Results for 'Helen Brock'

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  1.  14
    The Many Facets of DR William Hunter (1718–83).Helen Brock - 1994 - History of Science 32 (4):387-408.
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  2. A Metaphysics for Freedom.Helen Steward - 2012 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Helen Steward argues that determinism is incompatible with agency itself--not only the special human variety of agency, but also powers which can be accorded to animal agents. She offers a distinctive, non-dualistic version of libertarianism, rooted in a conception of what biological forms of organisation might make possible in the way of freedom.
  3.  47
    Being moved by meaningfulness: appraisals of surpassing internal standards elicit being moved by relationships and achievements.Helen Landmann, Florian Cova & Ursula Hess - 2019 - Cognition and Emotion 33 (7):1387-1409.
    ABSTRACTPeople can be moved and overwhelmed, a phenomenon typically accompanied by goose-bumps and tears. We argue that these feelings of being moved are not limited to situations that are appraise...
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  4.  42
    Linking Social Entrepreneurship and Social Change: The Mediating Role of Empowerment.Helen M. Haugh & Alka Talwar - 2016 - Journal of Business Ethics 133 (4):643-658.
    Entrepreneurship is increasingly considered to be integral to development; however, social and cultural norms impact on the extent to which women in developing countries engage with, and accrue the benefits of, entrepreneurial activity. Using data collected from 49 members of a rural social enterprise in North India, we examine the relationships between social entrepreneurship, empowerment and social change. Innovative business processes that facilitated women’s economic activity and at the same time complied with local social and cultural norms that constrain their (...)
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  5. Health Care Resource Prioritization and Rationing: Why Is It So Difficult?Dan W. Brock - 2007 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 74 (1):125-148.
    Rationing is the allocation of a good under conditions of scarcity, which necessarily implies that some who want and could be benefitted by that good will not receive it. One reflection of our ambivalence towards health care rationing is reflected in our resistance to having it distributed in a market like most other goods—most Americans reject ability to pay as the basis for distributing health care. They do not view health care as just another commodity to be distributed by markets. (...)
     
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  6.  32
    Visual Attention to Suffering After Compassion Training Is Associated With Decreased Amygdala Responses.Helen Y. Weng, Regina C. Lapate, Diane E. Stodola, Gregory M. Rogers & Richard J. Davidson - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
  7. What is history, now?: how the past and present speak to each other.Helen Carr, Suzannah Lipscomb & Edward Hallett Carr (eds.) - 2021 - London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
     
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  8.  31
    Locating the lived body in client–nurse interactions: Embodiment, intersubjectivity and intercorporeality.Helen F. Harrison, Elizabeth Anne Kinsella & Sandra DeLuca - 2019 - Nursing Philosophy 20 (2):e12241.
    The practice of nursing involves ongoing interactions between nurses' and clients' lived bodies. Despite this, several scholars have suggested that the “lived body” (Merleau‐Ponty, 1962) has not been given its due place in nursing practice, education or research (Draper, J Adv Nurs, 70, 2014, 2235). With the advent of electronic health records and increased use of technology, face‐to‐face assessment and embodied understanding of clients' lived bodies may be on the decline. Furthermore, staffing levels may not afford the time nurses need (...)
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  9.  95
    Nursing involvement in euthanasia: how sound is the philosophical support?Helen McCabe - 2007 - Nursing Philosophy 8 (3):167-175.
    Preference utilitarians are concerned to maximize the autonomous choices of individuals; for this reason, they argue that nurses ought to advocate for those patients who desire assistance with ending their lives. This approach prompts us to consider, then, the moral validity of nursing involvement in measures intended to end the lives of patients. In this article, the terms of preference utilitarianism are set out and considered in order to determine whether this approach offers sufficient philosophical support for sanctioning a role (...)
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  10.  47
    Caring and the Prison in Philosophy, Policy and Practice: Under Lock and Key.Helen Brown Coverdale - 2020 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 38 (3):415-430.
    Care appears prima facie antithetical to punishment. Since the overlaps between care and punishment are greater than we paradigmatically expect, care ethics offers a more accurate account of prisons: recognising and critiquing both dehumanising carceral violence, and the necessity, presence, and inadequacies of penal care, as well as unlocking ways of thinking differently about structural change without losing sight of individual issues. After introducing care ethics and evidencing the presence of caring practices in present prisons, the article considers how we (...)
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  11. Targeting the Fetal Body and/or Mother-Child Connection: Vital Conflicts and Abortion.Helen Watt & Anthony McCarthy - 2019 - The Linacre Quarterly:1-14.
    Is the “act itself” of separating a pregnant woman and her previable child neither good nor bad morally, considered in the abstract? Recently, Maureen Condic and Donna Harrison have argued that such separation is justified to protect the mother’s life and that it does not constitute an abortion as the aim is not to kill the child. In our article on maternal–fetal conflicts, we agree there need be no such aim to kill (supplementing aims such as to remove). However, we (...)
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  12. Perception and the ontology of causation.Helen Steward - 2011 - In Johannes Roessler, Hemdat Lerman & Naomi Eilan (eds.), Perception, Causation, and Objectivity. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press. pp. 139.
    The paper argues that the reconciliation of the Causal Theory of Perception with Disjunctivism requires the rejection of causal particularism – the idea that the ontology of causation is always and everywhere an ontology of particulars (e.g., events). The so-called ‘Humean Principle’ that causes must be distinct from their effects is argued to be a genuine barrier to any purported reconciliation, provided causal particularism is retained; but extensive arguments are provided for the rejection of causal particularism. It is then explained (...)
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  13. Self-Defence and the Principle of Non-Combatant Immunity.Helen Frowe - 2011 - Journal of Moral Philosophy 8 (4):530-546.
    The reductivist view of war holds that the moral rules of killing in war can be reduced to the moral rules that govern killing between individuals. Noam Zohar objects to reductivism on the grounds that the account of individual self-defence that best supports the rules of war will inadvertently sanction terrorist killings of non-combatants. I argue that even an extended account of self-defence—that is, an account that permits killing at least some innocent people to save one's own life—can support a (...)
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  14.  17
    Medically Unexplained Symptoms and Attachment Theory: The BodyMind Approach®.Helen Payne & Susan D. Brooks - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  15. The pleasure seekers.Helen Phillips - unknown
    IT WAS an outlandish, ethically questionable experiment, but this was the 1960s after all. Psychiatrist Robert Heath of Tulane University in New Orleans hoped to cure his patients' depression, intractable pain, schizophrenia, suicidal feelings, addiction, and even homosexuality - which in those days was considered a psychiatric disorder - by drowning them out with pleasure, induced by an electrode implanted deep in their brains.
     
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  16.  49
    Algorithmic bias: should students pay the price?Helen Smith - 2020 - AI and Society 35 (4):1077-1078.
  17.  76
    Getting away with murder: why virtual murder in MMORPGs can be wrong on Kantian grounds.Helen Ryland - 2019 - Ethics and Information Technology (2).
    Ali (Ethics and Information Technology 17:267–274, 2015) and McCormick (Ethics and Information Technology 3:277–287, 2001) claim that virtual murders are objectionable when they show inappropriate engagement with the game or bad sportsmanship. McCormick argues that such virtual murders cannot be wrong on Kantian grounds because virtual murders only violate indirect moral duties, and bad sportsmanship is shown across competitive sports in the same way. To condemn virtual murder on grounds of bad sportsmanship, we would need to also condemn other competitive (...)
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  18.  28
    Athenian oligarchs: the numbers game.Roger Brock - 1989 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 109:160-164.
  19.  5
    Chapter 12. The Genesis of the Garrisonian Formula: No-Government and Nonresistance.Peter Brock - 1968 - In Pacifism in the United States: From the Colonial Era to the First World War. Princeton: Princeton University Press. pp. 523-558.
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  20. The Theme of Freedom, Choice and Responsibility in the Philosophy of Existence: A Critical Appraisal.Helen T. Olojede - 2013 - Philosophy Pathways 180 (1).
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  21.  47
    Corporate Philanthropy as a Context for Moral Agency, a MacIntyrean Enquiry.Helen Nicholson, Ron Beadle & Richard Slack - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 167 (3):589-603.
    It has been claimed that ‘virtuous structures’ can foster moral agency in organisations. We investigate this in the context of employee involvement in corporate philanthropy, an activity whose moral status has been disputed. Employing Alasdair MacIntyre’s account of moral agency, we analyse the results of eight focus groups with employees engaged in corporate philanthropy in an employee-owned retailer, the John Lewis Partnership. Within this organisational context, Employee–Partners’ moral agency was evidenced in narrative accounts of their engagement in philanthropic activities and (...)
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  22.  22
    Why Save a Seed?Helen Anne Curry - 2019 - Isis 110 (2):337-340.
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  23.  18
    Scientific Consensus, Doctrinal Paradox and Discursive Dilemma.Helen Lauer - 2022 - Thought and Practice: A Journal of the Philosophical Association of Kenya 8 (1):1-26.
    Global ignorance about Africa continues to sustain inappropriate global interventions to resolve public health crises, often with disastrous consequences. To explain why this continues to happen, I marshal two theorems that predict basic statistical properties, called ‘the doctrinal paradox’ and ‘the discursive dilemma’, which underlie scientific consensus formation and evidence-based decision making on a global scale. These mathematical results illuminate the epistemic and material injustices committed by the protocols of medical research conducted at the highest level of global knowledge production (...)
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  24.  37
    Aversive properties of partial and varied reinforcement during runway acquisition.Helen B. Daly - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 81 (1):54.
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  25. Suárez's last stand for the substantial form.Helen Hattab - 2012 - In Benjamin Hill & Henrik Lagerlund (eds.), The Philosophy of Francisco Surez. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
  26.  14
    Freedom and Personality Again.Helen Wodehouse - 1942 - Philosophy 17 (66):174 - 175.
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  27.  6
    The Republic is a Feminist Issue.Helen Irving - 1996 - Feminist Review 52 (1):87-101.
    The growth during the 1990s of a republican movement in Australia has stimulated among other things a feminist examination of both the gendered nature of republicanism and the under-representation of women in senior positions in republican organizations. Feminists have adopted several critical perspectives on Australian republicanism: one involves the claim for the redesign of Australian political institutions in order to maximize the representation of women and women's interests; another suggests that the neglected history of women's involvement in constitutional politics during (...)
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  28.  22
    On the Literature of the Shvetāmbaras of GujaratOn the Literature of the Shvetambaras of Gujarat.Helen M. Johnson & Johannes Hertel - 1926 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 46:75.
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  29.  5
    The Function of Cynicism at the Present Time.Helen Small - 2020 - Oxford University Press.
    Tracing and re-evaluating the role of cynicism within literature, public moralism, and critical philosophy, this volume discovers how a range of modern writers have engaged with Cynic traditions of thought to test the boundaries of what can be thought and said on matters of general moral concern.
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  30. The Folly of Economic Sanctions.Helen Suzman - 1986 - Business and Society Review 57:87.
     
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  31.  21
    A Qualitative Exploration of Self-Kindness and “Treating Oneself” in Contexts of Eating, Weight Regulation and Other Health Behaviors: Implications for Mindfulness-Based Eating Programs.Helen Egan & Michail Mantzios - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  32.  83
    The meanings of consent to the donation of cord blood stem cells: perspectives from an interview-based study of a public cord blood bank in England.Helen Busby - 2010 - Clinical Ethics 5 (1):22-27.
    This paper explores the perspectives of women who have agreed that their umbilical cord blood may be collected for a public ‘cord blood bank’, for use in transplant medicine or research. Drawing on interview data from 27 mothers who agreed to the collection and use of their umbilical cord blood, these choices and the informed consent process are explored. It is shown that the needs of sick children requiring transplants are prominent in narrative accounts of cord blood banking, together with (...)
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  33.  41
    Recent Work in Utilitarianism.Dan W. Brock - 1973 - American Philosophical Quarterly 10 (4):241 - 276.
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  34.  26
    Studien zum Mahānisīha, Kapitel 6-8Studien zum Mahanisiha, Kapitel 6-8.Helen M. Johnson, Frank-Richard Hamm & Walther Schubring - 1954 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 74 (1):52.
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  35.  21
    Islam, Europe and Empire.Helen Anne B. Rivlin & Norman Daniel - 1970 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 90 (2):304.
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  36. Contributions to Jewish Iconography 'in'.Helen Rosenau - forthcoming - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library.
     
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  37. Can Reductive Individualists Allow Defence Against Political Aggression?Helen Frowe - 2015 - In David Sobel, Peter Vallentyne & Steven Wall (eds.), Oxford Studies in Political Philosophy, Volume 1. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK. pp. 173-193.
    Collectivist accounts of the ethics of war have traditionally dominated just war theory (Kutz 2005; Walzer 1977; Zohar 1993). These state-based accounts have also heavily influenced the parts of international law pertaining to armed conflict. But over the past ten years, reductive individualism has emerged as a powerful rival to this dominant account of the ethics of war. Reductivists believe that the morality of war is reducible to the morality of ordinary life. War is not a special moral sphere with (...)
     
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  38.  18
    Boethius: Some Aspects of His Times and Work.Helen Marjorie Barrett - 1940 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Originally published in 1940, this book contains a succinct introduction to Boethius, the influential medieval philosopher who was writing during the final days of the Western Roman Empire. Barrett keeps the general reader in mind as she explains Boethius' philosophy and his role in keeping Greek thinking available to his fellow Romans even as they were being conquered by the Ostrogoths. This book will be of value to anyone with an interest in ancient thought and in Late Antique philosophy.
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  39.  9
    The Discourse Interview.Helen Beebee & David Mossley - 2008 - Discourse: Learning and Teaching in Philosophical and Religious Studies 7 (2):15-30.
  40.  16
    Matthew of Aquasparta's Cognition Theory: Part II Ideogenesis.Helen Marie Beha - 1961 - Franciscan Studies 21 (1-2):1-79.
  41.  12
    Health Reform: Learning from Massachusetts.Helen Levy - 2012 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 49 (4):300-302.
  42.  8
    Kindergarten narratives on Froebelian education: transnational investigations.Helen May, Kristen Nawrotzki & Laurence Wayne Prochner (eds.) - 2016 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Kindergarten Narratives on Froebelian Education showcases the latest scholarship and historical understandings concerning the casting of the kindergarten idea abroad: across cultures, continents and centuries. Each chapter reveals previously unknown narratives of intrepid endeavour, political pragmatism and pedagogical innovation that collectively provide insight into the transformation of Froebel's ideas on early education into a global phenomenon. Across global contexts, each chapter will present a case study of the ideas scattering abroad, illustrative of the movement of ideas, curricula and pedagogical change; (...)
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  43.  21
    Document: Fact and fiction.Helen Petrovsky - 2013 - Philosophy of Photography 4 (2):181-189.
    In turning to photography the paper explores ways of conveying historical truth. It seems that contemporary art places itself at the very limit of representation in an attempt to remain faithful to historical eventuality. In fact, one is reminded of the type of historical occurrence which can be grasped only through ‘as-if presentations’, to remember the Kantian term. ‘Fiction’, therefore, is no longer opposed to ‘truth’, but becomes its conductor and ally.
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  44.  16
    Family, school and the mass production of parenting advice.Helen Proctor & Heather Weaver - 2020 - British Journal of Educational Studies 68 (1):43-60.
  45. International human rights law as a catalyst for the recognition and evolution of non-state law.Helen Quane - 2015 - In Michael A. Helfand (ed.), Negotiating state and non-state law: the challenge of global and local legal pluralism. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  46.  11
    Ethics, Technology and Medicine.Helen Zealley - 1989 - Journal of Medical Ethics 15 (4):220-221.
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  47. La vie de Schopenhauer.Helen Zimmern - 1876 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 1:424-425.
     
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  48.  40
    Deconstructing the elephant and the flag in the lavatory: promises and problems of moral foundations research.Helen Haste - 2013 - Journal of Moral Education 42 (3):316-329.
    Moral Foundations research offers rich promise, opening up key questions about how affect and cognition are integrated in moral response, and exploring how different moral discourses may supply meaning and valence to moral experience. Haidt and his colleagues also associate different discourses with different political positions. However I address three problematic areas. First to what extent Haidt has succeeded in transcending the traditional dichotomy of affect and cognition, and created an integrative model of how moral intuitions actually work. Second, the (...)
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  49.  19
    Commentary on" The Time Frame of Preferences, Dispositions, and the Validity of Advance Directives for the Mentally Ill".Dan W. Brock - 1998 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 5 (3):251-253.
  50. Syriac translation of Greek popular philosophy.Sebastian Brock - 2003 - In Peter Bruns (ed.), Von Athen nach Bagdad: zur Rezeption griechischer Philosophie von der Spätantike bis zum Islam. Bonn: Borengässer.
     
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