Results for 'Elizabeth Sikiaridi'

949 found
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  1.  37
    The Architectures of Iannis Xenakis.Elizabeth Sikiaridi - 2003 - Technoetic Arts 1 (3):201-207.
    Iannis Xenakis (1922–2001), composer, architect, engineer and media artist, designed together with Le Corbusier the Philips-pavilion for the 1958 Brussels World Fair. This pavilion is an early example of (“hybrid”) combined media and architectural space as it contained a Poème Électronique, an electronic synthesis of visual projections (conceived by Le Corbusier ) and acoustic events (composed by Varèse). The pavilion's architecture with its hyperbolic-paraboloid shells had a dynamic expression. Xenakis continued this research into complex material architectural forms. He also worked (...)
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  2.  45
    IDENSITY(r): urbanism in the communication age.Elizabeth Sikiaridi & Frans Vogelaar - 2003 - Technoetic Arts 1 (1):69-76.
    ‘The new city presupposes that the cables of the interhuman relations are switched reversibly, not in bundles as with television, but in real networks, respons(e)ibly, as in the telephone network. These are technical questions; and they are to be solved by urbanists and architects.’ (Vilém Flusser 1990). To reinforce the significance of public space we have to deal with at least two ‘publics’ - the global and the local public - by creating spheres where local and global public space can (...)
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  3. Private Government: How Employers Rule Our Lives.Elizabeth Anderson - 2017 - Princeton University Press.
    Why our workplaces are authoritarian private governments—and why we can’t see it One in four American workers says their workplace is a “dictatorship.” Yet that number almost certainly would be higher if we recognized employers for what they are—private governments with sweeping authoritarian power over our lives. Many employers minutely regulate workers’ speech, clothing, and manners on the job, and employers often extend their authority to the off-duty lives of workers, who can be fired for their political speech, recreational activities, (...)
  4.  62
    Is supererogation more than just costly sacrifice?Elizabeth Drummond Young - 2015 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 77:125-140.
    I begin by examining the answer to a traditional puzzle concerning supererogatory acts: if they are good to do, why are they not required? The answer often given is that they are optional acts because they cost the agent too much. This view has parallels with the traditional view of religious sacrifice, which involves offering up something or someone valuable as a gift or victim and experiencing a ‘cost’ as part of the ritual. There are problems with the idea that (...)
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  5.  34
    The Physical and the Moral: Anthropology, Physiology, and Philosophical Medicine in France, 1750-1850.Elizabeth A. Williams - 1994 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book explores the tradition of the 'science of man' in French medicine of the era 1750-1850, focusing on controversies about the nature of the 'physical-moral' relation and their effects on the role of medicine in French society. Its chief purpose is to recover the history of a holistic tradition in French medicine that has been neglected because it lay outside the mainstream themes of modern medicine, which include experimental, reductionist, and localistic conceptions of health and disease. Professor Williams also (...)
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  6.  58
    Perceiving and impressions.Elizabeth H. Wolgast - 1958 - Philosophical Review 67 (April):226-236.
  7.  24
    Requirement and rationality: two problems concerning supererogatory acts.Elizabeth Drummond Young - 2005 - Dissertation, University of Edinburgh
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  8.  15
    The Faith of Epicurus.Elizabeth Telfer - 1968 - Philosophical Quarterly 18 (73):361-362.
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  9. Study Project in the Phenomenology of the Body.Elizabeth Behnke - 1996 - In Thomas Nenon & Lester Embree (eds.), Issues in Husserl’s Ideas Ii. Springer Verlag.
     
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  10.  39
    (1 other version)Retributivism and the Moral Enhancement of Criminals Through Brain Interventions.Elizabeth Shaw - 2018 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 83:251-270.
    This chapter will focus on the biomedical moral enhancement of offenders – the idea that we could modify offenders’ brains in order to reduce the likelihood that they would engage in immoral, criminal behaviour. Discussions of the permissibility of using biomedical means to address criminal behaviour typically analyse the issues from the perspective of medical ethics, rather than penal theory. However, recently certain theorists have discussed whether brain interventions could be legitimately used for punitive (as opposed to purely therapeutic) purposes. (...)
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  11.  43
    R.I.P. to the PIP: PCNA‐binding motif no longer considered specific.Elizabeth M. Boehm & M. Todd Washington - 2016 - Bioessays 38 (11):1117-1122.
    Many proteins responsible for genome maintenance interact with one another via short sequence motifs. The best known of these are PIP motifs, which mediate interactions with the replication protein PCNA. Others include RIR motifs, which bind the translesion synthesis protein Rev1, and MIP motifs, which bind the mismatch repair protein Mlh1. Although these motifs have similar consensus sequences, they have traditionally been viewed as separate motifs, each with their own target protein. In this article, we review several recent studies that (...)
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  12.  56
    What Is Energy For? Social Practice and Energy Demand.Elizabeth Shove & Gordon Walker - 2014 - Theory, Culture and Society 31 (5):41-58.
    Energy has an ambivalent status in social theory, variously figuring as a driver or an outcome of social and institutional change, or as something that is woven into the fabric of society itself. In this article the authors consider the underlying models on which different approaches depend. One common strategy is to view energy as a resource base, the management and organization of which depends on various intersecting systems: political, economic and technological. This is not the only route to take. (...)
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  13.  5
    A Postscript from Hawaii.Elizabeth McCutcheon - 1984 - Moreana 21 (Number 83-21 (3-4):42-44.
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  14.  41
    Veronese, callet and the Black boy at the feast.Elizabeth McGrath - 1998 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 61 (1):272-276.
  15.  24
    The Significance of Moral Universality: the Moral Philosophy of Eric Weil.Elizabeth McMillan - 1977 - Philosophy Today 21 (1):32-42.
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  16.  22
    Healers, innovators, entrepreneurs: women in early modern healthcare: Forgotten Healers: women and the pursuit of health in late Renaissance Italy, by Sharon Strocchia, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 2020, ix + 330 pp., $49.95, £39.95, €45.00, ISBN 978-0674241749.Elizabeth W. Mellyn - 2021 - Annals of Science 78 (2):252-259.
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  17.  43
    Searching for Modern Culture's Beautiful Harmony: Schlegel and Hegel on Irony.Elizabeth Millán - 2010 - Hegel Bulletin 31 (2):61-82.
    Goethe and Friedrich Schiller stand together immortalised in Ernst Rietschel's statue at the centre of Weimar. In their lifetime, Goethe and Schiller shaped the culture of German-speaking lands, not only through their poetry, plays, and novels, but also in their role as editors of journals that helped to set the intellectual tone of the period. Schiller's journalDie Horen and Goethe'sPropyläen, although short-lived, were important literary vehicles of the period and provided a forum that brought scientists, historians, philosophers, and poets into (...)
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  18.  86
    Cyberspace as a new arena for terroristic propaganda: an updated examination.Elizabeth Minei & Jonathan Matusitz - 2012 - Poiesis and Praxis 9 (1):163-176.
    This paper analyzes the role of propaganda use in cyberterrorism. The main premise is that cyberterrorists display various semiotic gestures (e.g., the use of images and Internet videos) to communicate their intents to the public at large. In doing so, they communicate themes—these themes range from hate to anger. Cyberterrorism, then, is a form of theater or spectacle in which terrorists exploit cyberspace to trigger feelings of panic and overreaction in the target population. In many cases, this form of propaganda (...)
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  19.  21
    Feminism and the Abyss of Freedom (review).Elizabeth Kamarck Minnich - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (4):203-206.
  20.  7
    From gentle teasing to heavy sarcasm: instances of rhetorical irony in Homer’s Iliad.Elizabeth Minchin - 2010 - Hermes 138 (4):387-402.
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  21.  12
    On Paradox: The Claims of Theory.Elizabeth S. Anker - 2022 - Duke University Press.
    In _On Paradox_ literary and legal scholar Elizabeth S. Anker contends that faith in the logic of paradox has been the cornerstone of left intellectualism since the second half of the twentieth century. She attributes the ubiquity of paradox in the humanities to its appeal as an incisive tool for exposing and dismantling hierarchies. Tracing the ascent of paradox in theories of modernity, in rights discourse, in the history of literary criticism and the linguistic turn, and in the transformation (...)
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  22.  21
    Manipulating Meaning: Daniel Gogerly's Nineteenth Century Translations of the Theravada Texts.Elizabeth J. Harris - 2011 - Buddhist Studies Review 27 (2):177-195.
    Daniel John Gogerly, a British Wesleyan Methodist missionary, served in Sri Lanka from 1818 until his death. He learnt P?li in M?tara in the 1830s and was one of the first British translators of the P?li texts into English. Praised by fellow orientalist, T.W. Rhys Davis, as ‘the greatest Pali scholar of his age’ and hailed by his missionary colleagues as the expert who showed them how to attack Buddhism, his work was both pioneering and deeply flawed. This paper first (...)
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  23.  19
    When Pain Strikes (review).Elizabeth Harper - 1999 - Symploke 7 (1):211-212.
  24.  15
    Child’s Play? Colonial commodities, ephemera, and the construction of the greater French familyApprendre l’Empire, un jeu d’enfants?Elizabeth Heath - 2015 - Clio 40.
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  25.  6
    From the book review editor.Elizabeth Higginbotham - 1995 - Gender and Society 9 (5):532-534.
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  26.  41
    Consuming Beings: A Feminist Perspective on Prostitution in American Film.Elizabeth C. Hirschman & Barbara B. Stern - 1994 - American Journal of Semiotics 11 (3/4):223-284.
  27.  46
    Legends in Our Own Time: How Motion Pictures and Television Shows Fulfill the Functions of Myth.Elizabeth C. Hirschman - 2001 - American Journal of Semiotics 17 (3):7-46.
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  28.  27
    On ‘heroic fury’ and questions of method in Antonio Gramsci.Elizabeth Humphrys & Ihab Shalbak - 2018 - Thesis Eleven 147 (1):3-8.
    This paper is concerned with the deployment and the transformation of Gramsci’s notion of hegemony and the purpose it serves. I argue that, in its travel from Rome to London, this notion acquired something like a truth-value. In London the notion yielded what I call ‘hegemony thinking’: a distinctive style of thinking that focused on strategy to carry out effective political interventions. To demonstrate my claim I trace the Marxism Today discussion on the crisis of the Left and strategy in (...)
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  29.  23
    Differential conditioning as a function of cue presentation and S+ extinction.Elizabeth D. Ivey, Stephen F. Davis & John D. Seago - 1978 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 11 (4):239-242.
  30.  12
    Further notes on palamedes.Elizabeth M. Jeffreys - 1968 - Byzantinische Zeitschrift 61 (2).
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  31.  40
    Debating Collective Responsibility.Elizabeth S. Piliero - 2017 - Social Philosophy Today 33:175-186.
    This paper elucidates Hannah Arendt’s conditions for collective responsibility in light of her political writings. In turn, it pushes back on Iris Marion Young’s reservations about Arendtian collective responsibility and demonstrates its compatibility with Youngian political responsibility. At issue is how to understand (a) Arendtian collective responsibility as political and therefore forward-looking, (b) Arendt’s view of responsibility in the political realm as different from her view in the moral-legal realm, and (c) what Arendt’s vision of collective responsibility requires of everyone. (...)
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  32. Seneca's On the Happy Life and Stoic Individualism.Elizabeth Asmis - 1990 - Apeiron 23 (4):219.
  33. Third Award of the Cardinal Spellman-Aquinas Medal To Gerard Smith.Elizabeth G. Salmon - 1955 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 29:13.
     
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  34.  48
    Intergenerational Justice for Children: Restructuring Adoption, Reproduction and Child Welfare Policy.Elizabeth Bartholet - 2014 - Law and Ethics of Human Rights 8 (1):103-130.
    An intergenerational justice perspective requires that we look at the condition of the existing generation of children and those to be born in the future. Many millions of the existing generation of children are now in trouble and at high risk of never fulfilling their human potential. These children are in turn unlikely, if they live to produce children, to be capable of providing the nurturing parenting that the next generation will need.The article’s starting premises are that we should count (...)
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  35.  46
    The necessity of anger in Philodemus' On Anger.Elizabeth Asmis - 2011 - In Jeffrey Fish & Kirk R. Sanders (eds.), Epicurus and the Epicurean tradition. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 152-182.
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  36.  32
    Origin stories: Wonder woman and sovereign exceptionalism.Elizabeth Barringer - 2020 - Contemporary Political Theory 19 (3):430-452.
    This article approaches the recent Wonder Woman film as a presentation of the tensions traditionally associated with the paradox of democratic foundations. Steeped in classical mythology, Wonder Woman adapts two origin myths from the Athenian polis: the myth of Pandora and the myth of the heroic colonizing demigod. Through its adaptation of these myths I argue that Wonder Woman offers two competing responses to the democratic paradox of founding. One is exceptionalist, where sovereign interventions by extraordinary ‘super-agents’ like Wonder Woman (...)
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  37.  18
    Esse est Deus: Meister Eckharts christologische Versöhnung von Philosophie und Religion und ihre Ursprünge in der Tradition des Abendlandes.Elizabeth Brient - 1996 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 34 (3):458-459.
  38. The Immanence of the Infinite: A Response to Blumenberg's Reading of Modernity.Elizabeth Brient - 1995 - Dissertation, Yale University
    The epochal transition from the medieval to the modern world has long been thought in terms of the "infinitization" of the world-picture, that is, as the transition from the finite, hierarchically ordered medieval cosmos to the infinite and homogeneous universe of the new astronomy and physics. In this dissertation I argue that this process of "infinitization" must be understood intensively as well as extensively. Nature, in the modern age, is thought not only as infinitely extended in space, but also as (...)
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  39. The Marriage of Edward II of England and Isabelle of France: A Postscript.Elizabeth A. R. Brown - 1989 - Speculum 64 (2):373-379.
     
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  40.  97
    Sexing comparative ethics: Bringing forth feminist and gendered perspectives.Elizabeth M. Bucar, Grace Y. Kao & Irene Oh - 2010 - Journal of Religious Ethics 38 (4):654-659.
    This collaborative companion piece, written as a postscript to the three preceding essays, highlights four themes in comparative religious ethics that emerge through our focus on sex and gender: language, embodiment, justice, and critique.
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  41. Scientific Interest: Introduction to Isabelle Stengers, “Another Look: Relearning to Laugh”.Elizabeth A. Wilson - 2000 - Hypatia 15 (4):38-40.
    This introduction highlights the place of “interest” in Isabelle Stengers's essay “Another Look: Relearning to Laugh” and considers its importance for feminist analyses of the sciences. Claiming that the positive affects have been underemployed in feminist philosophy of science, it is argued that Stengers's essay shows how criticism in the sciences can be re-animated through interest, excitement, and laughter.
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  42.  31
    Cézanne, Wagner, modulation: A reply to Turner.Elizabeth Haines - 2000 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 58 (3):309-311.
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  43.  9
    Descartes: His Life and Times.Elizabeth S. Haldane - 1907 - Philosophical Review 16:94.
  44.  39
    Notes on a criticism.Elizabeth S. Haldane - 1912 - Mind 21 (81):145-147.
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  45.  55
    Ontogeny, phylogeny, and the relational reinterpretation hypothesis.Elizabeth V. Hallinan & Valerie A. Kuhlmeier - 2008 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 31 (2):138-139.
    If our knowledge of human cognition were based solely on research with participants younger than the age of 2 years, there would be no basis for the relational reinterpretation hypothesis, and Darwin's continuity theory would be safe as houses. Because many of the shortcomings cited apply to human infants, we propose how a consideration of cognitive development would inform the relational reinterpretation hypothesis.
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  46.  11
    Through Aristotelian Lenses, Potential Reforms of the Leveraged Buyout Model.Richard P. Nielsen & Elizabeth A. Hood - 2023 - Business and Professional Ethics Journal 42 (3):401-435.
    The overall objectives of this article are to help the reader see and understand through Aristotelian lenses: (1) positive and negative aspects of the Leveraged Buyout (LBO) business model; and, (2) how LBO practices can be reformed so as to retain positives and reduce negatives. Aristotelian lenses considered are: wealth acquisition through wealth expansion, wealth creation, and wealth transfers; distributive and corrective justice; and, a dialectic analytic process of retaining positives, reducing negatives, and reforming. Key net positive wealth expansion aspects (...)
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  47.  17
    Mother-Child Communication: The Influence of ADHD Symptomatology and Executive Functioning on Paralinguistic Style.Elizabeth S. Nilsen, Ami Rints, Nicole Ethier & Sarah Moroz - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  48.  29
    Faces of Environmental Racism: Confronting Issues of Global Justice.Hussein M. Adam, Elizabeth Bell, Robert D. Bullard, Robert Melchior Figueroa, Clarice E. Gaylord, Segun Gbadegesin, R. J. A. Goodland, Howard McCurdy, Charles Mills, Kristin Shrader-Frechette, Peter S. Wenz & Daniel C. Wigley (eds.) - 2001 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Through case studies that highlight the type of information that is seldom reported in the news, Faces of Environmental Racism exposes the type and magnitude of environmental racism, both domestic and international. The essays explore the justice of current environmental practices, asking such questions as whether cost-benefit analysis is an appropriate analytic technique and whether there are alternate routes to sustainable development in the South.
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  49.  59
    The existence of the self before God in Kierkegaard's the sickness unto death.Elizabeth A. Morelli - 1995 - Heythrop Journal 36 (1):15–29.
  50.  13
    Magnetoencephalogram recording during simulated driving: Towards an ecologically-valid paradigm.Elizabeth Walshe, William Gaetz, Daniel Romer, Timothy Roberts & Flaura Winston - 2018 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
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