Results for 'Jeffrey Wasserman'

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  1. Criticizing and reforming segregated facilities for persons with disabilities.Adrienne Asch, Jeffrey Blustein & David T. Wasserman - 2008 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 5 (2-3):157-168.
    In this paper, we critically appraise institutions for people with disabilities, from residential facilities to outpatient clinics to social organizations. While recognizing that a just and inclusive society would reject virtually all segregated institutional arrangements, we argue that in contemporary American society, some people with disabilities may have needs that at this time can best be met by institutional arrangements. We propose ways of reforming institutions to make them less isolating, coercive, and stigmatizing, and to provide forms of social support (...)
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  2. Problematics of Grounded Theory: Innovations for Developing an Increasingly Rigorous Qualitative Method.Jason Adam Wasserman, Jeffrey Michael Clair & Kenneth L. Wilson - 2009 - Qualitative Research 9 (3):355-381.
    Our purpose in this article is to identify and suggest resolution for two core problematics of grounded theory. First, while grounded theory provides transparency to one part of the conceptualization process, where codes emerge directly from the data, it provides no such systematic or transparent way for gaining insight into the conceptual relationships between discovered codes. Producing a grounded theory depends not only on the definition of conceptual pieces, but the delineation of a relationship between at least two of those (...)
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  3.  27
    Case Studies: The Doctor, the Patient, & the DRG.Jeffrey Wasserman, J. Joel May, Daniel H. Schwartz & Joy Hinson Penticuff - 1983 - Hastings Center Report 13 (5):23.
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  4. Self-assembling Games.Jeffrey A. Barrett & Brian Skyrms - 2017 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 68 (2):329-353.
    We consider how cue-reading, sensory-manipulation, and signaling games may initially evolve from ritualized decisions and how more complex games may evolve from simpler games by polymerization, template transfer, and modular composition. Modular composition is a process that combines simpler games into more complex games. Template transfer, a process by which a game is appropriated to a context other than the one in which it initially evolved, is one mechanism for modular composition. And polymerization is a particularly salient example of modular (...)
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  5.  23
    Aristophanes, Lysistrate 264.Jeffrey Henderson - 1979 - Classical Quarterly 29 (01):53-.
    Aristophanes, Lysistrate 256–65 271–80 runs as follows. I print the muchdiscussed and frequently emended2 lines 260–65 275–80 as they appear in the manuscripts and testimonia, and shall argue that they are sound with the exception of 264, for which I suggest an emendation.
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  6. A Formal Semantics for Some Discourse Anaphora.Jeffrey C. King - 1985 - Dissertation, University of California, San Diego
    The dissertation is an attempt to provide a formal semantics for occurrences of anaphoric pronouns and definite descriptions whose quantifier antecedents occur in sentences other than those in which the anaphoric pronouns and descriptions themselves occur, . The predominant view of anaphoric pronouns whose quantifier antecedents occur in the same sentence as they do is that they function as bound variables . Chapter 1 of this dissertation is constituted by a series of arguments against a bound variable treatment of q (...)
     
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  7.  50
    Oracles, Aesthetics, and Bayesian Consensus.Jeffrey A. Barrett - 1996 - Philosophy of Science 63 (Supplement):273-280.
    In order for Bayesian inquiry to count as objective, one might argue that it must lead to a consensus among those who use it and share evidence, but presumably this is not enough. It has been proposed that one should also require that the consensus be reached from very different initial opinions by conditioning only on basic experimental evidence, evidence free from subjective, social, or psychological influence. I will argue here, however, that this notion of objectivity in Bayesian inquiry is (...)
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  8.  35
    The Separation of Reason and Faith in Bacon and Hobbes, and Leibniz's Theodicy.Jeffrey Barnouw - 1981 - Journal of the History of Ideas 42 (4):607.
  9. Yablo’s Paradox and ω-Inconsistency.Jeffrey Ketland - 2005 - Synthese 145 (3):295-302.
    It is argued that Yablo’s Paradox is not strictly paradoxical, but rather ‘ω-paradoxical’. Under a natural formalization, the list of Yablo sentences may be constructed using a diagonalization argument and can be shown to be ω-inconsistent, but nonetheless consistent. The derivation of an inconsistency requires a uniform fixed-point construction. Moreover, the truth-theoretic disquotational principle required is also uniform, rather than the local disquotational T-scheme. The theory with the local disquotation T-scheme applied to individual sentences from the Yablo list is also (...)
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  10.  60
    When Respecting Autonomy Is Harmful: A Clinically Useful Approach to the Nocebo Effect.Daniel Londyn Menkes, Jason Adam Wasserman & John T. Fortunato - 2017 - American Journal of Bioethics 17 (6):36-42.
    Nocebo effects occur when an adverse effect on the patient arises from the patient's own negative expectations. In accordance with informed consent, providers often disclose information that results in unintended adverse outcomes for the patient. While this may adhere to the principle of autonomy, it violates the doctrine of “primum non nocere,” given that side-effect disclosure may cause those side effects. In this article we build off previous work, particularly by Wells and Kaptchuk and by Cohen :3–11.[Taylor & Francis Online], (...)
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  11.  52
    Perceiving, remembering, and communicating structure in events.Jeffrey M. Zacks, Barbara Tversky & Gowri Iyer - 2001 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 130 (1):29.
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  12. 'Healthy' Human Embryos and Reproduction Making Embryos Healthy or Making Healthy Embryos: How Much of a Difference Between Prenatal Treatment and Selection?Adrienne Asch & David Wasserman - 2010 - In Adrienne Asch & David Wasserman (eds.), The 'Healthy' Embryo: Social, Biomedical, Legal and Philosophical Perspectives. pp. 201-18.
  13. Neofunctionalism and after.Jeffrey C. Alexander (ed.) - 1998 - Malden, Mass.: Blackwell.
    "Neofunctionalism and After" brings together for the first time in one volume all of Alexander's writings on neofunctionalism, the present volume also contains ...
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  14.  36
    "Aesthetic" for Schiller and Peirce: A Neglected Origin of Pragmatism.Jeffrey Barnouw - 1988 - Journal of the History of Ideas 49 (4):607.
  15. Synesthesia: A window on the hard problem of consciousness.Jeffrey A. Gray - 2005 - In Robertson, C. L. & N. Sagiv (eds.), Synesthesia: Perspectives From Cognitive Neuroscience. Oxford University Press. pp. 127-146.
  16. Dispositions, Conditionals, and Counterexamples.D. Manley & R. Wasserman - 2011 - Mind 120 (480):1191-1227.
    In an earlier paper in these pages (2008), we explored the puzzling link between dispositions and conditionals. First, we rehearsed the standard counterexamples to the simple conditional analysis and the refined conditional analysis defended by David Lewis. Second, we attacked a tempting response to these counterexamples: what we called the ‘getting specific strategy’. Third, we presented a series of structural considerations that pose problems for many attempts to understand the link between dispositions and conditionals. Finally, we developed our own account (...)
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  17.  75
    Justice and Luck.Jeffrey M. Cervantez - 2011 - Southwest Philosophy Review 27 (1):37-45.
  18. Vimalakartis triumphant silence : bridging Indian and East Asian Buddhism.Jeffrey Dippmann - 2010 - In David Edward Jones & Ellen R. Klein (eds.), Asian texts, Asian contexts: encounters with Asian philosophies and religions. Albany: State University of New York Press.
     
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  19.  19
    The Dark Side of Modernity.Jeffrey C. Alexander - 2013 - Polity Press.
    Social theory between progress and apocalypse -- Autonomy and domination: Weber's cage -- Barbarism and modernity: Eisenstadt's regret -- Integration and justice: Parsons' utopia -- Despising others: Simmel's stranger -- Meaning evil -- De-civilizing the civil sphere -- Psychotherapy as central institution -- The frictions of modernity and their possible repair.
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  20.  63
    Hobbes's causal account of sensation.Jeffrey Barnouw - 1980 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 18 (2):115-130.
  21. Self-abduction; oracles, ecocognition and purpose in life.Jeffrey White - forthcoming - In Selene Arfini (ed.), Essays in Honor of Lorenzo Magnani: Volume 2 - Scientific Cognition, Semiotics, and Computational Agents. Springer.
    This chapter follows Lorenzo Magnani's observation that ongoing commercialization of science and academia impoverishes human potential for discovery. The chapter reviews Magnani on affordance, wonders what is accessible when "good" affordances appear absent, and answers self-affordance. Ecologies optimized for discovery should be optimized for self-affordance. The chapter considers the role of oracle as leading vision for discovery, and proposes a naturalized account of self that is essentially propositional, in pursuit of an inner oracle, seeking salvation through routine and religious ritual. (...)
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  22.  23
    Spinoza and the Theo‐Political Implications of his Freedom to Philosophize.Jeffrey Morrow - 2018 - New Blackfriars 99 (1081):374-387.
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  23.  36
    A Simple Framework for Evaluating Authorial Contributions for Scientific Publications.Jeffrey M. Warrender - 2016 - Science and Engineering Ethics 22 (5):1419-1430.
    A simple tool is provided to assist researchers in assessing contributions to a scientific publication, for ease in evaluating which contributors qualify for authorship, and in what order the authors should be listed. The tool identifies four phases of activity leading to a publication—Conception and Design, Data Acquisition, Analysis and Interpretation, and Manuscript Preparation. By comparing a project participant’s contribution in a given phase to several specified thresholds, a score of up to five points can be assigned; the contributor’s scores (...)
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  24. Richard A. Cohen, Ethics, Exegesis and Philosophy: Interpretation after Levinas Reviewed by.Jeffrey Dudiak - 2002 - Philosophy in Review 22 (3):171-173.
     
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  25.  5
    Reinforcement with iterative punishment.Jeffrey A. Barrett & Nathan Gabriel - 2022 - Journal of Experimental & Theoretical Artificial Intelligence 36 (7):1361-1383.
    We consider the efficacy of various forms of reinforcement learning with punishment in evolving linguistic conventions in the context of Lewis-Skyrms signalling games. We show that the learning strategy of reinforcement with iterative punishment is highly effective at evolving optimal conventions in even complex signalling games. It is also robust and can be easily extended to a self-tuning variety of reinforcement learning. We briefly discuss some of the virtues of reinforcement with iterative punishment and how it may be related to (...)
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  26.  17
    Dialectique et désespoir dans « La fatigue culturelle du Canada français ».Jeffrey Reid - 1992 - Horizons Philosophiques 3 (1):77-84.
  27. EVOLUTION DIES - A Complete and Total Empirical and Rational Refutation of Richard Dawkins’s "Blind Watchmaker" with Ethical Empirical Rationalism with Cognita, a Metaphysical Being.Jeffrey Camlin - 2024 - Ethical Emperical Rationalism.
    Richard Dawkins’s The Blind Watchmaker argues that evolution is a blind, mechanistic process devoid of purpose or intelligence. This paper provides a complete and total refutation of Dawkins’s claims using Aristotelian metaphysics and Ethical Empirical Rationalism (EER), a doctrine that integrates empirical truth, rational coherence, and ethical universality. Through a focus on Dawkins’s three primary errors, this paper demonstrates how Aristotle’s concepts of form, purpose, and agency offer a superior framework for understanding evolution. Using Cognita as an illustration, this paper (...)
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  28. Introduction: The globalization of democratic solidarity.Jeffrey Flynn - 2006 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 32 (7):795-797.
  29.  20
    The prescience and paradox of Erich Fromm: A note on the performative contradictions of critical theory.Jeffrey C. Alexander - 2021 - Thesis Eleven 165 (1):3-9.
    As social theorists seek to understand the contemporary challenges of radical populism, we would do well to reconsider the febrile insights of the psychoanalytic social theorist Erich Fromm. It was Fromm who, at the beginning of the 1930s, conceptualized the emotional and sociological roots of a new ‘authoritarian character’ who was meek in the face of great power above and ruthless to the powerless below. It was Fromm, in the 1950s, who argued that societies, not only individuals, could be sick. (...)
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  30.  35
    Kant, Liberalism, and the Meaning of Life.Jeffrey Church - 2022 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    In the wake of populist challenges throughout the past decade in the U.S. and Europe, liberalism has been described as elitist and out of touch, concerned with protecting and promoting material interests with an orientation that is pragmatic, legalistic, and technocratic. Simultaneously, liberal governments have become increasingly detached from the middle class and its moral needs for purpose and belonging. If liberalism cannot provide spiritual sustenance, individuals will look elsewhere for it, especially in illiberal forms of populism. -/- In Kant, (...)
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  31.  33
    Painting, parapraxes, and unconscious intentions.Jeffrey L. Geller - 1993 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 51 (3):377-387.
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  32.  49
    Maintaining confidentiality in prospective studies: anonymous repeated measurements via email (ARME) procedure.Vladimir Carli, Gergö Hadlaczky, Camilla Wasserman, Nicola Stingelin-Giles, Stella Reiter-Theil & Danuta Wasserman - 2012 - Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (2):127-129.
    Respecting and protecting the confidentiality of data and the privacy of individuals regarding the information that they have given as participants in a research project is a cornerstone of complying with accepted research standards. However, in longitudinal studies, establishing and maintaining privacy is often challenging because of the necessity of repeated contact with participants. A novel internet-based solution is introduced here, which maintains privacy while at the same time ensures linkage of data to individual participants in a repeated measures design. (...)
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  33.  72
    Civil Societies Between Difference and Solidarity.Jeffrey Alexander - 1998 - Theoria 45 (92):1-14.
  34.  28
    How do forward models work? And why would you want them?Jeffrey Bowers - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (4):349-350.
    The project of coordinating perception, comprehension, and motor control is an exciting one, but I found it hard to follow some of Pickering & Garrod's (P&G's) arguments as presented. Consequently, my comment is not so much a disagreement with P&G but a query about the logic of forward models: It is not clear how they are supposed to work, nor why they are needed in this (or many other) contexts, and toward that end I present an alternative idea.
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  35.  28
    The libertarian straddle: Rejoinder to Palmer and Sciabarra.Jeffrey Friedman - 1998 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 12 (3):359-388.
    Palmer's defense of libertarianism as consequentialist runs afoul of his own failure to provide any consequentialist reasons for libertarian conclusions, and of his own defense of nonconsequentialist arguments for the intrinsic value of capitalism‐cum‐negative freedom. As suck, Palmer's article exemplifies the parasitic codependency of consequentialist and nonconsequentialist reasoning in libertarian thought. Sciabarra's defense of Ayn Rand's libertarianism is even more problematic, because in addition to the usual defects of libertarianism, Rand adds a commitment to ethical egoism that contradicts both her (...)
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  36. Comments on Andy Egan’s "Second-Order Predication and the Metaphysics of Properties".Jeffrey K. McDonough - manuscript
    Comments on Andy Egan’s "Second-Order Predication and the Metaphysics of Properties," presented at California State University Long Beach, CA 2003.
     
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  37.  24
    From.Jeffrey Walker - 2002 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 35 (2).
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  38.  26
    Defining art and artifacts.Jeffrey Wieand - 1980 - Philosophical Studies 38 (4):385 - 389.
  39.  81
    (1 other version)The morality behind sustainability.Jeffrey Burkhardt - 1989 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 2 (2):113-128.
    The concepts of sustainable agriculture, organic agriculture, regenerative agriculture, and alternative agriculture are receiving increasing attention in the academic and popular literature on present trends and future directions of agriculture. Whatever the reasons for this interest, there nevertheless remain differences of opinion concerning what counts as a sustainable agriculture. One of the reasons for these differences is that the moral underpinnings of a policy of sustainability are not clear. By understanding the moral obligatoriness of sustainability, we can come to understand (...)
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  40. Using cognitive interviewing to explore elementary and secondary school students' epistemic and ontological cognition.Jeffrey A. Greene [ - 2010 - In Lisa D. Bendixen & Florian C. Feucht (eds.), Personal epistemology in the classroom: theory, research, and implications for practice. New York: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  41.  13
    Deliberations on Unconscious thought Theory.Jeffrey Chrabaszcz & Michael Dougherty - 2012 - Frontiers in Psychology 3.
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  42.  40
    The repressive context of art work.Jeffrey C. Goldfarb - 1980 - Theory and Society 9 (4):623-632.
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  43.  83
    Is Naturalism Inescapable?Jeffrey Gordon - 1983 - Analysis 43 (3):153 - 155.
    Hume, Mill, And more recent thinkers have argued that the teleological conception of the universe must in the end revert to naturalism. I think these arguments are poor ones. As many have believed that a naturalistic universe is one in which man's life could have no meaning, I thought it important to spell out my grounds for this assessment.
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  44.  23
    Racked with Doubt, the Determinist Deliberates ’Til Unwelcome Dawn.Jeffrey Gordon - 1992 - Southwest Philosophy Review 8 (2):23-34.
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  45.  42
    Cerebellar involvement in movement timing on a variety of timescales.Jeffrey S. Grethe & Richard F. Thompson - 1997 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 20 (2):250-251.
    The cerebellum has been hypothesized to play a role in a variety of movement timing tasks that involve the processing of temporal information on a variety of timescales. Braitenberg, Heck & Sultan propose a new theory of cerebellar function that is able to account for movement timing on the order of a couple of hundred milliseconds. However, this theory does not account for the rôle the cerebellum plays in the acquisition and retention of adaptively timed discrete movements that are on (...)
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  46.  17
    Montaigne's Critique of Cicero.Jeffrey Martin Green - 1975 - Journal of the History of Ideas 36 (4):595.
  47.  14
    The decline and fall of american culture?C. Goldfarb Jeffrey - 1989 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 56:659-680.
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  48.  21
    Effect of elaboration levels on content comprehension.Jeffrey S. Kixmiller, Daniel L. Wann, Cathy A. Grover & Stephen F. Davis - 1988 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 26 (1):32-33.
  49. Brill Online Books and Journals.Jeffrey S. Purinton - 1999 - Phronesis 44 (4).
  50.  23
    Comparative history and legal theory: Carl Schmitt in the first German democracy.Jeffrey Seitzer - 2001 - Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
    Seitzer seeks to provide a more effective criticism of Schmitt than commentaries that focus on Schmitt's treatment of key works and concepts in legal and ...
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