Results for 'Katharyn Hogan'

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  1.  77
    Is the machine question the same question as the animal question?Katharyn Hogan - 2017 - Ethics and Information Technology 19 (1):29-38.
  2.  21
    Reflecting and Advancing the Transformation: Catholic Theological Ethics and the Journal of Religious Ethics, 1973–2023.Linda Hogan - 2023 - Journal of Religious Ethics 51 (2):236-261.
    This essay considers how the JRE has engaged Catholic ethics in the last 50 years and how the concerns of Catholic ethics during this period of exceptional change are reflected and developed in the JRE. It discusses the transformation of Catholic ethics by focusing on the transitions: (i) from classical to historical consciousness; (ii) from an essentialist concept of human nature to a dynamic concept of the moral subject; (iii) from abstract to contextual moral reason; and (iv) from a discourse (...)
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  3. How to know unknowable things in themselves.Desmond Hogan - 2009 - Noûs 43 (1):49-63.
  4. Catholic Health Care Institutions: Dinosaurs Awaiting Extinction or Safe Refuge in a Culture of Death.Margaret Monahan Hogan - 2001 - Christian Bioethics 7 (1):163-172.
    Margaret Monahan Hogan; Catholic Health Care Institutions: Dinosaurs Awaiting Extinction or Safe Refuge in a Culture of Death, Christian bioethics: Non-Ecumenic.
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  5. The Presentation of Self in the Age of Social Media: Distinguishing Performances and Exhibitions Online.Bernie Hogan - 2010 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 30 (6):377-386.
    Presentation of self (via Goffman) is becoming increasingly popular as a means for explaining differences in meaning and activity of online participation. This article argues that self-presentation can be split into performances, which take place in synchronous “situations,” and artifacts, which take place in asynchronous “exhibitions.” Goffman’s dramaturgical approach (including the notions of front and back stage) focuses on situations. Social media, on the other hand, frequently employs exhibitions, such as lists of status updates and sets of photos, alongside situational (...)
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  6. Noumenal Affection.Desmond Hogan - 2009 - Philosophical Review 118 (4):501-532.
    A central doctrine of Kant's Critique of Pure Reason holds that the content of human experience is rooted in an affection of sensibility by unknowable things in themselves. This famous and puzzling affection doctrine raises two seemingly intractable old problems, which can be termed the Indispensability and the Consistency Problems. By what right does Kant present affection by supersensible entities as an indispensable requirement of experience? And how could any argument for such indispensability avoid violating the Critique's doctrine of noumenal (...)
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  7.  8
    (1 other version)Practising Public Scholarship: Experiences and Possibilities Beyond the Academy.Katharyne Mitchell (ed.) - 2008 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    A cross-disciplinary collection of 20 essays describing the journey to public scholarship, exploring the pleasures and perils associated with breaching the town-gown divide. Includes contributions from departments of geography, comparative literature, sociology, communications, history, English, public health, and biology Discusses their efforts to reach beyond the academy and to make their ideas and research broadly accessible to a wider audience Opens the way for a new kind of democratic politics—one based on grounded concepts and meaningful social participation Includes deeply personal (...)
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  8.  40
    What Literature Teaches Us about Emotion.Patrick Colm Hogan - 2011 - Cambridge University Press.
    Literature provides us with otherwise unavailable insights into the ways emotions are produced, experienced and enacted in human social life. It is particularly valuable because it deepens our comprehension of the mutual relations between emotional response and ethical judgment. These are the central claims of Hogan's study, which carefully examines a range of highly esteemed literary works in the context of current neurobiological, psychological, sociological and other empirical research. In this work, he explains the value of literary study for (...)
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  9. Handedness, Idealism, and Freedom.Desmond Hogan - 2021 - Philosophical Review 130 (3):385-449.
    Incongruent counterparts are pairs of objects which cannot be enclosed in the same spatial limits despite an exact similarity in magnitude, proportion, and relative position of their parts. Kant discerns in such objects, whose most familiar example is left and right hands, a “paradox” demanding “demotion of space and time to mere forms of our sensory intuition.” This paper aims at an adequate understanding of Kant’s enigmatic idealist argument from handed objects, as well as an understanding of its relation to (...)
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  10.  9
    Oxylipins in Fungal-Mammalian Interactions.Katharyn J. Affeldt & Nancy P. Keller - 2012 - In Guenther Witzany (ed.), Biocommunication of Fungi. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 291--303.
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  11.  21
    Ancient Artefacts and Modern Conflict: A Case Study of Looting and Instability in Iraq.Katharyn Hanson - 2011 - In Peter G. Stone (ed.), Cultural Heritage, Ethics and the Military. Boydell Press. pp. 4--113.
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  12. Natural kinds and ecological niches — response to Johnson's paper.Melinda Hogan - 1992 - Biology and Philosophy 7 (2):203-208.
  13.  16
    Tracing postwar biomedicine: Angela N. H. Creager: Life atomic: A history of radioisotopes in science and medicine. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2013, xvi+489pp, $45.00 HB.Andrew J. Hogan - 2014 - Metascience 24 (1):163-165.
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  14.  26
    The Technē Analogy in the Charmides.Richard A. Hogan - 1977 - Philosophy Research Archives 3:702-708.
    This paper discusses the interpretation of Charmides 164Dff. given by John Gould in The Development of Plato's Ethics. Gould claims that in this passage Plato wishes to indicate that he wants to delimit or qualify Socrates' analogy between morality or virtue on the one hand and art or craft (technē) on the other. Plato does this, supposedly, by showing us the unacceptable consequences which follow from assuming a complete analogy between morality and technē. I argue that this interpretation conflicts with (...)
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  15.  24
    You Can’t Measure That…Can You? How a Catholic Seminary Approaches the Question of Measuring Growth in Human and Spiritual Formation.Ed Hogan & Paul Hoesing - 2021 - Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 14 (2):254-275.
    The question of measuring growth in human and spiritual formation in Catholic seminaries has a history. In this article, we walk through three recent stages of that history to illuminate the potential of current approaches and clarify what still remains to be done.
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  16. The tradition of the end : Global capitalism and the contemporary spaces of apocalypse.Katharyne Mitchell - 2004 - In Nezar AlSayyad (ed.), The end of tradition? New York: Routledge.
     
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  17. Children's beliefs about earthquakes.Katharyn E. K. Ross & Thomas J. Shuell - 1993 - Science Education 77 (2):191-205.
     
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  18.  14
    Keeping faith with human rights.Linda Hogan - 2015 - Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press.
    Human rights are one of the great civilizing projects of modernity. From their formal promulgation in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 to their subsequent embrace by the newly independent states of Africa, human rights have emerged as the primary discourse of global politics and as an increasingly prominent category in the international and domestic legal system. In the theological realm, the concept of human rights has all but replaced its antecedent, natural rights, while in the world of (...)
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  19.  61
    Assessing Cross-sectoral and Cross-jurisdictional Coordination for Public Health Emergency Legal Preparedness.Rick Hogan, Cheryl H. Bullard, Daniel Stier, Matthew S. Penn, Teresa Wall, John Cleland, James H. Burch, Judith Monroe, Robert E. Ragland, Thurbert Baker & John Casciotti - 2008 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 36 (S1):36-41.
    A community's abilities to promote health and maximize its response to public health threats require fulfillment of one of the four elements of public health legal preparedness, the capacity to effectively coordinate law-based efforts across different governmental jurisdictions, as well as across multiple sectors and disciplines. Government jurisdictions can be viewed “vertically” in that response efforts may entail coordination in the application of laws across multiple levels, including local, state, tribal, and federal governments, and even with international organizations. Coordination of (...)
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  20.  17
    Philosophy as arraignment.Págdraig Hogan - 1993 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 27 (2):267–274.
    Págdraig Hogan; Philosophy as Arraignment, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 27, Issue 2, 30 May 2006, Pages 267–274, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-97.
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  21.  13
    Beauty and Sublimity: A Cognitive Aesthetics of Literature and the Arts.Patrick Colm Hogan - 2016 - Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press.
    Recent decades have witnessed an explosion in neuroscientific and related research treating aesthetic response. This book integrates this research with insights from philosophical aesthetics to propose new answers to longstanding questions about beauty and sublimity. Hogan begins by distinguishing what we respond to as beautiful from what we count socially as beautiful. He goes on to examine the former in terms of information processing and emotional involvement. In the course of the book, Hogan examines such issues as how (...)
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  22.  53
    Philosophical approaches to the study of literature.Patrick Colm Hogan - 2000 - Gainesville: University Press of Florida.
    Surveying 2,500 years of philosophically oriented literary theory, Patrick Hogan provides students and teachers of literature with both explication and ...
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  23.  12
    Literature and Moral Feeling: A Cognitive Poetics of Ethics, Narrative, and Empathy.Patrick Colm Hogan - 2022 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
    An influential body of recent work on moral psychology has stressed the interconnections among ethics, narrative, and empathy. Yet as Patrick Colm Hogan argues, this work is so vague in its use of the term 'narrative' as to be almost substanceless, and this vagueness is in large part due to the neglect of literary study. Extending his previous work on universal story structures, Hogan argues that we can transform ill-defined intuitions about narrative and ethics into explicit and systematic (...)
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  24.  43
    Data flows and water woes: The Utah Data Center.Mél Hogan - 2015 - Big Data and Society 2 (2).
    Using a new materialist line of questioning that looks at the agential potentialities of water and its entanglements with Big Data and surveillance, this article explores how the recent Snowden revelations about the National Security Agency have reignited media scholars to engage with the infrastructures that enable intercepting, hosting, and processing immeasurable amounts of data. Focusing on the expansive architecture, location, and resource dependence of the NSA’s Utah Data Center, I demonstrate how surveillance and privacy can never be disconnected from (...)
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  25.  18
    The ἀξίωσις of Words at Thucydides 3.82.4.John T. Hogan - 1980 - Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies 21 (2):139-150.
    In his famous chapter (3.82) on the revolutions engendered by the Peloponnesian War Thucydides notes that the effects of "stasis" ("faction" and "factional strife") reached even to the words people used. His overview should be translated ""Men changed the customary valuation [or" estimation"] of words in respect to deeds in judging what right was." Thucydides bases his understanding of distortions of language and understanding in revolutions on an implied idea that we need to use measures and standards in evaluating the (...)
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  26.  13
    Proops’s ‘Nugget of Gold’ in Kant’s Dialectic.Desmond P. Hogan - 2024 - Kantian Review 29 (2):267-275.
    The Fiery Test of Critique describes Kant’s indirect proof of idealism from the Antinomy of Pure Reason as the ‘nugget of gold’ in the Critique of Pure Reason’s Transcendental Dialectic. Here, I offer critical reflections on Proops’s reading of Kant’s indirect proof.
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  27.  21
    The Grassroots and the Gift: Moral Authority, American Philanthropy, and Activism in Education.Katharyne Mitchell & Chris Lizotte - 2014 - Foucault Studies 18:66-89.
    Parental activism in education reform, while often portrayed as an exemplary manifestation of participatory democracy and grassroots action in response to entrenched corporate and bureaucratic interests, is in fact carefully cultivated and channeled through strategic networks of philanthropic funding and knowledge. This paper argues that these networks are characteristic of a contemporary form of neoliberal governance in which the philanthropic “gift” both obligates its recipients to participate in the ideological projects of the givers and obscures the incursion of market principles (...)
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  28.  10
    Administrators in UK higher education: who, where, what and how much?John Hogan - 2014 - Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education 18 (3):76-83.
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  29.  51
    Confronting the truth: conscience in the Catholic tradition.Linda Hogan - 2000 - New York: Paulist Press.
    In "Confronting the Truth", Hogan gives readers a balanced, clearly written examination of conscience in the Catholic tradition.
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  30. Three kinds of rationalism and the non-spatiality of things in themselves.Desmond Hogan - 2009 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 47 (3):pp. 355-382.
    In the transcendental aesthetic of the Critique of Pure Reason, Kant claims that space and time are neither things in themselves nor properties of things in themselves but mere subjective forms of our sensible experience. Call this the Subjectivity Thesis. The striking conclusion follows an analysis of the representations of space and time. Kant argues that the two representations function as a priori conditions of experience, and are singular "intuitions" rather than general concepts. He also contends that the representations underwrite (...)
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  31.  11
    The new significance of learning: imagination's heartwork.Pádraig Hogan - 2010 - New York: Routledge.
    Reviews the restricting consequences of older and newer forms of paternalism, in education, taking a historical perspective and offering a cohesive sustained.
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  32.  81
    Agency, political economy, and the transnational democratic ideal.Brendan Hogan - 2010 - Ethics and Global Politics 3 (1):37-45.
    James Bohman’s Democracy across borders: from demos to demoi is a rich and deep text. It is also deceptively short in length in comparison to those authors he engages and compactly reconstructs. Bohman puts forward strong normative arguments for a ‘reconstructed’ ideal of transnational democracy and provides models for realizing these ideals that also aim to meet standards of practicability. Bohman articulates the minimum necessary conditions for any democratic ideal in terms of freedom from domination and freedom to initiate and (...)
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  33. Brute Error Without Sinn: Identity Claims in the Phaedo and in Frege.Melinda Hogan - 2003 - In Naomi Reshotko & Terry Penner (eds.), Desire, identity, and existence: essays in honor of T.M. Penner. Kelowna, B.C., Canada: Academic Print. &.
    There is a parallel between Plato's argument for the forms at 74b7-c5 in the Phaedo and Frege's argument for the claim that proper names express senses. There is also, I claim, an important asymmetry. The asymmetry explains why it is consistent to accept the conclusion of the Phaedo argument without accepting the conclusion of Frege's argument. The Phaedo argument turns on the possibility of a specific kind of mistaken judgement that may be termed "brute error". Frege's argument does not so (...)
     
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  34.  12
    Ethical Relations - Agency, Autonomy, Care.Linda Hogan & Sasha Roseneil - 2003 - Feminist Theory 4 (2):115-117.
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  35.  2
    Gates and borders, malls and moats: A photo essay of Manila, 2011.Trevor Hogan & Caleb J. Hogan - 2012 - Thesis Eleven 112 (1):35-50.
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  36.  34
    Responses to an invitation to comment on the book: Wain, K. The Learning Society in a Postmodern World.Pádraig Hogan - 2008 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 40 (4):565-568.
  37.  59
    Response to Mark Fettes’ Review of The New Significance of Learning: Imagination’s Heartwork.Pádraig Hogan - 2011 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 30 (3):323-325.
  38.  9
    The God of glory.Ronald F. Hogan - 1984 - Neptune, N.J.: Loizeaux Brothers.
  39.  22
    The Globalization of Nothing: A Review Symposium of George Ritzer's “The Globalization of Nothing,”'.T. Hogan - 2003 - Thesis Eleven 76 (1):105-109.
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  40.  56
    The Politics of Identity and the Experience of Learning: Insights for Pluralism from Western Educational History.Pádraig Hogan - 1998 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 17 (4):251-259.
    The eight short explorations in the first part of this paper attempt to identify some crucial developments in the history of Western learning which eclipsed pluralist educational practices in their (Socratic) infancy and thereafter, and which contributed to the widespread employment of education as a force for cultural uniformity, or assumed superiority. Drawing together the lessons of the first part with contemporary insights from hermeneutic philosophy, the second part sets forth briefly the promising educational possibilities for human self-understanding and co-existence (...)
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  41.  30
    Bridging the Gap across the Transition to Coparenthood: Triadic Interactions and Coparenting Representations from Pregnancy through 12 Months Postpartum.Regina Kuersten-Hogan - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  42.  41
    The paradox of tragedy and emotional response to simulation.Patrick Colm Hogan - 2017 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40.
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  43.  23
    Fairness, Hierarchy, and Moral Rationalization, or What's Wrong With Paradise Lost?Patrick Colm Hogan - 2024 - Emotion Review 16 (2):127-136.
    Literature and Moral Feeling argued that ethics is best understood as a constraint on egocentric self-interest. That constraint is specified variously by groups or individuals who set parameters differently within common ethical principles, and who use a range of emotion-guided narrative genres to imagine and evaluate possible actions. Though it covers many ethical concerns (collectively termed “morality”), this account leaves out fairness (alternatively, justice). The following essay seeks to make up for that deficit. Framing its analysis by reference to a (...)
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  44.  36
    Abstract concept learning in the pigeon.Thomas Zentall & David Hogan - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 102 (3):393.
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  45. Frantz Fanon's Engagement With Hegel's Master-Slave Dialectic.Brandon Hogan - 2018 - Africology: The Journal of Pan African Studies 11 (8):16-32.
    This article seeks to articulate an interpretation of Fanon’s engagement with G.W.F. Hegel that does not either assume that Fanon rejects Hegel’s normative conclusions or that Fanon’s engagement is incidental to his larger philosophical projects. I argue that Fanon’s take on the master-slave dialectic allows us to better understand the normative claims that undergird Fanon’s calls for violence and revolution in Black Skin, The Wretched of the Earth, and A Dying Colonialism.
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  46. The Mind and Its Stories: Narrative Universals and Human Emotion.Patrick Colm Hogan & Greg M. Smith - 2005 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 63 (2):206-209.
     
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  47.  10
    Conversations on Cognitive Cultural Studies: Literature, Language, and Aesthetics.Patrick Colm Hogan & Frederick Luis Aldama - 2014 - Ohio State University Press.
    In recent years, few areas of research have advanced as rapidly as cognitive science, the study of the human mind and brain. A fundamentally interdisciplinary field, cognitive science has both inspired and been advanced by work in the arts and humanities. In _Conversations on Cognitive Cultural Studies: Literature, Language, and Aesthetics,_ Frederick Luis Aldama and Patrick Colm Hogan, two of the most prominent experts on the intersection of mind, brain, and culture, engage each other in a lively dialog that (...)
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  48.  81
    Practices of Interpretation: Social Inquiry as Problem Solving and Self-Definition.Brendan Hogan - 2019 - In Vinicio Busacchi & Anna Nieddu (eds.), Pragmatismo ed ermeneutica. Soggettività, storicità, rappresentazione. Milano: Mimesis.
    John Dewey attempted a pragmatic aufhebung of the disparate methodological aims of social science-explanation, understanding, and critique- in his 1938 Logic: the theory of Inquiry. There, in his penultimate chapter ‘Social Inquiry’, Dewey performed a trademark implementation of his deflation of absolutistic and universalistic pretensions in intellectual and theoretical discourse, in this case with respect to any one approach to social science. This deflation--as elsewhere in his analogous treatments of epistemology, ethics, and the theory of action-- involved the reconstruction of (...)
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  49.  27
    Hegelian Restorative Justice.Brandon Hogan - 2023 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 61 (1):82-111.
    In the Philosophy of Right, Hegel claims that crime is a negation of right and punishment is the “negation of the negation.” Punishment, for Hegel, “annuls” the criminal act. Many take it that Hegel endorses a form of retributivism—the theory that criminal offenders should be subject to harsh treatment in response and in proportion to their wrongdoing. Here I argue that restorative criminal justice is consistent with Hegel's remarks on punishment and his overall philosophical system. This is true, in part, (...)
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  50. The persistence of idealism.P. Colm Hogan - 1994 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 24 (1):84-92.
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