Results for 'Jennifer Wineke'

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  1.  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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  2. The meta-ethical grounding of our moral beliefs: Evidence for meta-ethical pluralism.Jennifer C. Wright, Piper T. Grandjean & Cullen B. McWhite - 2013 - Philosophical Psychology 26 (3):336-361.
    Recent scholarship (Goodwin & Darley, 2008) on the meta-ethical debate between objectivism and relativism has found people to be mixed: they are objectivists about some issues, but relativists about others. The studies discussed here sought to explore this further. Study 1 explored whether giving people the ability to identify moral issues for themselves would reveal them to be more globally objectivist. Study 2 explored people's meta-ethical commitments more deeply, asking them to provide verbal explanations for their judgments. This revealed that (...)
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  3. 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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  4.  55
    Varieties of Moral Personality: Ethics and Psychological Realism.Jennifer Whiting - 1993 - Philosophical Review 102 (3):435.
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  5. Theory Without Theories: Well-Being, Ethics, and Medicine.Jennifer Hawkins - 2021 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 46 (6):656-683.
    Medical ethics would be better if people were taught to think more clearly about well-being or the concept of what is good for a person. Yet for a variety of reasons, bioethicists have generally paid little attention to this concept. Here, I argue, first, that focusing on general theories of welfare is not useful for practical medical ethics. I argue, second, for what I call the “theory-without-theories approach” to welfare in practical contexts. The first element of this approach is a (...)
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  6.  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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  7. Water Conservation Planning Guide For British Columbia's Communities.Jennifer Wong & Susanne Porter - forthcoming - Polis.
     
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  8.  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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  9. 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.
  10.  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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  11.  77
    Refuting The Whole System? Hume's Attack on Popular Religion in The Natural History of Religion.Jennifer Smalligan Marušić - 2012 - Philosophical Quarterly 62 (249):715-736.
    There is reason for genuine puzzlement about Hume's aim in ‘The Natural History of Religion’. Some commentators take the work to be merely a causal investigation into the psychological processes and environmental conditions that are likely to give rise to the first religions, an investigation that has no significant or straightforward implications for the rationality or justification of religious belief. Others take the work to constitute an attack on the rationality and justification of religious belief in general. In contrast to (...)
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  12.  50
    Truth in philosophy: a conceptual engineering approach.Jennifer Nado - 2024 - Asian Journal of Philosophy 3 (1):1-22.
    The focus of this paper will be to examine the implications that a “practical” approach to conceptual engineering might have for the “traditional” conception of philosophy as uncovering truths about phenomena of philosophical interest. In doing so, I will be building on the ideas of a figure that many take to be the first major philosopher to write on conceptual engineering: Rudolf Carnap. Though the current wave of interest in conceptual engineering goes back less than a decade, many conceptual engineers (...)
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  13.  93
    Consciousness in action.Jennifer Church - 1998 - Philosophical Review 109 (3):465-469.
    Hurley’s is a difficult book to work through—partly because of its length and the complexity of its arguments, but also because each of the ten essays of which it is composed has a rather different starting point and focus, and because few of her arguments achieve real closure. Essay 2 discusses competing interpretations of Kant, essay 4 articulates nonconceptual forms of self-consciousness, essay 5 offers fresh interpretations of commissurotomy patients’ behavior, essay 6 develops an objection to Wittgenstein on rule following, (...)
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  14.  6
    Acknowledgments.Jennifer Pitts - 2007 - In A Turn to Empire. Cambridge University Press.
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  15.  13
    The Grammar of Justice.Jennifer Radden - 1990 - Philosophical Review 99 (3):463.
  16.  24
    Affect, Cognition, and Responsibility.Jennifer A. Rosner - 2003 - Metascience 12 (2):210-213.
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  17.  31
    For You Alone: Emmanuel Levinas and the Answerable Life. By Terry A. Veling.Jennifer E. Rosato - 2016 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 90 (1):167-170.
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  18. Part III. Breaching future horizons : discovering human insufficiency with Marion.Jennifer Rosato - 2017 - In Antonio Calcagno, Steve G. Lofts, Rachel Bath & Kathryn Lawson (eds.), _Breached Horizons: The Philosophy of Jean-Luc Marion_, eds. Rachel Bath, Kathryn Lawson, Steven G. Lofts, Antonio Calcagno. New York; London: Rowman & Littlefield International.
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  19.  95
    Tracking instability in our philosophical judgments: Is it intuitive?Jennifer Wright - 2013 - Philosophical Psychology 26 (4):485-501.
    Skepticism about the epistemic value of intuition in theoretical and philosophical inquiry fueled by the empirical discovery of irrational bias (e.g., the order effect) in people's judgments has recently been challenged by research suggesting that people can introspectively track intuitional instability. The two studies reported here build upon this, the first by demonstrating that people are able to introspectively track instability that was experimentally induced by introducing conflicting expert opinion about certain cases, and the second by demonstrating that it was (...)
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  20.  58
    Academic Freedom.Jennifer Lackey (ed.) - 2018 - Oxford University Press.
    Recent years have seen growing concerns about threats to academic freedom in light of the changing norms of and demands on the university. This volume brings together contributions from leading philosophers about the latest issues - ranging from safe spaces to social media controversies - and traditional challenges for academic freedom.
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  21.  32
    A Sign of the Times.Jennifer Cramer & John M. Spartz - 2006 - Semiotics:202-217.
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  22.  40
    Paul Horwich , Truth—Meaning—Reality . Reviewed by.Jennifer Davis - 2011 - Philosophy in Review 31 (5):352-353.
  23.  19
    Disentangling prevalence induced biases in medical image decision-making.Jennifer S. Trueblood, Quentin Eichbaum, Adam C. Seegmiller, Charles Stratton, Payton O'Daniels & William R. Holmes - 2021 - Cognition 212 (C):104713.
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  24.  8
    Bibliography.Jennifer Pitts - 2007 - In A Turn to Empire. Cambridge University Press. pp. 343-362.
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  25.  18
    Five. James and John Stuart Mill: The Development of Imperial Liberalism in Britain.Jennifer Pitts - 2007 - In A Turn to Empire. Cambridge University Press. pp. 123-162.
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  26.  7
    Notes.Jennifer Pitts - 2007 - In A Turn to Empire. Cambridge University Press. pp. 259-342.
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  27.  59
    Tickle me, I think I might be dreaming! Sensory attenuation, self-other distinction, and predictive processing in lucid dreams.Jennifer M. Windt, Dominic L. Harkness & Bigna Lenggenhager - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  28.  61
    How Much Is That Mammoth in the Window?Jennifer Welchman - 2017 - Ethics, Policy and Environment 20 (1):41-43.
    T.J. Kasperbauer’s, ‘Should we Bring Back the Passenger Pigeon? The Ethics of De-extinction’ is a timely contribution to the small but growing literature on the ethical issues facing Conservation B...
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  29.  43
    Affect Theory and Breast Cancer Memoirs: Rescripting Fears of Death and Dying in the Anthropocene.Jennifer Mae Hamilton - 2021 - Body and Society 27 (4):3-29.
    Re-evaluating dominant cultural narratives around dying and death is central to new critiques of individualism and human exceptionalism. As conceptual tools for theorizing the end of the individual proliferate, the affective dimensions of this project are often overlooked, especially as they pertain to individual subjects. In contrast, a significant number of iconic queer and feminist thinkers have suffered breast cancer and written memoirs representing the subjective experience of confronting mortality. This article identifies the affective orientations towards one’s own mortality as (...)
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  30.  6
    What are rules and laws?Jennifer Boothroyd - 2016 - Minneapolis: Lerner Publications.
    Following Rules and Laws -- Making Rules and Laws -- Breaking Rules and Laws.
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  31.  17
    The Animal Inside: Essays at the Intersection of Philosophical Anthropology and Animal Studies.Jennifer Clements - 2019 - Journal of Animal Ethics 9 (2):234-235.
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  32.  15
    Alexander the Great and Egypt: History, Art, Tradition. Edited by Volker Grieb; Krzysztof Nawotka; and Agnieszka Wojciechowska.Jennifer Finn - 2021 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 136 (2).
    Alexander the Great and Egypt: History, Art, Tradition. Edited by Volker Grieb; Krzysztof Nawotka; and Agnieszka Wojciechowska. Philippika, vol. 74. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2014. Pp. 458, illus. €83.
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  33.  37
    Who Wants to Know?Jennifer Nado - 2019 - Oxford Studies in Epistemology 6.
    This chapter argues that professional inquirers, including professional philosophers, are subject to special epistemic obligations which require them to meet higher standards than those that are required for knowing. Perhaps the most obvious examples come from the experimental sciences, where professionals are required to employ rigorous methodological procedures to reduce the risk of error and bias; procedures such as double-blinding are obligatory in many experimental contexts, but no parallel bias-reducing measures are generally expected in ordinary epistemic activity. To expect such (...)
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  34.  23
    “Forgettings That Want to be Remembered”: museums and hauntings.Jennifer Walklate - 2023 - Angelaki 28 (6):71-83.
    This paper hypothesises that museums are fundamentally haunted, and hauntological, institutions, and argues that understanding the spectre is necessary to understanding the true position and potential of the museum as a cultural form. In doing so, the paper will address what precisely spectres are, and what hauntology is, before discussing how museums are haunted and hauntological through their relation to memory, anxiety, and the unheimliche. Ultimately, the key argument and conclusion of this paper is that understanding and accepting the museum’s (...)
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  35.  38
    An Existential-Phenomenological Investigation of Women’s Experience of Becoming Less Obsessed with their Bodily Appearance.Jennifer K. Kirby - 2016 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 16 (sup1):1-15.
    This study investigated women’s lived experience of becoming less obsessed with their bodily appearance. Written narrative accounts were collected from seven women co-participants and a phenomenological analysis of these descriptive protocols was then performed in order to reveal the prereflective structure of the focal phenomenon, seven essential constituents of which emerged. A major goal of this research was to contribute to the undernourished area of phenomenological research regarding the experience of body image.
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  36.  24
    One Woman Helping Another: Egg Donation as a Case of Relational Work.Jennifer Haylett - 2012 - Politics and Society 40 (2):223-247.
    California is the global hub for assisted reproductive technology practices, including egg donation. The rise of egg donation in the United States is surprising given the cultural context linking genetics and motherhood and rejecting the commodification of reproduction. Scholars in the hostile worlds camp have grappled with the relationship between intimacy and economics, yet employing this theory to explain the increase in egg donation is unsatisfactory. The concept of relational work, developed by Viviana Zelizer, provides scholars with a robust analytical (...)
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  37. Experimental Philosophy 2.0.Jennifer Nado - 2016 - Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 5 (3):159-168.
    I recommend three revisions to experimental philosophy's ‘self-image’ which I suggest will enable experimentalist critics of intuition to evade several important objections to the 'negative' strand of the experimental philosophy research project. First, experimentalists should avoid broad criticisms of ‘intuition’ as a whole, instead drawing a variety of conclusions about a variety of much narrower categories of mental state. Second, experimentalists should state said conclusions in terms of epistemic norms particular to philosophical inquiry, rather than attempting to, for example, deny (...)
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  38.  45
    Solidarity in Dark Times: Arendt and Gadamer on the Politics of Appearance.Jennifer Gaffney - 2018 - Philosophy Compass 13 (12):e12554.
    This essay surveys the theme of solidarity in the respective works of Hans-Georg Gadamer and Hannah Arendt. Recent discourses in continental political philosophy have arrived at an impasse regarding solidarity. On the one hand, solidarities are important for galvanizing historically oppressed peoples against dominant discourses. On the other hand, solidarities that impose similarities in advance run the risk of absorbing difference and becoming exclusionary. Gadamer and Arendt, each in different manners, promise a distinctive approach to discourses on solidarity through their (...)
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  39.  7
    Bibliography.Jennifer Welchman - 1995 - In Dewey's ethical thought. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. pp. 219-224.
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  40.  23
    Living Together: Essays on Aristotle's Ethics.Jennifer Whiting - 2023 - New York, US: OUP Usa.
    This book comprises essays centered on Aristotle’s objectivist conception of eudaimonia, especially the roles played in it by activities of theoretical and practical intellect and the quality of our relationships with one another. Common objections to grounding this conception in the “proper function” of a human being are answered by appeal to the role played by Aristotle’s teleologically driven essentialism. His struggle to reconcile living in accordance with distinctively human virtues with the ideal of living a “divine” contemplative life is (...)
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  41.  49
    Recovery from Sexual Violence and Socially Mediated Dimensions of God’s Grace: Implications for Christian Communities.Jennifer Beste - 2005 - Studies in Christian Ethics 18 (2):89-112.
    How are Christians to understand God’s grace for individuals in the midst of severe trauma, particularly in light of a global epidemic of sexual violence against so many women and children? How does the call to witness to the good news of Christ’s love translate into specific obligations that respond to the needs of sexual abuse survivors? The purpose of this article is to explore these questions in the context of Karl Rahner’s theology of grace. When seeking to understand God’s (...)
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  42. Humanitarian Military Intervention.Jennifer Szende - 2011 - In Deen K. Chatterjee (ed.), Encyclopedia of Global Justice. Springer.
     
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  43. Feminism in philosophy of language: communicative speech acts.Jennifer Hornsby - 2000 - In Miranda Fricker & Jennifer Hornsby (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Feminism in Philosophy. Cambridge University Press. pp. 87–106.
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  44.  27
    Exemplarity Between Tradition and Critique.Jennifer A. Herdt - 2019 - Journal of Religious Ethics 47 (3):552-565.
    Moral exemplarism, which insists on the centrality of particular embodiments of exemplary virtue to the moral life, is currently receiving significant attention within moral philosophy as well as theological and religious ethics. This introductory essay situates the contributions made by this focus issue on moral exemplarity in relation to the history of attention to moral exemplars, the twentieth‐century turn to virtue, philosopher Linda Zagzebski’s exemplarist moral theory, Stanley Hauerwas’s particularist embrace of Christian discipleship, Foucauldian turns to critique and self‐cultivation, and (...)
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  45. Further Reflections: Surrogate Decisionmaking When Significant Mental Capacities are Retained.Jennifer Hawkins - 2021 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 30 (1):192-198.
    Mackenzie Graham has made an important contribution to the literature on decisionmaking for patients with disorders of consciousness. He argues, and I agree, that decisions for unresponsive patients who are known to retain some degree of covert awareness ought to focus on current interests, since such patients likely retain the kinds of mental capacities that in ordinary life command our current respect and attention. If he is right, then it is not appropriate to make decisions for such patients by appealing (...)
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  46. Immediate Judgment and Non-Cognitive Ideas: The Pervasive and Persistent in the Misreading of Kant’s Aesthetic Formalism.Jennifer A. McMahon - 2017 - In Altman Matthew (ed.), Palgrave Kant Handbook. pp. 425-446.
    The key concept in Kant’s aesthetics is “aesthetic reflective judgment,” a critique of which is found in Part 1 of the Critique of the Power of Judgment (1790). It is a critique inasmuch as Kant unravels previous assumptions regarding aesthetic perception. For Kant, the comparative edge of a “judgment” implicates communicability, which in turn gives it a public face; yet “reflection” points to autonomy, and the “aesthetic” shifts the emphasis away from objective properties to the subjective response evoked by the (...)
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  47.  47
    From Bad Pharma to Good Pharma: Aligning Market Forces with Good and Trustworthy Practices through Accreditation, Certification, and Rating.Jennifer E. Miller - 2013 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 41 (3):601-610.
    Could an accreditation, certification, or rating mechanism help the pharmaceutical industry improve both its bioethical performance and its public reputation? Other industries have used such systems to assess, improve, distinguish, and demonstrate the quality of their services, processes, and products. These systems have also helped increase transparency, accountability, stakeholder confidence, and awareness of industry best practices. This article explains how market forces can be harnessed to recognize and promote better bioethical performance by pharmaceutical companies when there are good systems to (...)
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  48.  65
    No Families, No Freedom: Human Flourishing in a Free Society.Jennifer Roback Morse - 1999 - Social Philosophy and Policy 16 (1):290.
    This essay has one simple theme: the family does a very important job that no other institution can do. What is that job? Inside a family, helpless babies are transformed from being self-centered bundles of impulses, desires, and emotions to being adult people capable of social behavior of all kinds. Why is this job important? The family teaches the ability to trust, cooperate, and self-restrain. Neither the free market nor selfgoverning political institutions can survive unless the vast majority of the (...)
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  49.  12
    The ideology of patient information leaflets: a diachronic study.Jennifer Mcmanus - 2009 - Discourse and Communication 3 (1):27-56.
    This study explores society's attitudes towards medicine, as reflected in the language of Patient Information Leaflets, and attempts to explicate how they have changed over the last century. For this purpose, Halliday's transitivity model is employed as a method of discourse analysis in order to carry out a systematic, comparative investigation of the language of early 20th-century PILs and that of their modern equivalents. The study demonstrates how the transitivity choices in the respective samples cumulatively realize a particular `world-view', and (...)
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  50. Beyond Accommodation: Everyday Narratives of Muslim Canadians.Jennifer Selby, Amelie Barras & Lori G. Beaman - unknown
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