Results for 'Hepburn, Katharine'

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  1.  17
    ‘Miss Hepburn is Humanized’: The Star Persona of Katharine Hepburn.Janet Thumim - 1986 - Feminist Review 24 (1):71-102.
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  2.  29
    Dietrich, Garbo et Hepburn : trois stars travesties dans l’Amérique de la Dépression.Isabelle Dhommee - 1999 - Clio 10.
    Dans une Amérique secouée par la Grande Dépression, trois stars hollywoodiennes féminines, Marlène Dietrich, Greta Garbo et Katharine Hepburn ont, chacune à leur manière, malmené l’ordre social en usant et abusant des atours masculins à la ville comme à l’écran.
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  3.  17
    ‘What Am I Going to Do with My Philodendron?’ Looking at a Plant in Desk Set.Georgina Evans - 2023 - Philosophies 8 (1):9.
    _Desk Set_, a 1957 20th Century Fox studio comedy, made with the sponsorship of IBM, charts the relationship between a reference librarian, Bunny Watson, and Richard Sumner, the inventor of a computer which appears to threaten her job. The film displays a thriving philodendron within Bunny’s skyscraper office, illustrating her organic style of thinking, and implicitly inviting us to see the plant in opposition to the computer. The suggestion that the plant is in some sense excessive, claiming attention beyond the (...)
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  4.  41
    Ugly Duckling, Funny Butterfly: Bette Davis and "Now, Voyager".Stanley Cavell - 1990 - Critical Inquiry 16 (2):213-247.
    One quality of remarriage comedies is that, for all their ingratiating manners, and for all the ways in which they are among the most beloved of Hollywood films, a moral cloud remains at the end of each of them. And that moral cloud has to do with what is best about them. What is best are the conversations that go on in them, where conversation means of course talk, but means also an entire life of intimate exchange between the principal (...)
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  5. Selves on Selves: The Philosophical Significance of Autobiography.John Gibson - 2012 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 46 (4):109-119.
    Philosophers of literature do not take much of an interest in autobiography.1 In one sense this is not surprising. As a certain prejudice has it, autobiography is, along with biography, the preferred reading of people who do not really like to read. The very words can conjure up images of what one finds on bookshelves in Florida retirement communities and in underfunded public libraries, books with titles like Under the Rainbow: The Real Liza Minnelli or Me: Stories of My Life (...)
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  6. Questions about the Meaning of Life: R. W. HEPBURN.R. W. Hepburn - 1966 - Religious Studies 1 (2):125-140.
    Claims about ‘the meaning of life’ have tended to be made and discussed in conjunction with bold metaphysical and theological affirmations. For life to have meaning, there must be a comprehensive divine plan to give it meaning, or there must be an intelligible cosmic process with a ‘telos’ that a man needs to know if his life is to be meaningfully orientated. Or, it is thought to be a condition of the meaningfulness of life, that values should be ultimately ‘conserved’ (...)
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  7. A feminist voice in the enlightenment salon: Madame de Lambert on taste, sensibility, and the feminine mind*: Katharine J. hamerton.Katharine J. Hamerton - 2010 - Modern Intellectual History 7 (2):209-238.
    This essay demonstrates how the early Enlightenment salonnière madame de Lambert advanced a novel feminist intellectual synthesis favoring women's taste and cognition, which hybridized Cartesian and honnête thought. Disputing recent interpretations of Enlightenment salonnières that emphasize the constraints of honnêteté on their thought, and those that see Lambert's feminism as misguided in emphasizing gendered sensibility, I analyze Lambert's approach as best serving her needs as an aristocratic woman within elite salon society, and show through contextualized analysis how she deployed honnêteté (...)
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  8. Observation in the margins, 500-1500.Katharine Park - 2011 - In Lorraine Daston & Elizabeth Lunbeck (eds.), Histories of scientific observation. London: University of Chicago Press.
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  9. Hepburn, Ronald W., The Reach of the Aesthetic: Collected Essays on Art and Nature. Aldershot and Burlington: Ashgate, 2001. Reviewed by Emily Brady, Environmental Values 12(2003):128-131. [REVIEW]Ronald Hepburn - 2003 - Environmental Values 12:128-131.
     
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  10.  48
    Nature Humanised: Nature Respected.Ronald Hepburn - 1998 - Environmental Values 7 (3):267-279.
    How far is it true that the aesthetic appreciation of nature obscures, rather than illuminates, its objects? Do we not humanise nature, read our own subjectivity into it, sentimentally distort it, in our aesthetic – as distinct from scientific – approaches? I argue that not all humanising falsifies, and that we can respect nature as well as annex its forms and expressive qualities in our aesthetic appreciation. Respecting/humanising are explored as two of the chief key concepts for an understanding of (...)
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  11.  20
    Advice-implicative actions: Using interrogatives and assessments to deliver advice in mundane conversation.Alexa Hepburn, Jonathan Potter & Chloe Shaw - 2015 - Discourse Studies 17 (3):317-342.
    Work on advice has concentrated on institutional settings where there are restrictions on roles, actions and their organisation. This article focuses on advice giving in mundane settings: interactions between mothers and their young-adult daughters in a corpus of 51 telephone calls. Analysis reveals a range of designs that can be ‘advice implicative’ including advice-implicative interrogatives and advice-implicative assessments. Recipients orient to the characteristic features these implicit forms share with more explicit advice: normative pressure on the recipient’s conduct and epistemic asymmetry (...)
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  12.  77
    II—Two Routes to Radical Racial Pluralism.Katharine Jenkins - 2019 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 93 (1):49-68.
    Quayshawn Spencer argues for radical racial pluralism, the position that there is a plurality of natures and realities for race in the United States. In this paper, I raise two difficulties for Spencer’s argument. The first is targeted narrowly at his response to a potential objection to his argument, and the second is a more general difficulty to do with how the argument handles the social consequences of the authoritative categorization of people. Although the second difficulty is more serious than (...)
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  13. Landscape and the Metaphysical Imagination.Ronald W. Hepburn - 1996 - Environmental Values 5 (3):191-204.
    Aesthetic appreciation of landscape is by no means limited to the sensuous enjoyment of sights and sounds. It very often has a reflective, cognitive element as well. This sometimes incorporates scientific knowledge, e.g.,geological or ecological; but it can also manifest what this article will call 'metaphysical imagination', which sees or seems to see in a landscape some indication, some disclosure of how the world ultimately is. The article explores and critically appraises this concept of metaphysical imagination, and some of the (...)
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  14.  25
    The Role of Solidarity in Research in Global Health Emergencies.Katharine Wright & Julian Sheather - 2020 - American Journal of Bioethics 20 (5):4-6.
    Volume 20, Issue 5, June 2020, Page 4-6.
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  15.  32
    Bacon's "Enchanted Glass".Katharine Park - 1984 - Isis 75:290-302.
  16. Ontology and Oppression: Race, Gender, and Social Reality.Katharine Jenkins - 2023 - New York, US: OUP Usa.
    The way society is organised means that we all get made into members of various types of people, such as judges, wives, or women. These ‘human social kinds’ may be brought into being by oppressive social arrangements, and people may suffer oppression in virtue of being made into a member of a certain human social kind. This book argues that we should pay attention to the ways in which the very fact of being made into a member of a certain (...)
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  17.  51
    Data and Theory in Aesthetics: Philosophical Understanding and Misunderstanding: Ronald Hepburn.Ronald Hepburn - 1996 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 41:235-252.
    This paper has a twofold structure: both parts concern philosophy's understanding of its data—in the area of aesthetics. The first part considers aesthetics as philosophy of art: the second part considers aesthetics as concerned also with the appreciation of nature.
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  18.  63
    Christianity and paradox.Ronald W. Hepburn - 1958 - New York,: Pegasus.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity (individual or corporate) has a copyright on the body of the work. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be (...)
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  19.  34
    Can a robot be an expert? The social meaning of skill and its expression through the prospect of autonomous AgTech.Katharine Legun, Karly Ann Burch & Laurens Klerkx - 2022 - Agriculture and Human Values 40 (2):501-517.
    Artificial intelligence and robotics have increasingly been adopted in agri-food systems—from milking robots to self-driving tractors. New projects extend these technologies in an effort to automate skilled work that has previously been considered dependent on human expertise due to its complexity. In this paper, we draw on qualitative research carried out with farm managers on apple orchards and winegrape vineyards in Aotearoa New Zealand. We investigate how agricultural managers’ perceptions of future agricultural automation relates to their approach to expertise, or (...)
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  20.  73
    Art, truth and the education of subjectivity.Ronald W. Hepburn - 1990 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 24 (2):185–198.
    Ronald W Hepburn; Art, Truth and the Education of Subjectivity, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 24, Issue 2, 30 May 2006, Pages 185–198, https://doi.
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  21.  44
    Cross-cultural Comparison of Learning in Human Hunting.Katharine MacDonald - 2007 - Human Nature 18 (4):386-402.
    This paper is a cross-cultural examination of the development of hunting skills and the implications for the debate on the role of learning in the evolution of human life history patterns. While life history theory has proven to be a powerful tool for understanding the evolution of the human life course, other schools, such as cultural transmission and social learning theory, also provide theoretical insights. These disparate theories are reviewed, and alternative and exclusive predictions are identified. This study of cross-cultural (...)
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  22. Freedom And Receptivity In Aesthetic Experience.Ronald Hepburn - 2006 - Postgraduate Journal of Aesthetics 3 (1):1-14.
    No-one can read far into our subject without finding an author linking aesthetic experience and freedom in one sense or another: Kant, notably of course, but also Schopenhauer, Schiller, and many more. In this article I want first [A] to remind you in a sentence or two of those by now classic ways of connecting concepts of freedom and aesthetic experience, and then [B] to outline some thoughts of my own. Section [C] opens up in more detail a less frequented (...)
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  23.  36
    Sustainability programs and deliberative processes: assembling sustainable winegrowing in New Zealand.Katharine Legun & Marion Sautier - 2018 - Agriculture and Human Values 35 (4):837-852.
    The term sustainability can be used so liberally within production industries that it becomes meaningless. There is also recognition that for sustainability to be a useful concept, it must be crafted for the context in which it is deployed. A paradox of sustainability, it seems, lies in the conflict between the practical adoptability and context specificity of programs paired with the need for significant change. One response for those grappling with this sustainability challenge has been to adopt flexible approaches to (...)
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  24.  96
    Being and Time.Ronald W. Hepburn - 1964 - Philosophical Quarterly 14 (56):276.
  25.  95
    Wonder.R. W. Hepburn - 1980 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 54 (1):1-24.
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  26. Ontic Injustice.Katharine Jenkins - 2020 - Journal of the American Philosophical Association 6 (2):188-205.
    In this article, I identify a distinctive form of injustice—ontic injustice—in which an individual is wronged by the very fact of being socially constructed as a member of a certain social kind. To be a member of a certain social kind is, at least in part, to be subject to certain social constraints and enablements, and these constraints and enablements can be wrongful to the individual who is subjected to them, in the sense that they inflict a moral injury. The (...)
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  27.  33
    Preparing ethical review systems for emergencies: next steps.Katharine Wright, Nic Aagaard, Amr Yusuf Ali, Caesar Atuire, Michael Campbell, Katherine Littler, Ahmed Mandil, Roli Mathur, Joseph Okeibunor, Andreas Reis, Maria Alexandra Ribeiro, Carla Saenz, Mamello Sekhoacha, Ehsan Shamsi Gooshki, Jerome Amir Singh & Ross Upshur - 2023 - BMC Medical Ethics 24 (1):1-6.
    Ethical review systems need to build on their experiences of COVID-19 research to enhance their preparedness for future pandemics. Recommendations from representatives from over twenty countries include: improving relationships across the research ecosystem; demonstrating willingness to reform and adapt systems and processes; and making the case robustly for better resourcing.
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  28.  49
    Women, Gender, and Utopia.Katharine Park - 2006 - Isis 97 (3):487-495.
  29. Two levels of aesthetic definition.Katharine Gilbert - 1950 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 9 (2):119-123.
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  30. Conferralism and Intersectionality: A Response to Ásta’s Categories We Live By.Katharine Jenkins - 2019 - Journal of Social Ontology 5 (2):261-272.
    The conferralist account of social properties that Ásta develops and defends in Categories We Live By is persuasive in many ways. Conferralism could however do better, by its own lights, at handling the phenomenon of intersectionality. This paper first suggests a friendly amendment to the schema for conferrals that Asta offers. This helps to explain the difficulty concerning intersectionality. Finally, the paper suggests a way of developing the conferralist account that would resolve this difficulty.
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  31.  26
    The ‘loveliest and lordliest’.Katharine Bubel - 2008 - Renascence 60 (4):309-323.
  32.  17
    Existentialism and Religious Belief.Ronald W. Hepburn - 1959 - Philosophical Quarterly 9 (37):383-384.
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  33.  7
    The Transcendence of the Cave.R. W. Hepburn - 1968 - Philosophical Quarterly 18 (72):272-273.
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  34.  25
    (1 other version)Aquinas Medal Award to Gerald Verbeke.Katharine Rose Hanley - 1989 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 63:16-19.
  35.  15
    Arnold Berleant, Living in The Landscape: Towards An Aesthetics of Environment.Ronald Hepburn - 1998 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 56 (3):302-303.
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  36.  20
    Integrating interdisciplinary problem solving through process.Brian Hepburn & Henrik Thorén - unknown
    An intuitive and appealing way to characterize problem solving is as the application of constraints which reduce the problem-solution space. Any advantage offered by interdisciplinary problem solving would then plausi- bly derive from the integration of constraints from the fields involved. We propose an account of interdisciplinary problem solving which treats the integration of constraints as an iterative process. Appealing to a general- ization of entity-activity dualism from mechanical explanation, we extend the accounts of Bechtel and of Craver to non-hierarchical, (...)
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  37. Optimism, finitude, and the meaning of life.R. W. Hepburn - 1982 - In Donald MacKenzie MacKinnon, Brian Hebblethwaite & Stewart R. Sutherland (eds.), The Philosophical frontiers of Christian theology: essays presented to D.M. MacKinnon. New York: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  38.  19
    Prospect for metaphysics.Ronald W. Hepburn - 1961 - Philosophical Books 2 (4):20-22.
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  39. (2 other versions)The Reach of the Aesthetic: Collected Essays on Art and Nature.Ronald W. Hepburn - 2002 - Philosophy 77 (300):293-296.
     
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  40.  7
    The Language of Value.R. W. Hepburn - 1959 - Philosophical Quarterly 9 (36):282-283.
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  41.  36
    Do Religious Claims Make Sense? by Stuart C. Brown. (London, S.C.M. Press, 1969. Pp. xx + 188. Price 36s.).Ronald Hepburn - 1971 - Philosophy 46 (175):68-.
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  42. Rape Myths: What are They and What can We do About Them?Katharine Jenkins - 2021 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 89:37-49.
    In this paper, I aim to shed some light on what rape myths are and what we can do about them. I start by giving a brief overview of some common rape myths. I then use two philosophical tools to offer a perspective on rape myths. First, I show that we can usefully see rape myths as an example of what Miranda Fricker has termed ‘epistemic injustice’, which is a type of wrong that concerns our role as knowers. Then, I (...)
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  43.  33
    (1 other version)Trivial and serious in aesthetic appreciation of nature.Ronald W. Hepburn - 1993 - In . Cambridge University Press. pp. 65-80.
    The aesthetic appreciation of both art and nature is often, in fact, judged to be more – and less – serious. For instance, both natural objects and art objects can be hastily and unthinkingly perceived, and they can be perceived with full and thoughtful attention. In the case of art, we are better equipped to sift the trivial from the serious appreciation; for the existence of a corpus, and a continuing practice, of criticism of the arts – for all their (...)
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  44.  43
    The Beautiful, The Sublime, & The Picturesque in Eighteenth-Century British Aesthetic Theory.Ronald W. Hepburn - 1960 - Philosophical Quarterly 10 (39):188-189.
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  45. Freedom of political speech, hate speech and the argument from democracy: The transformative contribution of capabilities theory.Katharine Gelber - 2010 - Contemporary Political Theory 9 (3):304-324.
    Much of the most influential free speech scholarship emphasises that ‘political speech’ warrants the very highest standards of protection because of its centrality to self-governance. This central idea mitigates against efforts to justify the regulation of political speech and renders some egregiously offensive or harmful speech worthy of protection from a theoretical perspective. Yet paradoxically, in practice, in many liberal democracies such speech is routinely restricted. In this paper, I develop an argument that is compatible with both the argument from (...)
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  46. 'Wonder' and Other Essays.R. W. Hepburn - 1987 - Religious Studies 23 (2):295-297.
     
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  47.  54
    The Weather Prophets: Science and Reputation in Victorian Meteorology.Katharine Anderson - 1999 - History of Science 37 (2):179-216.
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  48. Symmetry and its formalisms: Mathematical aspects.Brian Hepburn & Alexandre Guay - 2009 - Philosophy of Science 76 (2):160-178.
    This article explores the relation between the concept of symmetry and its formalisms. The standard view among philosophers and physicists is that symmetry is completely formalized by mathematical groups. For some mathematicians however, the groupoid is a competing and more general formalism. An analysis of symmetry that justifies this extension has not been adequately spelled out. After a brief explication of how groups, equivalence, and symmetries classes are related, we show that, while it’s true in some instances that groups are (...)
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  49.  66
    Terrorist-Extremist Speech and Hate Speech: Understanding the Similarities and Differences.Katharine Gelber - 2019 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 22 (3):607-622.
    The terms ‘hate’ and ‘hatred’ are increasingly used to describe the rationale of a kind of anti-Western terrorist-extremist speech. This discursively links this kind of terrorist-extremist speech with the well-known concept of ‘hate speech’, a link that suggests the two phenomena are more alike than they are unlike. In this article I interrogate the similarities and differences between anti-Western terrorist-extremist speech and hate speech as they manifest in Western liberal democratic states along two axes: to whom the speech is addressed, (...)
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  50.  33
    Why should we team reason?Katharine Browne - 2018 - Economics and Philosophy 34 (2):185-198.
    :Team reasoning is thought to be descriptively and normatively superior to the classical individualistic theory of rational choice primarily because it can recommend coordination on Hi in the Hi-Lo game and cooperation in Prisoner's Dilemma-type situations. However, left unanswered is whether it is rational for individuals to become team members, leaving a gap between reasons for individuals and reasons for team members. In what follows, I take up Susan Hurley's attempt to show that it is rational for an individual to (...)
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