Results for 'Jennifer Karyn Reid'

947 found
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  1.  52
    Mediating the Word: St. Patrick, The Trivium, and Christian Communication.Jennifer Karyn Reid - 2009 - Mediatropes 2 (1):84-116.
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  2.  71
    New NSF And NIH Responsible Conduct of Research (RCR) Guidelines.Jennifer McCafferty, Reid Cushman, Kenneth W. Goodman, Paul Braunschweiger & Robin N. Fiore - 2012 - Teaching Ethics 12 (2):23-30.
  3.  39
    Editorial. Teaching about climate change in the midst of ecological crisis: Responsibilities, challenges, and possibilities.Jennifer Bleazby, Gilbert Burgh, Simone Thornton, Mary Graham, Alan Reid & Ilana Finefter-Rosenbluh - 2023 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 55 (10):1087–1095.
    One challenge posed by climate change education is that, despite the scientific consensus on human induced climate change, the issue is controversial and politicised. A recent poll conducted in the USA revealed that 45% of respondents did not believe that human activity is a key cause of climate change, while 8.3% denied that climate change was occurring at all. The poll also found that those with conservative political beliefs were far more likely to deny anthropogenic climate change. The controversial nature (...)
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  4.  9
    Empedocles in Sicily.Heather L. Reid, Jennifer Ferriss-Hill & Jessica Decker (eds.) - 2024 - Parnassos Press – Fonte Aretusa.
    Empedocles of Akragas (modern Agrigento) is arguably Sicily’s most important Greek intellectual. He was considered not only an influential philosopher, but also a poet, an orator, a doctor, and even a god. As a philosopher, Empedocles focused on reality, tracing it to the composition and decomposition of four immutable elements: water, air, fire, and earth, which are moved by two opposing forces, Love and Hate. He is said to have been an enemy of the aristocracy despite his noble birth, and (...)
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  5.  4
    Book Review: Aging Our Way: Lessons for Living from 85 and Beyond. [REVIEW]Jennifer Reid Keene - 2012 - Gender and Society 26 (6):956-957.
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  6. Reid's foundation for the primary/secondary quality distinction.Jennifer McKitrick - 2002 - Philosophical Quarterly 52 (209):478-494.
    Reid offers an under-appreciated account of the primary/secondary quality distinction. He gives sound reasons for rejecting the views of Locke, Boyle, Galileo and others, and presents a better alternative, according to which the distinction is epistemic rather than metaphysical. Primary qualities, for Reid, are qualities whose intrinsic natures can be known through sensation. Secondary qualities, on the other hand, are unknown causes of sensations. Some may object that Reid's view is internally inconsistent, or unacceptably relativistic. However, a (...)
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  7.  54
    Thomas Reid's theory of perception - by Ryan Nichols. [REVIEW]Jennifer Mckitrick - 2008 - Philosophical Books 49 (3):257-261.
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  8.  56
    Reflection and the Stability of Belief: Essays on Descartes, Hume and Reid[REVIEW]Jennifer Smalligan Marušić - 2013 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 21 (4):800-803.
  9. Truth, trust and medicine.Jennifer C. Jackson - 2001 - New York: Routledge.
    Truth, Trust and Medicine investigates the notion of trust and honesty in medicine, and questions whether honesty and openness are of equal importance in maintaining the trust necessary in doctor-patient relationships. Jackson begins with the premise that those in the medical profession have a basic duty to be worthy of the trust their patients place in them. Yet questions of the ethics of withholding information and consent and covert surveillance in care units persist. This book boldly addresses these questions which (...)
     
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  10.  18
    Introduction.Jennifer Lackey - 2006 - In Jennifer Lackey & Ernest Sosa (eds.), The epistemology of testimony. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 1-24.
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  11. Substitution and simple sentences.Jennifer M. Saul - 1997 - Analysis 57 (2):102–108.
  12. Memory as a generative epistemic source.Jennifer Lackey - 2005 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 70 (3):636–658.
    It is widely assumed that memory has only the capacity to preserve epistemic features that have been generated by other sources. Specifically, if S knows (justifiedly believes/rationally believes) that p via memory at T2, then it is argued that (i) S must have known (justifiedly believed/rationally believed) that p when it was originally acquired at Tl, and (ii) S must have acquired knowledge that p (justification with respect to p/rationality with respect to p) at Tl via a non-memorial source. Thus, (...)
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  13. Moody Minds Distempered: Essays on Melancholy and Depression.Jennifer Radden (ed.) - 2009 - Oup Usa.
    In Moody Minds Distempered philosopher Jennifer Radden assembles several decades of her research on melancholy and depression. The chapters are ordered into three categories: those about intellectual and medical history of melancholy and depression; those that emphasize aspects of the moral, psychological and medical features of these concepts; and finally, those that explore the sad and apprehensive mood states long associated with melancholy and depressive subjectivity. A newly written introduction maps the conceptual landscape, and draws out the analytic and (...)
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  14.  12
    Contemporary Portrayals of Aushwitz: Philosophical Challenges.Alan Rosenberg, James R. Watson & Detlef Linke (eds.) - 2000 - Humanity Books.
    What happens when an entire group of human beings is excluded from the definition of humanity? How is the power of language used to distort reality? What happens when a comprehensive economic plan is based on theft, brainwashing, slave labor, and murder? These and other philosophical questions about the Holocaust are contemplated in Contemporary Portraits of Auschwitz. In 1988, a group of philosophers who had survived the Holocaust, or had known people at the Auschwitz death camp, decided to found an (...)
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  15. (1 other version)Hilbert.Constance Reid - 1972 - Philosophy of Science 39 (1):106-108.
     
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  16.  55
    Modelling the effects of semantic ambiguity in word recognition.Jennifer M. Rodd, M. Gareth Gaskell & William D. Marslen-Wilson - 2004 - Cognitive Science 28 (1):89-104.
    Most words in English are ambiguous between different interpretations; words can mean different things in different contexts. We investigate the implications of different types of semantic ambiguity for connectionist models of word recognition. We present a model in which there is competition to activate distributed semantic representations. The model performs well on the task of retrieving the different meanings of ambiguous words, and is able to simulate data reported by Rodd, Gaskell, and Marslen‐Wilson [J. Mem. Lang. 46 (2002) 245] on (...)
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  17.  77
    Contingent transcranialism and deep functional cognitive integration: The case of human emotional ontogenesis.Jennifer Greenwood - 2013 - Philosophical Psychology 26 (3):420-436.
    Contingent transcranialists claim that the physical mechanisms of mind are not exclusively intracranial and that genuine cognitive systems can extend into cognizers' physical and socio-cultural environments. They further claim that extended cognitive systems must include the deep functional integration of external environmental resources with internal neural resources. They have found it difficult, however, to explicate the precise nature of such deep functional integration and provide compelling examples of it. Contingent intracranialists deny that extracranial resources can be components of genuine extended (...)
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  18.  20
    Why Justice?: Introduction to the Special Issue on Entanglements of Science, Ethics, and Justice.Jennifer R. Fishman & Laura Mamo - 2013 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 38 (2):159-175.
    This special issue of Science, Technology, & Human Values assembles papers that consider relations among science, ethics, and justice. The papers are drawn from a 2011 National Science Foundation-sponsored workshop that brought together interdisciplinary scholars to consider, incorporate, and attend to the meanings, uses, and social consequences of ethical questions and justice ideals in technoscientific projects. The papers included in this special issue examine key areas that emerged from this workshop, including public participation, the production of knowledge, what counts as (...)
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  19. Recent work: Moral particularism.Jennifer Flynn - 2010 - Analysis 70 (1):140-148.
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  20. Moral Principles and Social Values.Jennifer Trusted - 1987 - Routledge.
    First published in 1987. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
     
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  21.  41
    Feminist originalism: Intersectionality and the politics of reading.Jennifer C. Nash - 2016 - Feminist Theory 17 (1):3-20.
    This article examines the growing body of commemorative feminist work on intersectionality – the myriad journals and books that have marked intersectionality’s twentieth anniversary and celebrated the analytic’s field-defining status and cross-disciplinary circulation. I argue that this commemorative scholarship is marked by its own genre conventions, including the emergence of originalism, an investment in returning to the ‘inaugural’ intersectional texts – namely Crenshaw’s two articles (1989, 1991) – and assessing later feminist work on intersectionality by its fidelity to those texts. (...)
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  22.  65
    Excellence‐Prior Eudaimonism.Jennifer A. Herdt - 2019 - Journal of Religious Ethics 47 (1):68-93.
    Eudaimonism is often regarded as egoistic. If it recommends that agents pursue their own good because it is their own good, it is guilty as charged. But excellence‐prior eudaimonism offers a non‐egoistic alternative to this welfare‐prior eudaimonism. Excellence‐prior eudaimonism recommends that an agent live in a way that is in fact good for the agent, but it does not regard the agent’s own good as necessarily that for the sake of which the agent acts, nor does it regard living well (...)
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  23.  37
    Sensors and Sensing Practices: Reworking Experience across Entities, Environments, and Technologies.Jennifer Gabrys - 2019 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 44 (5):723-736.
    This editorial examines how sensing practices are transforming through proliferating sensor technologies and altered sensing relations. Rather than engage with sensing as a project of the human mind or body as usually delineated within sensory classifications, this overview of sensors and sensing practices documents how sensing entities are emerging that are composed of shifting ensembles of multiple humans and more-than-humans, environments and technologies, politics and practices. By decoupling sensing from its exclusive human orientation, the editorial and collection demonstrate how reworked (...)
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  24.  35
    Pathologically divided minds, synchronic unity and models of self.Jennifer Radden - 1998 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 5 (5-6):658-672.
    In this paper, I explore the implications of adopting one model of self rather than another in respect to one particular feature of our mental life. The need to explain synchronic unity in normal subjectivity, and also to explain the apparent and puzzling absence of synchronic unity in certain symptoms of severe mental disorder, I show, becomes more pressing with one particular model. But in the process of developing that explanation we learn something about subjectivity and perhaps also something about (...)
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  25.  9
    Theoretical Perspectives on Social Organization.Jennifer Fewell - 2009 - In Jürgen Gadau & Jennifer Fewell (eds.), Organization of Insect Societies: From Genome to Sociocomplexity. Harvard. pp. 433.
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  26.  21
    Embryo Donation for Pregnancy: Psychology, Philosophy and Policy.Jennifer Flynn - 2013 - Journal of Clinical Research and Bioethics 4 (S1).
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  27. Into the darkness: losing identity with dementia.Jennifer Radden & Fordyce & M. Joan - 2005 - In Julian C. Hughes, Stephen J. Louw & Steven R. Sabat (eds.), Dementia: Mind, Meaning, and the Person. Oxford University Press.
     
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  28.  50
    Natural selection or shareability?Jennifer J. Freyd - 1990 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 (4):732-734.
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  29. Bligh's Exploration of Australia's East Coast.Jennifer Gall - 2011 - Agora (History Teachers' Association of Victoria) 46 (2):37.
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  30.  11
    Imitation and Design.Reid Maccallum & William Blissett - 1954 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 13 (2):272-272.
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  31.  15
    Predicting adult relationship quality and satisfaction from teen dating experiences.Jennifer Puth, Tara Kocek & James Donnelly - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  32.  29
    Knowledge in action.Jennifer Hornsby - 2007 - In .
    Book synopsis: The book illustrates the concept of action in three different contexts - the justification of actions, people's life history, and pragmatism. The special feature of this book is that a comprehensive view of this kind marks a departure from the atomistic approach of action theory, which in itself raises a number of questions. If actions are not justified by mental states, how can persons then act for reasons? How can persons' actions over time be described, and what is (...)
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  33. Enhancing autonomy in paid surrogacy.Jennifer Damelio & Kelly Sorensen - 2008 - Bioethics 22 (5):269–277.
    The gestational surrogate – and her economic and educational vulnerability in particular – is the focus of many of the most persistent worries about paid surrogacy. Those who employ her, and those who broker and organize her services, usually have an advantage over her in resources and information. That asymmetry exposes her to the possibility of exploitation and abuse. Accordingly, some argue for banning paid surrogacy. Others defend legal permission on grounds of surrogate autonomy, but often retain concerns about the (...)
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  34.  13
    The Vice of the Tough Tattoo.Jennifer Baker - 2012 - In Fritz Allhoff & Robert Arp (eds.), Tattoos – Philosophy for Everyone. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 181–192.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Of Ouija Boards and Bar Owners1 Bad Reasons for Condemning Tattoos Some Moral Compliments My Complaint Traditional Virtue Ethics Virtue Ethics and Tattoos Tough Tattoos … What Lies Beneath.
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  35.  11
    The Works of Lucy Hutchinson: Volume I: The Translation of Lucretius.Reid Barbour & David Norbrook (eds.) - 2011 - Oxford University Press.
    Volume I in a four-volume edition of the writings of Lucy Hutchinson, which have never before been published in a collected edition. Hutchinson's translation of Lucretius's classical epic De rerum natura is provided alongside the Latin text she used. The detailed commentary and full introduction illuminate the translation and its contexts.
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  36.  15
    Colonial Geographies, Black Geographies, and Bioethics.Jennifer Mccurdy - 2022 - Hastings Center Report 52 (S1):66-68.
    Hastings Center Report, Volume 52, Issue S1, Page S66-S68, March‐April 2022.
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  37.  60
    International Reflections on Individual Autonomy and Corporate EffectivenessPeople in Corporations: Ethical Responsibilities and Corporate Effectiveness.Jennifer Mills Moore, Georges Enderle, Brenda Almond & Antonio Argandona - 1993 - Business Ethics Quarterly 3 (2):197.
  38.  5
    Law and Liberalism II.Jennifer Nedelsky - 1988 - Faculty of Law, University of Toronto.
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  39.  8
    Redeeming Beowulf. The Heroic Idiom as Marker of Quality in Old English Poetry.Jennifer Neville - 2014 - In Heike Sahm & Victor Millet (eds.), Narration and Hero: Recounting the Deeds of Heroes in Literature and Art of the Early Medieval Period. De Gruyter. pp. 45-70.
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  40. Human Rights.Jennifer Szende - 2011 - In Deen K. Chatterjee (ed.), Encyclopedia of Global Justice. Springer.
  41.  15
    Who's/whose at risk? answerability and the critical possibilities of classroom discourse.Jennifer A. Vadeboncoeur & Allan Luke ‡ - 2004 - Critical Discourse Studies 1 (2):201-223.
    Our aim in this article is twofold. First, we challenge the essentialized notion of adolescents and young people as perpetually driven to resist the authority of adults. At the same time, we disrupt linguistic conceptions of adolescent discourse, along with the discourse of youth at risk, by analyzing a transcript of classroom discourse that reflects an exchange between a highly regarded and well liked preservice teacher and his students. This representative transcript highlights the preservice teacher's ability to query, without a (...)
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  42. Water Conservation Planning Guide For British Columbia's Communities.Jennifer Wong & Susanne Porter - forthcoming - Polis.
     
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  43.  34
    Commentary on Jonathan A. Newman, Gary Varner, and Stefan Linquist: Defending Biodiversity: Environmental Science and Ethics, chapter 11: should biodiversity be conserved for its aesthetic value?Jennifer Welchman - 2020 - Biology and Philosophy 35 (1):13.
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  44.  33
    Uterine Transplantation: Ethics in Light of Recent Successes.Jennifer Flynn & Naila Ramji - 2019 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 12 (1):1-23.
    We argue that strong moral objections to widespread implementation of uterine transplantation persist despite recent live births following the procedure. These objections relate not only to the serious medical risk to which live donors are currently subject but also to the strength of pronatalistic and biologistic social forces. We explore medical risk in light of various factors and treat questions relating uterine transplantation to gestational surrogacy.
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  45.  88
    The Self and Its Moods in Depression and Mania.Jennifer Radden - 2013 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 20 (7-8):7-8.
    This discussion is about the moods characteristic of depressive and manic states. Moods are distinguished from the emotions they often accompany, and the relationship between these less and more cognitive, and seemingly less and more intentional, states is provided preliminary clarification. Epistemic deficiencies identified here, when combined with differences of quality and quantity in the moods and motivations that beset the depression and mania sufferer, seem likely to hinder self-knowledge and self-integration. These deficiencies, it is argued, may help explain why (...)
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  46.  41
    Good medical ethics, justice and provincial globalism.Jennifer Prah Ruger - 2015 - Journal of Medical Ethics 41 (1):103-106.
  47. Extending statistical learning farther and further: Long-distance dependencies, and individual differences in statistical learning and language.Jennifer B. Misyak & Morten H. Christiansen - 2007 - In McNamara D. S. & Trafton J. G. (eds.), Proceedings of the 29th Annual Cognitive Science Society. Cognitive Science Society. pp. 1307--1312.
  48. Practising to Know: Practicalism and Confucian Philosophy.Stephen Hetherington & Karyn Lai - 2012 - Philosophy 87 (3):375-393.
    For a while now, there has been much conceptual discussion about the respective natures of knowledge-that and knowledge-how, along with the intellectualist idea that knowledge-how is really a kind of knowledge-that. Gilbert Ryle put in place most of the terms that have so far been distinctive of that debate, when he argued for knowledge-how's conceptual distinctness from knowledge-that. But maybe those terms should be supplemented, expanding the debate. In that spirit, the conceptual option of practicalism has recently entered the fray. (...)
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  49.  39
    Introduction.Jennifer Radden & Kelso Cratsley - 2019 - In Kelso Cratsley & Jennifer Radden (eds.), Mental Health as Public Health: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Ethics of Prevention. San Diego, CA: Elsevier.
    In this introduction to the edited volume, we briefly describe some of the current challenges faced by public mental health initiatives, at both the national and global level. We also include several general remarks on interdisciplinary methodology in public mental health ethics, followed by short descriptions of the chapters included in the volume.
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  50.  17
    The Autonomy of Technology: Do Courts Control Technology or Do They Just Legitimize Its Social Acceptance?Jennifer Chandler - 2007 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 27 (5):339-348.
    This article draws on the suggestion that modern technology is “autonomous” in that our social control mechanisms are unable to control technology and instead merely adapt society to integrate new technologies. In this article, I suggest that common law judges tend systematically to support the integration of novel technologies into society. For example, courts sometimes require parties seeking compensation for serious injuries to submit to medical technologies to which the parties object for genuine reasons of fear or moral objection. Where (...)
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