Results for 'Jayson Maclean'

268 found
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  1.  80
    The market for animal welfare.Jayson L. Lusk - 2011 - Agriculture and Human Values 28 (4):561-575.
    Animal welfare is emerging as one of the most controversial issues in modern livestock agriculture. Although consumers can buy free range products in niche markets, some have argued that existing markets cannot solve the animal welfare dilemma because there are individuals who care about animal well-being who do not eat animal products. This paper proposes a market-based solution to at least partially manage animal welfare externalities. After discussing the current lack of market incentives to promote farm animal well-being, a potential (...)
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  2.  7
    Supporting and Humiliating Dignity with Biometric Technologies: An Affordance Perspective.Jayson Killoran, Jasmin Manseau, Andrew Park & Jan Kietzmann - forthcoming - Journal of Business Ethics:1-18.
    Biometric technologies are at the forefront of organizational innovation, surveillance, and control. In many instances, the use of physiological and behavioral biometrics enhances individual and organizational performance. However, they also have the potential to hinder human wellbeing. In particular, recent generations of biometrics are capable of extracting deeper insights into human behavior, enabling organizational surveillance practices, but may also constrain individual rights and freedoms. While biometric technologies have been evidenced to infringe upon privacy and lead to discriminatory practices, little research (...)
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  3.  68
    Becoming-Bonsai, Becoming-Carer.Jayson Jimenez - 2023 - Environmental Philosophy 20 (1):1-24.
    This essay reflects on my academic work and personal experience as a bonsai enthusiast. Specifically, I plan to point out how Deleuzian theory informs my bonsai practice. First, I situate bonsai gardening as an encounter with the vegetal world. Then I consider this encounter as a form of Deleuzian becoming. Becoming reifies a transformation of the two species to become another version of itself—one that occurs between a bonsai and its carer. As a bonsai carer myself, I find becoming as (...)
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  4.  40
    Fragmented or centralized?: Comparative case study of ethical frameworks for social research in Philippines and Taiwan.Jayson Troy F. Bajar - 2022 - International Journal of Ethics Education 7 (2):235-255.
    With the delegation of ethical checking mechanisms to the institutional review boards (IRBs), flexible interpretations of overarching research ethics principles differed across scientific and cultural settings. This article is a comparative case study of ethical frameworks for social research in the Philippines and Taiwan. Justifications in choosing the two cases preponderantly focused on data trends regarding research and development (R&D) policy and practice. This article compared the elements observed in the two frameworks, specifically in terms of: national regulations, curricular requirements, (...)
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  5.  72
    An Overburdened Term: Dewey's Concept of "Experience" as Curriculum Theory.Seaman Jayson & J. Nelsen Peter - 2011 - Education and Culture 27 (1):5-25.
    From the start, John Dewey's ideas about education have been prone to misunderstanding. One of the greatest casualties has been "experience," a term so routinely misappropriated that Dewey ultimately decided to abandon it. He wrote, "I would abandon the term 'experience' because of my growing realization that the historical obstacles which prevented understanding of my use of 'experience' are, for all practical purposes, insurmountable. I would substitute the term 'culture' because with its meanings as now firmly established it can fully (...)
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  6.  17
    Compassion, by the Pound: The Economics of Farm Animal Welfare.F. Bailey Norwood & Jayson L. Lusk - 2011 - Oxford University Press.
    This highly readable book is aimed at anyone with an interest in the food they eat. In conversational tone, and avoiding academic jargon, it provides an honest and objective account of the consequences of food consumption choices and policies, through the lens of economics.
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  7. Climate Complicity and Individual Accountability.Douglas MacLean - 2019 - The Monist 102 (1):1-21.
    Climate change is a unique ethical problem. The individual actions of virtually everyone in the world contribute to climate change, which risk causing great harm, especially in the future. We are all complicit in causing this harm. In most cases, complicity implies accountability: one deserves blame or punishment, he becomes a legitimate subject of reactive attitudes, or he owes compensation. I argue that individuals are not accountable in these ways for their complicity in causing climate change. Rather, our moral accountability (...)
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  8.  13
    Logic, Signs and Nature in the Renaissance: The Case of Learned Medicine.Ian Maclean - 2001 - Cambridge University Press.
    This is a major work by Ian Maclean exploring the foundations of learning in the Renaissance. Logic, Signs and Nature offers a profoundly learned, compelling and original account of the range of what was thinkable and knowable by learned medics of the period c.1530-1630. This is a study of great significance to the history of medicine, as well as the history of European ideas in general.
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  9.  13
    The elimination of morality.Anne Maclean - 1993 - Reflections on Utilitarianism and Bioethics. London U. New York.
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  10.  27
    Review of Ian Maclean: The Renaissance Notion of Woman[REVIEW]Ian Maclean - 1982 - Ethics 92 (3):567-569.
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  11.  65
    Framing and Organizational Misconduct: A Symbolic Interactionist Study.Tammy L. MacLean - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 78 (1-2):3-16.
    This study expands theoretical understanding of organizational misconduct through qualitative analysis of widespread deceptive sales practices at a large U.S. life insurance company. Adopting a symbolic interactionist perspective, this research describes how a set of taken-for-granted interpretive frames located in the organization’s culture created a worldview through which deceptive sales practices were seen as normal, acceptable, routine operating procedure. The findings from this study extend and modify the dominant theoretical ‘pressure/opportunity’ model of organizational misconduct by proposing that the process engine (...)
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  12.  63
    The "Sceptical Crisis" Reconsidered: Galen, Rational Medicine and the Libertas Philosophandi.Ian Maclean - 2006 - Early Science and Medicine 11 (3):247-274.
    This paper reassesses the role of sceptical thinking in the emergence of the new science of the seventeenth century, in the context of the seminal but contestable History of Scepticism by Richard Popkin. It investigates the anti-sceptical essay by Galen De optimo modo docendi, which was retranslated in the sixteenth century by Erasmus and later published as an adjunct to the works of Sextus Empiricus, in order to highlight the currency of ideas about hyperbolic doubt, and links this to the (...)
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  13.  60
    The Elimination of Morality: Reflections on Utilitarianism and Bioethics.Anne Maclean - 1993 - New York: Routledge.
    First published in 1993. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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  14. Montaigne and the truth of the schools.Ian Maclean - 2005 - In Ullrich Langer, The Cambridge Companion to Montaigne. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  15.  15
    Interpretation and Meaning in the Renaissance: The Case of Law.Ian Maclean - 1992 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book investigates theories of interpretation and meaning in Renaissance jurisprudence.
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  16.  53
    The brain's generation gap: Some human implications.Paul D. MacLean - 1973 - Zygon 8 (2):113-127.
  17.  37
    Effects of Affiliative Human–Animal Interaction on Dog Salivary and Plasma Oxytocin and Vasopressin.Evan L. MacLean, Laurence R. Gesquiere, Nancy R. Gee, Kerinne Levy, W. Lance Martin & C. Sue Carter - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
  18.  30
    Deweyan Tools for Inquiry and the Epistemological Context of Critical Pedagogy.Peter Nelsen & Jayson Seaman - 2011 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 47 (6):561-582.
    This article develops the notion of resistance as articulated in the literature of critical pedagogy as being both culturally sponsored and cognitively manifested. To do so, the authors draw upon John Dewey's conception of tools for inquiry. Dewey provides a way to conceptualize student resistance not as a form of willful disputation, but instead as a function of socialization into cultural models of thought that actively truncate inquiry. In other words, resistance can be construed as the cognitive and emotive dimensions (...)
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  19.  53
    Evidence, Logic, the Rule and the Exception in Renaissance Law and Medicine.Ian Maclean - 2000 - Early Science and Medicine 5 (3):227-256.
    This article sets out to investigate aspects of the uptake of Renaissance law and medicine from some of the logical and natural-philosophical components of the university arts course. Medicine is shown to have a much laxer operative logic than law, reflecting its commitment to the theory of idiosyncrasy as opposed to the demands made upon the law by the need for a uniform application of justice. Symptomatic of the different uptake arc the contrasting meanings of "regulariter" and "generaliter" in the (...)
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  20.  56
    Johann Gustav Droysen and the Development of Historical Hermeneutics.Michael J. Maclean - 1982 - History and Theory 21 (3):347-365.
    Droysen sought to exploit, for practical political effect, a vision of history as an integral, progressive, and fathomable continuum, and hence in his writings subordinated historical individuality to history's discernible teleology. Droysen's methodological opponent, Rankean historicism, was to the right of his centrist politics. Droysen insisted against Ranke that history is not something "out there" that can be dispassionately and scientifically analyzed but is man's ontological ground. He was basically a moderate Young Hegelian: historians can be scholars and yet ally (...)
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  21.  56
    Endogenous Oxytocin, Vasopressin, and Aggression in Domestic Dogs.Evan L. MacLean, Laurence R. Gesquiere, Margaret E. Gruen, Barbara L. Sherman, W. Lance Martin & C. Sue Carter - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
  22. Values at Risk.Douglas Maclean, Dorothy Nelkin & Michael S. Brown - 1988 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 17 (1):54-65.
     
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  23. Mildenberger, Carl David (2015). Games and evil. In: MacLean, Malcolm; Russell, Wendy; Ryall, Emily. Philosophical perspectives on play. Abingdon: Routledge, 42-52.Carl David Mildenberger, Malcolm MacLean, Wendy Russell & Emily Ryall (eds.) - 2015
     
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  24.  27
    The Free Animal: Rousseau on Free Will and Human Nature.Lee MacLean - 2013 - University of Toronto Press.
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  25. Is “Being Human” a Moral Concept?Douglas Maclean - 2010 - Philosophy and Public Policy Quarterly 30 (3/4):16-20.
    Many philosophers have argued against “speciesism”—an attitude of bias toward the interests of members of one’s own species. In reply, Douglas MacLean defends a speciesist or humanist outlook on morality, exploring the ways in which ethics is inextricably tied to practices that define what it is to live a distinctively human life.
     
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  26. Foucault's Renaissance Episteme Reassessed: An Aristotelian Counterblast.Ian Maclean - 1998 - Journal of the History of Ideas 59 (1):149-166.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Foucault’s Renaissance Episteme Reassessed: An Aristotelian CounterblastIan MacleanThere seem to me to be two good reasons for looking at Foucault’s Renaissance episteme again, even though specialists of the Renaissance have given it short shrift and Foucault himself does not seem to have set great store by it in his later writings. 1 The first is that in general books on Foucault accounts of it are still given in a (...)
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  27. Energy and the Future.Douglas Maclean & Peter G. Brown - 1984 - Ethics 94 (3):542-543.
     
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  28.  49
    Evolution of the psychencephalon.Paul D. MacLean - 1982 - Zygon 17 (2):187-211.
    Abstract.In evolving to its great size the human brain has retained the distinctive features and chemistry of three kinds of brains that reflect an ancestral relationship to reptiles, early mammals, and late mammals. It constitutes, so to speak, a psychencephalon comprised of three‐brains‐in‐one, a triune brain. In the evolution from reptiles to mammals two key changes were the development of nursing and maternal care. Through the agency of “newer” parts of the brain a parental concern for family eventually generalizes not (...)
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  29. Keyholders and flak jackets: the method in the madness of mixed metaphors.A. Maclean - 2008 - Clinical Ethics 3 (3):121-126.
    The law in England allows that both parents and competent minors concurrently have the right to consent to medical treatment of the minor. This means that while competent minors may consent to treatment their refusal of consent does not act as an effective veto of treatment and treatment remains lawful if given with parental consent. This approach has been heavily criticized as inconsistent with the House of Lords decision in the Gillick case and damned as ‘palpable nonsense’. In this article, (...)
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  30.  13
    Bertrand Russell's bundle theory of particulars.Gülberk Koç Maclean - 2014 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Bertrand Russell's Bundle Theory of Particulars presents and evaluates Russell's arguments for two competing theories on the nature of particulars at different stages in his career: the substratum theory of particulars (1903-1913) and the bundle theory of particulars (1940-1948). Through its original focus on Russell's little known metaphysics in the later part of his career, this study explains why Russell's theory of particulars is relevant today. It argues that a Russellian realist bundle theory is indeed the best explanation of similarities (...)
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  31. External Conditions, Internal Rationality: Spinoza on the Rationality of Suicide.Ian MacLean-Evans - 2023 - Journal of Spinoza Studies 2 (1):40-63.
    I argue alongside some other scholars that there is a plausible reading of Spinoza’s philosophy of suicide which holds both of the following tenets: first, that suicides occur because of external conditions, and second, that there are at least some suicides which are rational. These two tenets require special attention because they seem to be the source of significant tension. For Spinoza, if one’s cognitions are to be the most adequate, they must be “disposed internally” (E2p29s/G II 114), or determined (...)
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  32.  77
    Cost-Benefit Analysis and Procedural Values.Douglas MacLean - 1994 - Analyse & Kritik 16 (2):166-180.
    One argument against using cost-benefit analysis to justify policies aimed at promoting human life and health or protecting the environment is that it requires putting a price on priceless goods. This distorts the value of these goods, and it can affect their value by cheapening them. This argument might be rejected by a moral consequentialist who believes that a rational agent should always be able to reflect on his values, even priceless goods, and assess their costs and their importance. This (...)
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  33.  29
    Dispositional affect predicts temporal attention costs in the attentional blink paradigm.Mary H. MacLean, Karen M. Arnell & Michael A. Busseri - 2010 - Cognition and Emotion 24 (8):1431-1438.
  34.  28
    History in a Two-Cultures World: The Case of the German Historians.Michael MacLean - 1988 - Journal of the History of Ideas 49 (3):473.
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  35.  24
    Thick as Thieves: A Social Embeddedness Model of Rule Breaking in Organizations.Tammy L. MacLean - 2001 - Business and Society 40 (2):167-196.
    This qualitative study examines rule breaking in organizations by analyzing how deceptive sales practices became widespread at a major life insurance company. Using grounded theory techniques, a theoretical model is developed that illustrates the persistence and proliferation of rule breaking in organizations. Findings suggest the utility of adopting a social embeddedness perspective on rule breaking, as the mechanisms of diffusion and facilitation embedded in relationships between managers and employees enable the process whereby rule breaking becomes widespread.
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  36.  27
    Using brain potentials to understand prism adaptation: the error-related negativity and the P300.Stephane J. MacLean, Cameron D. Hassall, Yoko Ishigami, Olav E. Krigolson & Gail A. Eskes - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  37.  13
    The Political Responsibility of Intellectuals.Ian MacLean, Alan Montefiore & Peter Winch (eds.) - 1990 - Cambridge University Press.
    The Political Responsibility of Intellectuals addresses the many problems in defining the relationship of intellectuals to the society in which they live. In what respects are they responsible for, and to, that society? Should they seek to act as independent arbiters of the values explicitly or implicity espoused by those around them? Should they seek to advise those in public life about the way in which they should act, or should they withdraw from any form of political involvement? And how (...)
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  38. Heterodoxy in natural philosophy and medicine : Pietro pomponazzi, Guglielmo gratarolo, girolamo cardano.Ian Maclean - 2005 - In John Hedley Brooke & Ian Maclean, Heterodoxy in Early Modern Science and Religion. Oxford University Press.
  39.  28
    A Moral and Intellectual Evaluation of Russell’s Romantic/Sexual Practices.Gülberk Koç Maclean - 2024 - In Landon D. C. Elkind & Alexander Mugar Klein, Bertrand Russell, Feminism, and Women Philosophers in his Circle. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 11-36.
    This chapter will argue that due to a lack of genuine consent, some of Russell’s practices in his romantic/sexual relationships are morally objectionable according to his own normative theory (utilitarianism) and these practices are intellectually objectionable according to his post-1913 meta-ethics (expressivism) and his understanding of rationality. On utilitarian grounds, Russell’s actions would maximize pleasure and minimize pain for all the parties affected by the relationship if the authenticity of his partners’ consent were maintained either by a more or less (...)
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  40.  22
    Families.Mavis Maclean - 2010 - In Peter Cane & Herbert M. Kritzer, The Oxford handbook of empirical legal research. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Family laws concern relationships, belief, and values, and reflect the social diversities as well as a dynamic nature. This article analyses the relationship between family and the state that emerges at the juncture of the conformation of family dynamics to the social benchmark of codes. It opens up with the discussion of three central concerns of empirical work: the first two arise from demographic change reflected in marriage breakdown and its consequences for finance and parenting. The third strand deals with (...)
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  41. Armstrong and van Fraassen on Probabilistic Laws of Nature.Duncan Maclean - 2012 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 42 (1):1-13.
    In What is a Law of Nature? (1983) David Armstrong promotes a theory of laws according to which laws of nature are contingent relations of necessitation between universals. The metaphysics Armstrong develops uses deterministic causal laws as paradigmatic cases of laws, but he thinks his metaphysics explicates other sorts of laws too, including probabilistic laws, like that of the half-life of radium being 1602 years. Bas van Fraassen (1987) gives seven arguments for why Armstrong’s theory of laws is incapable of (...)
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  42.  19
    Elite Business Networks and the Field of Power: A Matter of Class?Mairi Maclean, Charles Harvey & Gerhard Kling - 2017 - Theory, Culture and Society 34 (5-6):127-151.
    We explore the meaning and implications of Bourdieu’s construct of the field of power and integrate it into a wider conception of the formation and functioning of elites at the highest level in society. Corporate leaders active within the field of power hold prominent roles in numerous organizations, constituting an ‘elite of elites’, whose networks integrate powerful participants from different fields. As ‘bridging actors’, they form coalitions to determine institutional settlements and societal resource flows. We ask how some corporate actors (...)
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  43.  50
    The Medical Republic of Letters before the Thirty Years War.Ian Maclean - 2008 - Intellectual History Review 18 (1):15-30.
    (2008). The Medical Republic of Letters before the Thirty Years War. Intellectual History Review: Vol. 18, Humanism and Medicine in the Early Modern Era, pp. 15-30.
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  44.  31
    Including the Epistemic in Democratic Music Pedagogy.Tessa MacLean - 2023 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 31 (1):25-42.
    Philosophical descriptions of democratic music education frequently rely on “inclusion” and “participation” as the defining features of democratically oriented music programs. Democratic epistemic considerations, such as regulatory ideals of musical quality and excellence, however, are less commonly cited, if not actively avoided. This paper addresses several primary reasons for the paucity of epistemic considerations in democratic music education and problematizes current concerns about epistemic judgements from a democratic perspective. Drawing on Miranda Fricker’s influential concept of epistemic injustice, this paper argues (...)
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  45. The Security Gamble: Deterrence in the Nuclear Age.Douglas Maclean (ed.) - 1984 - Rowman & Allenheld.
     
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  46.  65
    What Morality Is.Anne Maclean - 1984 - Philosophy 59 (227):21 - 37.
    I shall in this paper defend a universalizability thesis against certain objections. It will shortly be clear that the thesis defended is not the universalizability thesis as generally understood but something which differs crucially from it in that it claims no role whatsoever in ‘the definition of morality’. My title may therefore be misleading in this respect.
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  47.  22
    Now you see it, now you don't: Consent and the legal protection of autonomy.Alasdair R. Maclean - 2000 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 17 (3):277–288.
  48.  23
    Science and theology at Groningen University.J. MacLean - 1972 - Annals of Science 29 (2):187-201.
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  49.  39
    Humans, animals, and the world we share.Douglas MacLean - 2022 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 105 (1):220-229.
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  50.  41
    Right and Good: False Dichotomy?Anne Maclean - 1985 - Philosophy 60 (231):129 - 132.
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