Results for 'Lisa Roth Fleury'

946 found
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  1.  12
    Book Review: Understanding Others, Understanding Ourselves – Finnish Folklore and Gender, Past and Present. [REVIEW]Lisa Roth Fleury - 2000 - European Journal of Women's Studies 7 (4):506-510.
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  2.  14
    Does anodal cerebellar tDCS boost transfer of after-effects from throwing to pointing during prism adaptation?Lisa Fleury, Francesco Panico, Alexandre Foncelle, Patrice Revol, Ludovic Delporte, Sophie Jacquin-Courtois, Christian Collet & Yves Rossetti - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Prism Adaptation is a useful method to study the mechanisms of sensorimotor adaptation. After-effects following adaptation to the prismatic deviation constitute the probe that adaptive mechanisms occurred, and current evidence suggests an involvement of the cerebellum at this level. Whether after-effects are transferable to another task is of great interest both for understanding the nature of sensorimotor transformations and for clinical purposes. However, the processes of transfer and their underlying neural substrates remain poorly understood. Transfer from throwing to pointing is (...)
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  3.  39
    Retrieval cues fail to influence contextualized evaluations.Ryan J. Hutchings, Jimmy Calanchini, Lisa M. Huang, Heather R. Rees, Andrew M. Rivers, Jenny Roth & Jeffrey W. Sherman - 2020 - Cognition and Emotion 34 (1):86-104.
    ABSTRACTInitial evaluations generalise to new contexts, whereas counter-attitudinal evaluations are context-specific. Counter-attitudinal information may not change evaluations in new contexts beca...
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  4.  27
    Reconstructing Quine: The troubles with a tradition.Paul A. Roth - 1983 - Metaphilosophy 14 (3-4):249-266.
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  5. Shared agency and contralateral commitments.Abraham Sesshu Roth - 2004 - Philosophical Review 113 (3):359-410.
    My concern here is to motivate some theses in the philosophy of mind concerning the interpersonal character of intentions. I will do so by investigating aspects of shared agency. The main point will be that when acting together with others one must be able to act directly on the intention of another or others in a way that is relevantly similar to the manner in which an agent acts on his or her own intentions. What exactly this means will become (...)
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  6.  13
    Reasoning with models.Roni Khardon & Dan Roth - 1996 - Artificial Intelligence 87 (1-2):187-213.
  7. The Status of Mechanism in Locke’s Essay.Lisa Downing - 1998 - Philosophical Review 107 (3):381-414.
    The prominent place 0f corpuscularizm mechanism in L0ckc`s Essay is nowadays universally acknowledged} Certainly, L0ckc’s discussions 0f the primary/secondary quality distinction and 0f real essences cannot be understood without reference to the corpuscularizm science 0f his day, which held that all macroscopic bodily phenomena should bc explained in terms 0f the motions and impacts 0f submicroscopic particles, 0r corpuscles, each of which can bc fully characterized in terms of 21 strictly limited range 0f (primary) properties: size, shape, motion (or mobility), (...)
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  8. Making populations: Bounding genes in space and in time.Lisa Gannett - 2003 - Philosophy of Science 70 (5):989-1001.
    At least below the level of species, biological populations are not mind‐independent objects that scientists discover. Rather, biological populations are pragmatically constructed as objects of investigation according to the aims, interests, and values that inform particular research contexts. The relations among organisms that are constitutive of population‐level phenomena (e.g., mating propensity, genealogy, and competition) occur as matters of degree and so give rise to statistically defined open‐ended biological systems. These systems are rendered discrete units to satisfy practical needs and theoretical (...)
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  9. Original Tao: Inward Training (Nei-yeh) and the Foundations of Taoist Mysticism.Harold David Roth (ed.) - 1999 - Columbia University Press.
    Revolutionizing received opinion of Taoism's origins in light of historic new discoveries, Harold D. Roth has uncovered China's oldest mystical text--the original expression of Taoist philosophy--and presents it here with a complete translation and commentary. Over the past twenty-five years, documents recovered from the tombs of China's ancient elite have sparked a revolution in scholarship about early Chinese thought, in particular the origins of Taoist philosophy and religion. In _Original Tao,_ Harold D. Roth exhumes the seminal text of (...)
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  10. Temporal semantics in a superficially tenseless language.Lisa Matthewson - 2006 - Linguistics and Philosophy 29 (6):673 - 713.
    This paper contributes to the debate about ‘tenseless languages’ by defending a tensed analysis of a superficially tenseless language. The language investigated is St’át’imcets (Lillooet Salish). I argue that although St’át’imcets lacks overt tense morphology, every finite clause in the language possesses a phonologically covert tense morpheme; this tense morpheme restricts the reference time to being non-future. Future interpretations, as well as ‘past future’ would-readings, are obtained by the combination of covert tense with an operator analogous to Abusch’s (1985) WOLL. (...)
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  11. (1 other version)Racism and human genome diversity research: The ethical limits of "population thinking".Lisa Gannett - 2001 - Proceedings of the Philosophy of Science Association 2001 (3):S479-.
    This paper questions the prevailing historical understanding that scientific racism "retreated" in the 1950s when anthropology adopted the concepts and methods of population genetics and race was recognized to be a social construct and replaced by the concept of population. More accurately, a "populational" concept of race was substituted for a "typological one"-this is demonstrated by looking at the work of Theodosius Dobzhansky circa 1950. The potential for contemporary research in human population genetics to contribute to racism needs to be (...)
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  12. Why it doesn’t matter to metaphysics what Mary learns.Robert Cummins, Martin Roth & Ian Harmon - 2014 - Philosophical Studies 167 (3):541-555.
    The Knowledge Argument of Frank Jackson has not persuaded physicalists, but their replies have not dispelled the intuition that someone raised in a black and white environment gains genuinely new knowledge when she sees colors for the first time. In what follows, we propose an explanation of this particular kind of knowledge gain that displays it as genuinely new, but orthogonal to both physicalism and phenomenology. We argue that Mary’s case is an instance of a common phenomenon in which something (...)
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  13.  84
    Skeptical strategies in the "zhuangzi" and "theaetetus".Lisa Raphals - 1994 - Philosophy East and West 44 (3):501-526.
  14. The evolution and ontogeny of consciousness.Gerhard Roth - 2000 - In Thomas Metzinger (ed.), Neural Correlates of Consciousness: Empirical and Conceptual Questions. MIT Press.
     
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  15. What Was Hume’s Problem with Personal Identity?Abraham Sesshu Roth - 2000 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 61 (1):91-114.
    An appreciation of Hume’s psychology of object identity allows us to recognize certain tensions in his discussion of the origin of our belief in personal identity---tensions which have gone largely unnoticed in the secondary literature. This will serve to provide a new solution to the problem of explaining why Hume finds that discussion of personal identity so problematic when he famously disavows it in the Appendix to the Treatise. It turns out that the two psychological mechanisms which respectively generate the (...)
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  16.  26
    Corrigendum.Stephen Turner, Deborah Tollefsen, Paul Roth, Mark Risjord, Kareem Khalifa & David Henderson - 2023 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 53 (2):163-163.
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  17.  17
    Character Strengths Are Related to Students’ Achievement, Flow Experiences, and Enjoyment in Teacher-Centered Learning, Individual, and Group Work Beyond Cognitive Ability.Lisa Wagner, Mathias Holenstein, Hannah Wepf & Willibald Ruch - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
  18.  66
    Biogeographical ancestry and race.Lisa Gannett - 2014 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 47:173-184.
  19. Reverse discrimination as unjustified.Lisa H. Newton - 1973 - Ethics 83 (4):308-312.
  20.  79
    The distribution of representation.Lisa M. Osbeck & Nancy J. Nersessian - 2006 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 36 (2):141–160.
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  21.  12
    Animals and the Environment: Advocacy, Activism, and the Quest for Common Ground.Lisa Kemmerer (ed.) - 2015 - New York: Routledge.
    "Contemporary earth and animal activists often seem to think and operate independently and neither seems to have much understanding of the other. Instead of continuing this lack of engagement, this eclectic anthology highlights important areas of common ground"--.
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  22.  13
    On the hardness of approximate reasoning.Dan Roth - 1996 - Artificial Intelligence 82 (1-2):273-302.
  23. Four Key Questions to Guide Human Rights–based Social Listening during Infodemics.Lisa Forman - forthcoming - Asian Bioethics Review:1-14.
    This paper considers what a human rights–based approach to the use of social listening to counter infodemics during a serious health threat might entail, using COVID-19 as a primary example. The paper considers social listening in the context of human rights including health, life, free speech, and privacy, and outlines what a rights-compliant form of social listening to infodemics might entail. The paper argues that human rights offer guardrails against illicit and unethical forms of social listening as well as signposts (...)
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  24.  97
    _Toward a Theory of Whiteness and Racial Habi.Lisa Madura - 2023 - Dissertation, Vanderbilt University
    This dissertation argues that a sufficiently worked out concept of habit is crucial for understanding race, and specifically whiteness. It has become common for race theorists to think about white privilege as a matter of habit, but they have yet to realize the potential of this approach. This is in part because the existing accounts of white habit either omit or outright reject an explicitly phenomenological framework. This leads them to think only in terms of discrete habits of racism and (...)
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  25.  87
    Ethical Progress as Problem‐Resolving.Amanda Roth - 2012 - Journal of Political Philosophy 20 (4):384-406.
  26.  99
    How does the body get into the mind?Wolff-Michael Roth & Daniel V. Lawless - 2002 - Human Studies 25 (3):333-358.
    In this article, we propose that gestures play an important role in the connection between sensorimotor experience and language. Gestures may be the link between bodily experience and verbal expression that advocates of embodied cognition have postulated. In a developmental sequence of communicative action, gestures, which are initially similar to action sequences, substantially shorten and represent actions in metonymic form. In another process, action sequences are based on kinesthetic schemata that themselves find their metaphoric expression in language. Again, gestures enact (...)
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  27. الفلسفة والسعادة (Philosophy and Happiness).Lisa Bortolotti (ed.) - 2013 - al-Markaz al-Qawmī lil-Tarjamah/The National Center for Translation: Cairo. Translated by Ahmed Al-Ansari.
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  28.  36
    The effect of grade level on WISC-R IQs of 6-year-olds.Howard H. Carvajal, Larry A. Roth, Cooper B. Holmes & Gregory L. Page - 1992 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 30 (4):317-318.
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  29.  10
    Problèmes posés par la transcription et l’annotation d’écrits d’élèves.Claire Doquet, Vanda Enoiu, Serge Fleury & Sara Maziotti - 2017 - Corpus 16.
    Les écrits scolaires posent des problèmes d’analyse automatique à cause des nombreux écarts à la norme langagière qu’ils comportent. Dans le but de constituer et de rendre exploitable un corpus significatif d’écrits d’élèves, le groupe de recherche ECRISCOL (Écrits Scolaires) de l’université de la Sorbonne Nouvelle a élaboré des solutions techniques pour préserver l’accès aux manuscrits des élèves tout en rendant possible une analyse automatique par des logiciels d’analyse textuelle. Le corpus en construction comporte une dimension développementale – il est (...)
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  30. Neural correlates of unawareness of illness in psychosis.Laura A. Flashman & Robert M. Roth - 2004 - In Xavier F. Amador & Anthony S. David (eds.), Insight and Psychosis: Awareness of Illness in Schizophrenia and Related Disorders. Oxford University Press UK. pp. 157-176.
  31. WSPI 2006: Contributions to the Third International Workshop on Philosophy and Informatics.Ingvar Johansson, Bertin Klein & Thomas Roth-Berghofer (eds.) - 2006
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  32.  18
    The perceptual stability of the visual field: What is calibration for?Jacques Paillard, Michelle Fleury, Normand Teasdale, Chantal Bard & Vincent Nougier - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (2):272-272.
  33.  65
    The role of truth when communicating knowledge across epistemic difference.Lisa A. Bergin - 2001 - Social Epistemology 15 (4):367 – 378.
  34.  4
    Widerständiges Wissen: Herbert Marcuses Protesttheorie in Diskussion mit Intellektuellen der Refugee-Bewegung der 2010er Jahre.Lisa Doppler - 2021 - Bielefeld: Transcript.
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  35. Appropriation and Derogation: When is it Wrong to Appropriate?Lisa Jones - 2016 - In Darren Hudson Hick & Reinold Schmücker (eds.), The Aesthetics and Ethics of Copying. Bloomsbury. pp. 187-210.
     
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  36.  4
    Rational intuition: philosophical roots, scientific investigations.Lisa M. Osbeck & Barbara S. Held (eds.) - 2014 - New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
    Rational Intuition explores the concept of intuition as it relates to rationality through mediums of history, philosophy, cognitive science, and psychology.
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  37.  52
    From “Home” to “Camp”: Theorizing the Space of Safety.Lisa Weems - 2010 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 29 (6):557-568.
    In this article, I discuss how the space of the classroom is a contested object that is constituted by historical, cultural, political, social, psychological, and discursive practices (Lefebvre in The production of space, Blackwell, Oxford, UK, 1991). I then employ Deleuze and Guattari’s notion of “assemblage” to characterize the ways in which educational spaces cohere “content and affect” quoted in Puar (Terrorist assemblages: Homonationalism in queer times, Duke University Press, Durham, 2007, 193) into discursive figures of the heteronormative and racialized (...)
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  38.  71
    "Men wearing masks": Issues of description in the analysis of ritual.Andrew L. Roth - 1995 - Sociological Theory 13 (3):301-327.
    Since Durkheim ([1912] 1965), the concept of ritual has held a privileged position in studies of social life because investigators recurrently have treated it as a source of insight into core issues of human sociality, such as the maintenance of social order. Consequently, studies of ritual have typically focused on rituals' function(s), and, specifically, whether ritual begets social integration or fragmentation. In this frame, students of ritual have tended to ignore other, equally fundamental issues, including (1) how actions, or courses (...)
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  39.  27
    An Early American Pharmacologist: Horatio C Wood.George Roth - 1939 - Isis 30 (1):38-45.
  40. Drury, Alexandre Kojeve: The Roots of Postmodernist Politics.M. S. Roth - 1996 - Political Theory 24:338-342.
  41. Jayanta on Pratibhajfiana.Gustav Roth - 1992 - In Gustav Roth & H. S. Prasad (eds.), Philosophy, grammar, and indology: essays in honour of Professor Gustav Roth. Delhi, India: Sri Satguru Publications. pp. 20--399.
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  42.  15
    Knowledge caching for sensor-based systems.Yuval Roth & Ramesh Jain - 1994 - Artificial Intelligence 71 (2):257-280.
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  43.  12
    »Lesen mag es die ganze schöne Welt.«: Michael Hißmanns Beitrag zur Popularphilosophie.Udo Roth - 2013 - In »Lesen mag es die ganze schöne Welt.«: Michael Hißmanns Beitrag zur Popularphilosophie. pp. 157-202.
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  44.  8
    Neue Arbeiten zur Anthropologie Nietzsches.Phillip H. Roth - 2014 - Nietzsche Studien 43 (1).
    Name der Zeitschrift: Nietzsche-Studien Jahrgang: 43 Heft: 1 Seiten: 331-346.
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  45.  45
    Note on the relationship between Locke and Descartes.Leon Roth - 1935 - Mind 44 (175):414-416.
  46.  14
    Talking about religion in public.John K. Roth - 1993 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 14 (2):189 - 204.
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  47.  25
    Varro’s picta Italia(RR I. ii. 1) and the Odology of Roman Italy.Roman Roth - 2007 - Hermes 135 (3):286-300.
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  48. What is Pregnancy Ambivalence? Is it Maternal Ambivalence?Amanda Roth - 2020 - In The Maternal Tug: Ambivalence, Identity, and Agency. pp. 45-72.
     
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  49.  6
    The History of Robert Grosseteste’s Translations within the Context of 'Aristoteles Latinus'.Lisa Devriese - 2023 - Revista Española de Filosofía Medieval 30 (1).
    Among his many accomplishments, Grosseteste is known for translating Greek philosophical, theological, and glossarial treatises into Latin, making them available for Latin readers. Three of these translations are nowadays studied for the Aristoteles Latinus project, which aims at making critical editions of all Greek-Latin medieval translations of Aristotle’s oeuvre. The goal of this contribution is to give an overview of the history of Robert Grosseteste’s translations of Aristotelian texts within the context of Aristoteles Latinus. The first part is devoted to (...)
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  50.  12
    Zur Einführung: Johann Georg Heinrich Feder.Hans-Peter Nowitzki, Udo Roth & Gideon Stiening - 2018 - In Gideon Stiening, Udo Roth & Hans-Peter Nowitzki (eds.), Zur Einführung: Johann Georg Heinrich Feder : Empirismus und Popularphilosophie zwischen Wolff und Kant. De Gruyter. pp. 1-18.
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