Results for 'Hailey Hancock'

218 found
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  1.  25
    Planning Community-Centered Inquiries: (Re)Imagining K-8 Civics Teacher Education With/In Rural and Indigenous Communities.Christine Rogers Stanton, Danielle Morrison & Hailey Hancock - 2022 - Journal of Social Studies Research 46 (1):85-99.
    This phenomenological case study investigates how planning community-centered civics inquiries can prepare elementary pre-service teachers to better address inequities facing rural communities, including those located on Indigenous reservations. Specifically, the study addresses this research question: How does community-centered planning inform pre-service teacher readiness to support place-conscious and anti-colonial civics education within elementary contexts? Findings suggest that guided, community-centered planning leads to enhanced pre-service teacher confidence in preparing to facilitate equity-oriented elementary education, particularly as related to evolving understandings of civics content (...)
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  2.  36
    Managing for the middle: rancher care ethics under uncertainty on Western Great Plains rangelands.Hailey Wilmer, María E. Fernández-Giménez, Shayan Ghajar, Peter Leigh Taylor, Caridad Souza & Justin D. Derner - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 37 (3):699-718.
    Ranchers and pastoralists worldwide manage and depend upon resources from rangelands across Earth’s terrestrial surface. In the Great Plains of North America rangeland ecology has increasingly recognized the importance of managing rangeland vegetation heterogeneity to address conservation and production goals. This paradigm, however, has limited application for ranchers as they manage extensive beef production operations under high levels of social-ecological complexity and uncertainty. We draw on the ethics of care theoretical framework to explore how ranchers choose management actions. We used (...)
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  3.  16
    De la lutte pour les droits civils à la Justice pour Toutes les Personnes Handicapées.Hailey Hudson & Harriet de Gouge - 2024 - Multitudes 94 (1):97-100.
    Le texte de Hailey est une présentation didactique des 10 principes de justice handie du collectif Sins Invalid. Ceux-ci ont été rédigés en 2015, dans un contexte nord-américain où les milieux de justice sociale peinaient à considérer les effets combinés du racisme et du validisme systémique.
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  4.  48
    Care Workers on Strike.Hailey Huget - 2020 - Feminist Philosophy Quarterly 6 (1).
    This paper investigates a moral conflict that care workers, defined as workers who care for dependent others, confront when they go on strike. Care workers who confront decisions about whether to go on strike are, in my analysis, caught between impossible options: Should they prioritize the needs of those who are currently dependent upon them, and forego striking, or prioritize their long-term ability to provide the best possible care, and partake in strikes? I argue that care workers who confront these (...)
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  5. Forgiveness, Reconciliation, and Accountability: A Critique of Charles Griswold’s Forgiveness Paradigm.Hailey Huget - 2012 - Philosophia 40 (2):337-355.
    Abstract In this paper I analyze and critique Charles Griswold’s work Forgiveness: A Philosophical Exploration. Griswold’s theory of forgiveness is structured around the notion that human frailty, imperfection, and susceptibility to unfortunate circumstances are cornerstones of the human experience. While Griswold’s paradigm of forgiveness is compelling on the whole, I argue that this “human frailty thesis” creates unintentional and problematic consequences that undermine major goals of his paradigm. In particular, the human frailty thesis undermines Griswold’s requirement that forgiveness hold an (...)
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  6. Examining the Factor Structure of the Self-Report of Psychopathy Short-Form Across Four Young Adult Samples.Hailey L. Dotterer, Rebecca Waller, Craig S. Neumann, Daniel S. Shaw, Erika E. Forbes, Ahmad R. Hariri & Luke W. Hyde - forthcoming - Assessment:1-18.
    Psychopathy refers to a range of complex behaviors and personality traits, including callousness and antisocial behavior, typically studied in criminal populations. Recent studies have used self-reports to examine psychopathic traits among noncriminal samples. The goal of the current study was to examine the underlying factor structure of the Self-Report of Psychopathy Scale–Short Form (SRP-SF) across complementary samples and examine the impact of gender on factor structure. We examined the structure of the SRP-SF among 2,554 young adults from three undergraduate samples (...)
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  7.  13
    Culturally Informed Care: Solidarity, Cultural Humility, and Medical Ethics.Hailey Hawkins, Nico Nortjé & Amitabha Palmer - 2024 - Canadian Journal of Bioethics / Revue canadienne de bioéthique 7 (2-3):189-191.
    Cette étude de cas explore les complexités éthiques entourant le traitement de Mme H, une femme âgée atteinte d’un myélome multiple. Des objectifs divergents entre sa famille, ancrée dans des valeurs culturelles et religieuses, et l’équipe médicale ont suscité des délibérations éthiques. Les objectifs divergents étaient centrés sur le désir de la famille d’un traitement agressif du cancer, motivé par leurs croyances Ubuntu et chrétiennes dans le caractère sacré de la vie et l’espoir d’une intervention divine, contrastant avec l’accent mis (...)
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  8.  11
    Loss of seasonal ranges reshapes transhumant adaptive capacity: Thirty-five years at the US Sheep Experiment Station.Hailey Wilmer, J. Bret Taylor, Daniel Macon, Matthew C. Reeves, Carrie S. Wilson, Jacalyn Mara Beck & Nicole K. Strong - forthcoming - Agriculture and Human Values:1-19.
    Transhumance is a form of extensive livestock production that involves seasonal movements among ecological zones or landscape types. Rangeland-based transhumance constitutes an important social and economic relationship to nature in many regions of the world, including across the Western US. However, social and ecological drivers of change are reshaping transhumant practices, and managers must adapt to increased demands for public rangeland use. Specifically, concerns for wildlife conservation have led to reduced access to seasonal public lands grazing for western US livestock (...)
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  9. Treillage’d Space.Charlie Hailey - 2010 - Environment, Space, Place 2 (2):79-119.
    Late in their architectural career, Alison and Peter Smithson designed an eighty-square-foot, indoor-outdoor space for a man and his cat. The Smithsons described this modest space in methodological and phenomenal terms, noting that the addition to Axel Bruchhäuser’s Hexenhaus could be read “as an exemplar of a method by which a small physical change—a layering-over of air adhered to an existing fabric—can bring about a delicate tuning of persons with place.” The Hexenhaus’ tuning elements—second skin, tree screen, and double-acting mesh—create (...)
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  10.  41
    Demarcation of Viral Shelters Results in Destruction by Membranolytic GTPases: Antiviral Function of Autophagy Proteins and Interferon‐Inducible GTPases.Hailey M. Brown, Scott B. Biering, Allen Zhu, Jayoung Choi & Seungmin Hwang - 2018 - Bioessays 40 (6):1700231.
    A hallmark of positive‐sense RNA viruses is the formation of membranous shelters for safe replication in the cytoplasm. Once considered invisible to the immune system, these viral shelters are now found to be antagonized through the cooperation of autophagy proteins and anti‐microbial GTPases. This coordinated effort of autophagy proteins guiding GTPases functions against not only the shelters of viruses but also cytoplasmic vacuoles containing bacteria or protozoa, suggesting a broad immune‐defense mechanism against disparate vacuolar pathogens. Fundamental questions regarding this process (...)
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  11.  12
    Spoil Island: Reading the Makeshift Archipelago.Charlie Hailey - 2013 - Lexington Books.
    Spoil islands are overlooked places combining dirt with paradise, waste-land with “brave new world,” and wildness with human intervention. Mundane products of dredging, these islands form an uninvestigated archipelago that demonstrates the potential value and contested re-valuation of landscapes of waste. Research navigates the U.S. east coast from New York City to Key West, examines these marginalized topographies to understand emergent concerns of 21st-century placemaking, public space, and infrastructure, and discovers that spoil islands constitute an unprecedented public commons, where human (...)
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  12.  52
    Inside Ethics: On the Demands of Moral Thought by Alice Crary.Hailey Huget - 2016 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 26 (4):4-9.
    In this original and insightful new work, Alice Crary proposes that we see human beings and animals as creatures that are “inside ethics,” which is to say that they possess “characteristics that are simultaneously empirically discoverable and morally loaded”. This view rejects what Crary sees as the dominant paradigm in moral philosophy, wherein empirical observations about human beings and animals are viewed as morally neutral and shorn of any evaluative characteristics. Her view has implications for a range of topics in (...)
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  13. Loss of seasonal ranges reshapes transhumant adaptive capacity: Thirty-five years at the US Sheep Experiment Station.Hailey Wilmer, J. Bret Taylor, Daniel Macon, Matthew C. Reeves, Carrie S. Wilson, Jacalyn Mara Beck & Nicole K. Strong - 2025 - Agriculture and Human Values 42 (1):545-563.
    Transhumance is a form of extensive livestock production that involves seasonal movements among ecological zones or landscape types. Rangeland-based transhumance constitutes an important social and economic relationship to nature in many regions of the world, including across the Western US. However, social and ecological drivers of change are reshaping transhumant practices, and managers must adapt to increased demands for public rangeland use. Specifically, concerns for wildlife conservation have led to reduced access to seasonal public lands grazing for western US livestock (...)
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  14.  30
    Michel Foucault and the Problematics of Power: Theorizing DTCA and Medicalized Subjectivity.Black Hawk Hancock - 2018 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 43 (4):439-468.
    This article explores Foucault’s two different notions of power: one where the subject is constituted by power–knowledge relations and another that emphasizes how power is a central feature of human action. By drawing out these two conceptualizations of power, Foucault’s work contributes three critical points to the formation of medicalized subjectivities: the issue of medicalization needs to be discussed both in terms of both specific practices and holistically ; we need to think how we as human beings are “disciplined” and (...)
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  15.  45
    Selecting Socio-scientific Issues for Teaching.Tamara S. Hancock, Patricia J. Friedrichsen, Andrew T. Kinslow & Troy D. Sadler - 2019 - Science & Education 28 (6-7):639-667.
    Currently there is little guidance given to teachers in selecting focal issues for socio-scientific issues -based teaching and learning. As a majority of teachers regularly collaborate with other teachers, understanding what factors influence collaborative SSI-based curriculum design is critical. We invited 18 secondary science teachers to participate in a professional development on SSI-based instruction and curriculum design. Through intentional design, we studied how these teachers formed curriculum design teams and how they selected focal issues for SSI-based curriculum units. We developed (...)
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  16.  44
    Mind, machine and morality: toward a philosophy of human-technology symbiosis.Peter A. Hancock - 2009 - Burlington, VT: Ashgate.
    Technology is our conduit of power. In our modern world, technology is the gatekeeper deciding who shall have and who shall have not. Either technology works for you or you work for technology. It shapes the human race just as much as we shape it. But where is this symbiosis going? Who provides the directions, the intentions, the goals of this human-machine partnership? Such decisions do not derive from the creators of technology who are enmeshed in their individual innovations. They (...)
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  17.  7
    The Child That Haunts Us: Symbols and Images in Fairytale and Miniature Literature.Susan Hancock - 2008 - Routledge.
    _The Child That Haunts Us_ focuses on the symbolic use of the child archetype through the exploration of miniature characters from the realms of children’s literature. Jung argued that the child archetype should never be mistaken for the ‘real’ child. In this book Susan Hancock considers how the child is portrayed in literature and fairytale and explores the suggestion from Jung and Bachelard that the symbolic resonance of the miniature is inversely proportionate to its size. We encounter many instances (...)
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  18.  21
    The Responsibility of Reason: Theory and Practice in a Liberal-Democratic Age.Ralph Hancock - 2010 - Rowman & Littlefield.
    In The Responsibility of Reason, Ralph C. Hancock undertakes no less than to answer the Heideggerian challenge.
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  19.  36
    Can we smell the organizational coffee?' The gap between the theory and practice of 'learning practices.Glyn Elwyn & Stephen Hailey - 2004 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 10 (3):371-374.
  20.  45
    Beyond The Anticipatory Corpse: Medicine, Power, and the Care of the Dying: A Theoretical and Methodological Intervention into the Sociology of Brain Implant Surgery.Black Hawk Hancock & Daniel R. Morrison - 2016 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 41 (6):659-678.
    Drawing on and extending the Foucaultian philosophical framework that Jeffrey Bishop develops in his masterful book, The Anticipatory Corpse: Medicine, Power, and the Care of the Dying, we undertake a sociological analysis of the neurological procedure—deep brain stimulation —which implants electrodes in the brain, powered by a pacemaker-like device, for the treatment of movement disorders. Following Bishop’s work, we carry out this analysis through a two-fold strategy. First, we examine how a multidisciplinary team evaluates candidates for this implant at a (...)
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  21. The refutation of naturalism in Moore and Hare.Roger Hancock - 1960 - Journal of Philosophy 57 (10):326-334.
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  22.  23
    (2 other versions)Neuroergonomics: Where the Cortex Hits the Concrete.P. A. Hancock - 2019 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 13.
  23. Metaphysics, history of.Roger Hancock - 1967 - In Paul Edwards, The Encyclopedia of philosophy. New York,: Macmillan. pp. 5--289.
  24. Presuppositions.Roger Hancock - 1960 - Philosophical Quarterly 10 (38):73-78.
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  25.  40
    Programming interfaces and basic topology.Peter Hancock & Pierre Hyvernat - 2006 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 137 (1-3):189-239.
    A pattern of interaction that arises again and again in programming is a 'handshake', in which two agents exchange data. The exchange is thought of as provision of a service. Each interaction is initiated by a specific agent--the client or Angel--and concluded by the other--the server or Demon. We present a category in which the objects--called interaction structures in the paper--serve as descriptions of services provided across such handshaken interfaces. The morphisms--called (general) simulations--model components that provide one such service, relying (...)
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  26. A note on Kant's third critique.Roger Hancock - 1958 - Philosophical Quarterly 8 (32):261-265.
  27.  7
    Calvin and the Foundations of Modern Politics.Ralph C. Hancock - 1989 - St. Augustine's Press.
    Originally published: Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1989. With new pref.
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  28.  77
    Anomalous Monism and Physical Closure.Nancy Slonneger Hancock - 2001 - Journal of Philosophical Research 26 (January):175-185.
    The principle of the anomalousness of the mental (PAM) is one of the most controversial principles in Donald Davidson’s argument for anomalous monism (AM). It states that there cannot be any laws (psychophysical or psychological) on the basis of which mental events can be predicted and explained. The argument against such psychological laws rests on the claim that psychology is not a comprehensive closed system (though physics is). Here I sketch the argument for AM, focusing on the role of PAM (...)
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  29.  61
    Ethics and history in Kant and mill.Roger Hancock - 1957 - Ethics 68 (1):56-60.
  30.  39
    Evidence‐based practice – an incomplete model of the relationship between theory and professional work.Helen C. Hancock & Patrick R. Easen - 2004 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 10 (2):187-196.
  31.  10
    Kant on War and Peace.Roger Hancock - 1974 - In Gerhard Funke, Akten des 4. Internationalen Kant-Kongresses: Mainz, 6.–10. April 1974, Teil 2: Sektionen 1,2. De Gruyter. pp. 668-674.
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  32.  50
    Marx's Theory of Justice.Roger Hancock - 1971 - Social Theory and Practice 1 (3):65-71.
  33.  46
    What's a face worth: Noneconomic factors in game playing.Peter J. B. Hancock & Lisa M. DeBruine - 2003 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 26 (2):162-163.
    Where behavior defies economic analysis, one explanation is that individuals consider more than the immediate payoff. We present evidence that noneconomic factors influence behavior. Attractiveness influences offers in the Ultimatum and Dictator Games. Facial resemblance, a cue of relatedness, increases trusting in a two-node trust game. Only by considering the range of possible influences will game-playing behavior be explained.
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  34. Kant and Civil Disobedience.Roger Hancock - 1975 - Idealistic Studies 5 (2):164-176.
    There are a number of passages in Kant’s political writings in which he appears to deny to citizens any right whatever to resist political authority. Thus, in the essay, “Concerning the Common Saying: This May be True in Theory But Does Not Hold in Practice,” Kant argues that even when such authority is exercised in a way which violates what Kant himself takes to be the fundamental principles of justice, any act of resistance to it is a punishable act.
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  35.  26
    Role development in health care assistants: the impact of education on practice.Helen Hancock, Steve Campbell, Vince Ramprogus & Julie Kilgour - 2005 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 11 (5):489-498.
  36. Exploring the challenges and successes of the Lecturer Practitioner role using a stakeholder evaluation approach.Helen Hancock, Hilary Lloyd, Steve Campbell, Chris Turnock & Stephen Craig - 2007 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 13 (5):758-764.
  37.  71
    Trayvon Martin, Intersectionality, and the Politics of Disgust.Ange-Marie Hancock - forthcoming - Theory and Event 15 (3).
  38.  24
    Anti-Abortionist at Large: How to Argue Intelligently About Abortion and Live to Tell About It.Curtis L. Hancock - 2004 - Philosophia Christi 6 (2):366-368.
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  39.  44
    Aristotle and the Metaphysics.Curtis L. Hancock - 2008 - International Philosophical Quarterly 48 (4):557-559.
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  40.  29
    A bigger mouse? The rat genome unveiled.John M. Hancock - 2004 - Bioessays 26 (10):1039-1042.
    Rattus norvegicus is an important experimental organism and interesting to evolutionary biologists. The recently published draft rat genome sequence1 provides us with insights into both the rat's evolution and its physiology. We learn more about genome evolution and, in particular, the adaptive significance of gene family expansions and the evolution of rodent genomes, which appears to have decelerated since the divergence of mouse and rat. An important observation is that some regions of genomes, many in noncoding regions, show very high (...)
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  41.  49
    A note on Hare's the language of morals.Roger Hancock - 1963 - Philosophical Quarterly 13 (50):56-63.
  42. Aestheticizing the world of organization–creating beautiful untrue things.Philip Hancock - 2003 - In Adrian Carr & Philip Hancock, Art and aesthetics at work. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 171--94.
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  43. Bioethics and ethics in cancer research.Ronald Lee Hancock - 2006 - Ludus Vitalis 14 (25):247-250.
     
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  44. Biological inevitableness.Ronald L. Hancock - 2005 - Ludus Vitalis 13 (24):25-28.
     
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  45.  28
    Box 1. Principal components analysis of faces.Peter J. B. Hancock, Vicki Bruce & A. Mike Burton - 2000 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 4 (9):330-337.
  46.  23
    Budick, Sanford., Kant and Milton.Curtis Hancock - 2013 - Review of Metaphysics 66 (4):828-830.
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  47.  42
    Choosing as doing.Roger Hancock - 1968 - Mind 77 (308):575-576.
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  48. Concepts for the cure of cancer by epigenetically inducing redysdifferentiation.Ronald Lee Hancock - 2010 - Ludus Vitalis 18 (33):187-193.
     
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  49.  19
    Dlaczego Gilson? Dlaczego teraz? / Why Gilson? Why Now?Curtis L. Hancock - 2013 - Studia Gilsoniana 2:7-20.
    The author identifies and discusses the most important elements of Étienne Gilson’s thought which emanate out of his articulation and defense of the Western Creed. To the question: why Gilson, why now?, the author offers a following answer: because we need to champion the Western Creed, defend philosophical realism, rightly interpret the history of philosophy, correctly comprehend Christian philosophy, and show that modernist and postmodernist systems are arbitrary. The author maintains that Gilson delivers us with the realist philosophy of the (...)
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  50.  7
    Driving Into the Future.P. A. Hancock - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    This work considers the future of driving in terms of both its short- and long-term horizons. It conjectures that human-controlled driving will follow in the footsteps of a wide swath of other, now either residual or abandoned human occupations. Pursuits that have preceded it into oblivion. In this way, driving will dwindle down into only a few niche locales wherein enthusiasts will still persist, much in the way that steam train hobbyists now continue their own aspirational inclinations. Of course, the (...)
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