reforms continue to rely on employer-sponsored health care coverage, ERISA preemption reform should be part of the next steps. State-level reform has acquired greater urgency, while the justifications for preempting that source of reform has eroded. This article recommends a statutory waiver for ERISA preemption as a feasible way to adapt to these circumstances. It offers proposed statutory text for reformers inclined to pursue ERISA reform as health reform.
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  31.  13
    Hopes for the PSDA.Elizabeth Leibold McCloskey - 1991 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 2 (3):172-173.
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  32.  12
    On Liberty.Elizabeth Rapaport (ed.) - 1978 - Hackett Publishing Company.
    Contents include a selected bibliography and an editor's Introduction broken into two sections. The first section provides a brief sketch of the historical, social, and biographical context in which Mill wrote and the second traces the central line of argument in the text to aid in the comprehension of the essay's structure, method, and major theses.
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  33.  41
    Teaching Health Law.Elizabeth Pendo - 2010 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 38 (1):154-159.
    Last summer, I was thinking about a public service project for my disability discrimination law course. I teach the course in fall, and try to incorporate a project each year. Integrating a public service project into a traditional doctrinal course fits within the trend toward expanding teaching techniques beyond the case method in order to better prepare students for the practice of law. It was also inspired in part by the Carnegie Foundation's 2007 report, “Educating Lawyers: Preparation for the Profession (...)
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  34.  51
    Calling for change: A feminist approach to women in art, politics, philosophy and education.Elizabeth Mary Grierson - 2019 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (7):731-743.
    Michel Foucault showed by his genealogical method that history is random. It comprises sites of disarray and dispersal. In those sites, Simone de Beauvoir wrote philosophy through lived experience of woman as Other in relation to man as the Absolute. Here lies a fecund site for revisionist analysis of female cultural production and its relevance to a philosophy of education. The paper works with a feminist approach to the politics of knowledge, examining textual and political strategies in the recording of (...)
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  35.  79
    Hume’s better argument for motivational skepticism.Elizabeth S. Radcliffe & Richard McCarty - 2018 - Philosophical Explorations 21 (1):76-89.
    On a standard interpretation, Hume argued that reason is not practical, because its operations are limited to “demonstration” and “probability.” But recent critics claim that by limiting reason’s operations to only these two, his argument begs the question. Despite this, a better argument for motivational skepticism can be found in Hume’s text, one that emphasizes reason’s inability to generate motive force against contrary desires or passions. Nothing can oppose an impulse but a contrary impulse, Hume believed, and reason cannot generate (...)
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  36.  11
    Minimal Cognitive Preconditions on the Ratchet.Elizabeth Renner & Tadeusz Zawidzki - 2018 - In Laura Desirèe Di Paolo, Fabio Di Vincenzo & Francesca De Petrillo (eds.), Evolution of Primate Social Cognition. Springer Verlag. pp. 249-265.
    H. sapiens stands out from other primates along many social dimensions; however, none seems as prominent and important as the capacity of our species for cumulative cultural evolution or, as Tomasello calls it, “the ratchet.” Although other primate species show evidence of cultural variation, there is little evidence of cumulative cultural evolution, i.e., the gradual accumulation, modification, and refinement of traditions and skills over historical time, in any primate species other than our own. This is clearly an extremely significant component (...)
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  37.  32
    The time of violence: Deconstruction and value.Elizabeth Grosz - 1998 - Cultural Values 2 (2-3):190-205.
    . The time of violence: Deconstruction and value. Cultural Values: Vol. 2, No. 2-3, pp. 190-205.
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  38.  14
    Knowledge and Human Interests.Elizabeth Vallance - 1973 - Philosophical Quarterly 23 (91):170-172.
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  39. Reason, Morality, and Hume’s “Active Principles”: Comments on Rachel Cohon’s Hume’s Morality: Feeling and Fabrication.Elizabeth S. Radcliffe - 2008 - Hume Studies 34 (2):267-276.
    Rachel Cohon's Hume is a moral sensing theorist, who holds both that moral qualities are mind-dependent and that there is such a thing as moral knowledge. He is an anti-rationalist about motivation, arguing that reason alone does not motivate, but allows that both beliefs and passions are motivating. And he is both a descriptive and a normative moral theorist who, despite having resources for putting checks on our sentimentally-based moral evaluations, does end up with a kind of a relativistic account (...)
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  40.  7
    Chapter two. Object lessons.Elizabeth Rose Wingrove - 2000 - In Rousseau's Republican Romance. Princeton University Press. pp. 58-101.
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  41.  17
    Special issue on Elwyn Richardson.Elizabeth M. Grierson - 2016 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 48 (7):655-656.
  42. Derrida and the Limits of Philosophy.Elizabeth Gross - 1986 - Thesis Eleven 14 (1):26-43.
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  43.  33
    Jacob böhme and his relation to Hegel.Elizabeth S. Haldane - 1897 - Philosophical Review 6 (2):146-161.
  44. Morality Within the Realm of the Morally Permissible.Elizabeth Harman - 2015 - Oxford Studies in Normative Ethics 5:221-244.
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  45. Fetishizing Ontology.Elizabeth Purcell - 2011 - Radical Philosophy Review 14 (1):67-84.
    Recently Slavoj Žižek has critiqued certain "feminist" readings of Lacan's feminine structure of desire, including Julia Kristeva, for postulating a feminine discourse which is supposedly beyond the phallic economy. This paper defends Kristeva's position, both by noting how Žižek Hegelian ontology prevents him from utilizing the resources of sexual difference and by clarifying Kristeva's double account of maternity. One consequence of this investigation is that a Kristevean theory of desire will provide one with a new form of political intervention by (...)
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  46.  66
    A Humean explanation of acting on normative reasons.Elizabeth Radcliffe - 2020 - Synthese 199 (1-2):1269-1292.
    This article presents a limited defense of Humeanism about practical reason. Jonathan Dancy and other traditional objective-reasons theorists argue that all practical reasons, what we think about when we deliberate, are facts or states of affairs in the world. On the Humean view, the reasons that motivate us are belief-desire combinations, which are in the mind. Thus, Dancy and others reject Humeanism on the grounds that it cannot allow that anyone acts from a normative reason. I argue, first, that this (...)
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  47.  58
    Is mind-mindedness trait-like or a quality of close relationships? Evidence from descriptions of significant others, famous people, and works of art.Elizabeth Meins, Charles Fernyhough & Jayne Harris-Waller - 2014 - Cognition 130 (3):417-427.
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  48.  15
    (3 other versions)Editors’ Introduction.Elizabeth S. Radcliffe & Mark G. Spencer - 2023 - Hume Studies 48 (2):193-193.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Editors’ IntroductionElizabeth S. Radcliffe and Mark G. SpencerThis issue opens with the winning essay in the Second Annual Hume Studies Essay Prize competition: “Hume’s Passion-Based Account of Moral Responsibility,” by Taro Okamura. Dr. Okamura’s essay was chosen as the 2022 winner from among papers submitted by emerging scholars from August 2021 through July 2022. Dr. Okamura received his Ph.D. from the University of Alberta in 2022. He is currently (...)
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  49.  49
    Interaction versus observation: A finer look at this distinction and its importance to autism.Elizabeth Redcay, Katherine Rice & Rebecca Saxe - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (4):435 - 435.
    Although a second-person neuroscience has high ecological validity, the extent to which a second- versus third-person neuroscience approach fundamentally alters neural patterns of activation requires more careful investigation. Nonetheless, we are hopeful that this new avenue will prove fruitful in significantly advancing our understanding of typical and atypical social cognition.
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  50.  93
    Hume on Passion, Reason, and the Reasonableness of Ends.Elizabeth S. Radcliffe - 1994 - Southwest Philosophy Review 10 (2):1-11.
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