Results for 'James Cleary'

932 found
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  1.  22
    Burying as a species-specific defensive reaction: Differential performance of rats, mice, guinea pigs, and hamsters.James Cleary, Scott Wallace & Alan Poling - 1982 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 20 (1):61-63.
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  2.  17
    Interview: Aaron James.Skye Cleary - 2018 - Philosophy Now 124:17-17.
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  3.  24
    Contract before the Enlightenment: The Ideas of James Dalrymple, Viscount Stair, 1619–1695, written by Stephen Bogle.Matthew Cleary - 2023 - Grotiana 44 (2):391-393.
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  4. Life to the Full: Rights and Social Justice in Australia.James Franklin (ed.) - 2007 - Ballan, Australia: Connor Court.
    A collection of articles on the the principles of social justice from an Australian Catholic perspective. Contents: Forward (Archbishop Philip Wilson), Introduction (James Franklin), The right to life (James Franklin), The right to serve and worship God in public and private (John Sharpe), The right to religious formation (Richard Rymarz), The right to personal liberty under just law (Michael Casey), The right to equal protection of just law regardless of sex, nationality, colour or creed (Sam Gregg), The right (...)
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  5.  23
    Coordinate transformation and limb movements: There may be more complexity than meets the eye.James R. Bloedel - 1992 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 15 (2):326-326.
  6.  38
    Aligning the Criterion and Tests for Brain Death.James L. Bernat & Anne L. Dalle Ave - 2019 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 28 (4):635-641.
    Abstract:Disturbing cases continue to be published of patients declared brain dead who later were found to have a few intact brain functions. We address the reasons for the mismatch between the whole-brain criterion and brain death tests, and suggest solutions. Many of the cases result from diagnostic errors in brain death determination. Others probably result from a tiny amount of residual blood flow to the brain despite intracranial circulatory arrest. Strategies to lessen the mismatch include improving brain death determination training (...)
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  7. The Influence of Ethics Instruction, Religiosity, and Intelligence on Cheating Behavior.James M. Bloodgood, William H. Turnley & Peter Mudrack - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 82 (3):557-571.
    This study examines the influence of ethics instruction, religiosity, and intelligence on cheating behavior. A sample of 230 upper level, undergraduate business students had the opportunity to increase their chances of winning money in an experimental situation by falsely reporting their task performance. In general, the results indicate that students who attended worship services more frequently were less likely to cheat than those who attended worship services less frequently, but that students who had taken a course in business ethics were (...)
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  8. The Handbook of Contemporary Semantic Theory.James Higginbotham - 1996 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
     
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  9. The Limits of Obligation.James S. Fishkin - 1984 - Ethics 94 (2):327-329.
     
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  10. Is the cerebellum a motor control device?James M. Bower - 1992 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 15 (4):714-715.
     
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  11.  34
    Kant, Madison and the Problem of Transnational Order: Popular Sovereignty in Multilevel Systems.James Bohman - 2013 - In Andreas Niederberger & Philipp Schink (eds.), Republican democracy: liberty, law and politics. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    Although eighteenth-century Federalists, including James Madison, have been associated with the very contemporary idea of a transnational political order, the argument that the modern state with its centralised authority and supreme power poses a threat to liberty was already a subject of discussions during the period. The American Constitution was intended to establish a new political order, rather than a loose federation or an enlarged state. The Framers were not alone in their preoccupation with a transnational order; the German (...)
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  12.  96
    Four Bottomless Errors and the Collapse of Statistical Fairness.James Brusseau - manuscript
    The AI ethics of statistical fairness is an error, the approach should be abandoned, and the accumulated academic work deleted. The argument proceeds by identifying four recurring mistakes within statistical fairness. One conflates fairness with equality, which confines thinking to similars being treated similarly. The second and third errors derive from a perspectival ethical view which functions by negating others and their viewpoints. The final mistake constrains fairness to work within predefined social groups instead of allowing unconstrained fairness to subsequently (...)
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  13.  20
    Evolution and the sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).James J. McKenna & Sarah Mosko - 1990 - Human Nature 1 (3):291-330.
    This paper extends the evolutionary and developmental research model for SIDS presented in previous articles (McKenna 1990a, 1990b). Data from variety of fields were used to show why we should expect human infants to be physiologically responsive in a beneficial way to parental contact, one form of which is parent-infant co-sleeping. It was suggested that on-going sensory exchanges (touch, movement, smell, temperature, etc.) between co-sleeping parent-infant pairs might diminish the chances of an infantile cardiac-respiratory crisis (such as those suspected to (...)
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  14.  48
    Probabilistic Explanations.James H. Fetzer - 1982 - PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1982:194-207.
    The purpose of this paper is to provide a systematic defense of the single-case propensity account of probabilistic explanation from the criticisms advanced by Hanna and by Humphreys and to offer a critical appraisal of the aleatory conception advanced by Humphreys and of the deductive-nomological-probabilistic approach Railton has proposed. The principal conclusion supported by this analysis is that the Requirements of Maximal Specificity and of Strict Maximal Specificity afford the foundation for completely objective explanations of probabilistic explananda, so long as (...)
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  15. Art and Knowledge.James O. Young - 2005 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 63 (2):198-200.
     
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  16. Introduction to Peirce's Philosophy, interpreted as a System.James Feibleman - 1949 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 4 (2):213-214.
  17.  44
    A week-long meditation retreat decouples behavioral measures of the alerting and executive attention networks.James C. Elliott, B. Alan Wallace & Barry Giesbrecht - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  18. Multifractal Dynamics in the Emergence of Cognitive Structure.James A. Dixon, John G. Holden, Daniel Mirman & Damian G. Stephen - 2012 - Topics in Cognitive Science 4 (1):51-62.
    The complex-systems approach to cognitive science seeks to move beyond the formalism of information exchange and to situate cognition within the broader formalism of energy flow. Changes in cognitive performance exhibit a fractal (i.e., power-law) relationship between size and time scale. These fractal fluctuations reflect the flow of energy at all scales governing cognition. Information transfer, as traditionally understood in the cognitive sciences, may be a subset of this multiscale energy flow. The cognitive system exhibits not just a single power-law (...)
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  19.  4
    Moving toward Equity through Embedded ELSI Ethnography.Jennifer Elyse James, Leslie Riddle, Barbara Koenig & Galen Joseph - 2024 - Hastings Center Report 54 (S2):93-101.
    This paper describes the unique values of, challenges within, and opportunities presented by embedded ELSI ethnography. Drawing from our six‐year embedded ELSI study of the WISDOM (Women Informed to Screen Depending on Measures of Risk) trial, we present three examples of the variable ways we engaged with the WISDOM trial's scientific team. WISDOM is a preference‐sensitive, pragmatic, randomized controlled trial of risk‐based breast cancer screening informed by genomics. Our embedded ELSI approach included multiple modes of engagement: (a) Trial investigators sought (...)
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  20.  18
    Reaction Time Data in Music Cognition: Comparison of Pilot Data From Lab, Crowdsourced, and Convenience Web Samples.James Armitage & Tuomas Eerola - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  21. The Ethics of Speculation.James J. Angel & Douglas M. McCabe - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 90 (S3):277-286.
    Recently there has been an outpouring of consumer frustration over rising food and energy prices. Many politicians railed against “speculators” who allegedly drove up the prices of key necessities. Is speculation unethical? This article reviews the traditional arguments against speculation. Many of the standard criticisms confuse speculation with gambling. In much the same way as ethicists now draw distinctions between usury and normal business interest, we draw a distinction between socially useful speculation and gambling. Gambling involves taking on risk with (...)
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  22. What cognitive science tells us about ethics and the teaching of ethics.James Anderson - 1997 - Journal of Business Ethics 16 (3):279-291.
    A relatively new and exciting area of collaboration has begun between philosophy of mind and ethics. This paper attempts to explore aspects of this collaboration and how they bear upon traditional ethics. It is the author's contention that much of Western moral philosophy has been guided by largely unrecognized assumptions regarding reason, knowledge and conceptualization, and that when examined against empirical research in cognitive science, these assumptions turn out to be false -- or at the very least, unrealistic for creatures (...)
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  23.  26
    Husserl and the marks of the mental.James Kinkaid - 2024 - Synthese 205 (1):1-22.
    An active area of research in the philosophy of mind concerns the relation between the two marks of the mental: intentionality and phenomenal consciousness. One position that has recently gained in popularity is the _phenomenal intentionality theory_, according to which intentionality arises from phenomenal consciousness. Proponents of the phenomenal intentionality theory recognize Edmund Husserl’s phenomenology as a precedent, but little work has been done to locate Husserl within the contemporary landscape of views on the relation between the marks of the (...)
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  24. Developmental Perspective on the Emergence of Moral Personhood.James C. Harris - 2010 - In Eva Feder Kittay & Licia Carlson (eds.), Cognitive Disability and its Challenge to Moral Philosophy. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 55--73.
     
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  25.  15
    Chapters from Modern Psychology.James Rowland Angell - 1912 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 9 (16):444-445.
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  26.  25
    On Wolfgang Spohn’s Laws of Belief.James Woodward - 2019 - Philosophy of Science 86 (4):759-772.
    This is one of a pair of discussion notes comparing some features of the account of causation in Wolfgang Spohn’s Laws of Belief with the “interventionist” account in James Woodward’s Making Things Happen. Despite striking similarities there are also important differences. These include the “epistemic” orientation of Spohn’s account as opposed to the worldly or “ontic” orientation of the interventionist account, Spohn’s focus on token-level causal claims in contrast to the primary interventionist focus on type-level claims, the role of (...)
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  27.  67
    Dynamical embodiments of computation in cognitive processes.James P. Crutchfield - 1998 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (5):635-635.
    Dynamics is not enough for cognition, nor it is a substitute for information-processing aspects of brain behavior. Moreover, dynamics and computation are not at odds, but are quite compatible. They can be synthesized so that any dynamical system can be analyzed in terms of its intrinsic computational components.
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  28.  23
    Teaching Global Bioethics.James Dwyer - 2003 - Bioethics 17 (5-6):432-446.
    ABSTRACT We live in a world with enormous disparities in health. The life expectancy in Japan is 80 years; in Malawi, 40 years. The under‐five mortality in Norway is 4/1000; in Sierra Leone, 316/1000. The situation is actually worse than these figures suggest because average rates tend to mask inequalities within a country. Several presidents of the IAB have urged bioethicists to attend to global disparities and to broaden the scope of bioethics. For the last six years I have tried (...)
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  29.  25
    Homology of process: developmental dynamics in comparative biology.James DiFrisco & Johannes Jaeger - forthcoming - Interface Focus.
    Comparative biology builds up systematic knowledge of the diversity of life, across evolutionary lineages and levels of organization, starting with evidence from a sparse sample of model organisms. In developmental biology, a key obstacle to the growth of comparative approaches is that the concept of homology is not very well defined for levels of organization that are intermediate between individual genes and morphological characters. In this paper, we investigate what it means for ontogenetic processes to be homologous, focusing specifically on (...)
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  30.  49
    The non-compactness of square.James Cummings, Matthew Foreman & Menachem Magidor - 2003 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 68 (2):637-643.
  31.  36
    Global health and justice.James Dwyer - 2005 - Bioethics 19 (5-6):460-475.
    In Australia, Japan, Sweden, and Switzerland, the average life expectancy is now greater than 80 years. But in Angola, Malawi, Sierra Leone, and Zimbabwe, the average life expectancy is less than 40 years. The situation is even worse than these statistics suggest because average figures tend to mask inequalities within countries. What are we to make of a world with such unequal health prospects? What does justice demand in terms of global health? To address these questions, I characterize justice at (...)
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  32.  54
    Nonperturbative, Unitary Quantum-Particle Scattering Amplitudes from Three-Particle Equations.James Lindesay & H. Pierre Noyes - 2004 - Foundations of Physics 34 (10):1573-1606.
    We here use our nonperturbative, cluster decomposable relativistic scattering formalism to calculate photon–spinor scattering, including the related particle–antiparticle annihilation amplitude. We start from a three-body system in which the unitary pair interactions contain the kinematic possibility of single quantum exchange and the symmetry properties needed to identify and substitute antiparticles for particles. We extract from it a unitary two-particle amplitude for quantum–particle scattering. We verify that we have done this correctly by showing that our calculated photon–spinor amplitude reduces in the (...)
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  33.  6
    A Refutation of Snails by Roast Beef.James Alexander - 2015 - Philosophy Now 107:18-19.
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  34.  5
    (1 other version)How do we know?: an introduction to epistemology.James K. Dew - 2014 - Downers Grove, Illinois: IVP Academic, an imprint of InterVarsity Press.
    What is epistemology? -- What is knowledge? -- Where does knowledge come from? -- What is truth, and how do we find it? -- What are inferences, and how do they work? -- What do we perceive? -- Do we need justification? -- What is virtue epistemology? -- Do we have revelation? -- How certain can we be?
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  35. A practical guide to yoga.James Hewitt - 1960 - New York,: Funk & Wagnalls.
     
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  36. (1 other version)Talks to teachers on psychology and to students on some of life's ideals.William James - 1899 - Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications.
     
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  37. The Ladder of Jacob: Ancient Interpretations of the Biblical Story of Jacob and His Children.James L. Kugel - 2006
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  38.  11
    Information, Meaning and the Role of Semiosis in the Development of Living Systems.James Liszka - 2008 - Signs 2:188-217.
    The claim here is that semiosis is concomitant with life and not simply one of several possible adaptive mechanisms. Signs, particularly indices, serve as steering mechanisms for even the most primitive organisms, completing a circuit between the detection of energy sources and behavior that is conducive to acquiring those sources. Without that kind of agency, no form of life is possible. To show this, an understanding of the interrelation among energy, matter, information, and meaning is required, and how they are (...)
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  39. Absolute modernism and the space of literature.James Martell - 2018 - In Christopher Langlois (ed.), Understanding Blanchot, understanding modernism. New York, NY: Bloomsbury Academic.
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  40. A Brief History of the Presbyterians.James H. Smylie - 1996
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  41.  18
    Mental elaboration.James Sully - 1890 - Mind 15 (60):469-488.
  42. Rules in Dialogue.James Trafford - 2016 - In Meaning in Dialogue: An Interactive Approach to Logic and Reasoning. New York: Springer.
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  43. ch. Five World Cinema and Its Worlds.James Tweedie - 2018 - In Hunter Vaughan & Tom Conley (eds.), The Anthem handbook of screen theory. London: Anthem Press.
     
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  44.  29
    Principles of philosophical reasoning.James H. Fetzer (ed.) - 1984 - Totowa, N.J.: Rowman & Allanheld.
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  45.  7
    Platonis Protagoras: With Introduction, Notes and Appendices.James Adams (ed.) - 2013 - Cambridge University Press.
    Originally published in in 1893, this book contains the text of the Socratic dialogue Protagoras, which discusses a variety of Sophistic and Socratic tenets, including the teachability of virtue. The dialogue also provides an interesting view on the connection between pederasty and education in ancient Athens. Notable Plato scholars James and Adele Adams present an introduction addressing the purpose and themes of the dialogue; a biography of Protagoras and extant fragments of his works are also included. This book will (...)
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  46.  74
    Are Phase 1 Trials Therapeutic? Risk, Ethics, and Division of Labor.James A. Anderson & Jonathan Kimmelman - 2012 - Bioethics 28 (3):138-146.
    Despite their crucial role in the translation of pre-clinical research into new clinical applications, phase 1 trials involving patients continue to prompt ethical debate. At the heart of the controversy is the question of whether risks of administering experimental drugs are therapeutically justified. We suggest that prior attempts to address this question have been muddled, in part because it cannot be answered adequately without first attending to the way labor is divided in managing risk in clinical trials. In what follows, (...)
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  47.  19
    Semiotic Arguments and Markets in Votes.James Stacey Taylor - 2017 - Business Ethics Journal Review 5 (6):35-39.
    Jacob Sparks has developed a semiotic critique of markets that is based on the fact that “market exchanges express preferences.” He argues that some market transactions will reveal that the purchaser of a market good inappropriately prefers it to a similar non-market good. This avoids Brennan and Jaworski’s criticism that semiotic objections to markets fail as the meaning of market transactions are contingent social facts. I argue that Sparks’ argument is both incomplete and doomed to fail. It can only show (...)
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  48.  14
    On Rereading "Style".James Ackerman - 1978 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 45.
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  49.  9
    Paul Johannes Tillich 1886-1965.James Luther Adams - 1965 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 39:125 - 126.
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  50. The Hesychast Method of Prayer.James Aerthayil - 1977 - Journal of Dharma 2:204-216.
     
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