Results for 'Margaret A. White'

951 found
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  1.  33
    Word fragments as aids to recall: The organization of a word.Leonard M. Horowitz, Margaret A. White & Douglas W. Atwood - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 76 (2p1):219.
  2.  25
    A note on the measurement of stimulus discriminability in conditional discriminations.K. Geoffrey White, Margaret-Ellen Pipe & Anthony P. McLean - 1985 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 23 (2):153-155.
  3.  17
    White Already to Harvest’: South Australian Women Missionaries in India1.Margaret Allen - 2000 - Feminist Review 65 (1):92-107.
    In 1882, the South Australian Baptist Missionary Society sent off its first missionaries to Faridpur in East Bengal. Miss Marie Gilbert and Miss Ellen Arnold were the first of a stream of missionary women who left the young South Australian colony to work in India. Scores of women from other Christian denominations and from other Australian colonies also went to India and indeed to other mission fields in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. As with other western women missionaries, these women (...)
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  4. Is Margaret Cavendish a naïve realist?Daniel Whiting - 2024 - European Journal of Philosophy 32 (2):321-341.
    Perception plays a central and wide‐ranging role in the philosophy of Margaret Cavendish. In this paper, I argue that Cavendish holds a naïve realist theory of perception. The case draws on what Cavendish has to say about perceptual presentation, the role of sympathy in experience, the natures of hallucination and of illusion, and the individuation of kinds. While Cavendish takes perception to have representational content, I explain how this is consistent with naïve realism. In closing, I address challenges to (...)
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  5. The Racialization of White Man's Polygamy.Margaret Denike - 2010 - Hypatia 25 (4):852-874.
    This paper offers a genealogy of anti-polygamy sentiment in North America, elucidating certain racist and nationalist formations that are implicit in the historical valorization and enforcement of heterosexual monogamy. It tracks the white supremacist and heteronormative logic that conditions the widespread disdain toward polygamy, and that renders it fundamentally different from familial configurations that are associated with national identity. Relating political and philosophical doctrines to the archival documentation and insights of contemporary legal and cultural historians of anti-polygamy sentiment, it (...)
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  6.  36
    Kathryn A. Smith, Art, Identity and Devotion in Fourteenth-Century England: Three Women and Their Books of Hours. (The British Library Studies in Medieval Culture.) London: British Library; Toronto and Buffalo, N.Y.: University of Toronto Press, 2003. Pp. xix, 364 plus 8 color plates; 145 black-and-white figures, 2 genealogical tables, and 5 maps. $75 (cloth); $29.95 (paper). [REVIEW]Margaret Manion - 2006 - Speculum 81 (1):274-276.
  7.  23
    The Petrification of Cleopatra in Nineteenth Century Art.Margaret Malamud & Martha Malamud - 2020 - Arion 28 (1):31-51.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Petrification of Cleopatra in Nineteenth Century Art MARGARET MALAMUD MARTHA MALAMUD What did Cleopatra look like? Was she a Roman, a Ptolemaic Greek, an Egyptian, an African? Was she a precocious child, a devastatingly beautiful seductress, an astute practitioner of imperial politics, a murderess, a longnosed blue-stocking? [Figure 1] Cleopatra is dead, but “Cleopatra ” exists in the eye of the beholder. What other human being has (...)
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  8. Margaret Macdonald on the Definition of Art.Daniel Whiting - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 30 (6):1074-1095.
    In this paper, I show that, in a number of publications in the early 1950s, Margaret Macdonald argues that art does not admit of definition, that art is—in the sense associated with Wittgenstein—a family resemblance concept, and that definitions of art are best understood as confused or poorly expressed contributions to art criticism. This package of views is most typically associated with a famous paper by Morris Weitz from 1956. I demonstrate that Macdonald advanced that package prior to Weitz, (...)
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  9.  4
    (1 other version)Ishmael's Reading of The Great White Whale.Margaret D. Bauer - 1998 - Logos: A Journal of Catholic Thought and Culture 1 (4):145-177.
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  10.  70
    Do US Black Women Experience Stress-Related Accelerated Biological Aging?Arline T. Geronimus, Margaret T. Hicken, Jay A. Pearson, Sarah J. Seashols, Kelly L. Brown & Tracey Dawson Cruz - 2010 - Human Nature 21 (1):19-38.
    We hypothesize that black women experience accelerated biological aging in response to repeated or prolonged adaptation to subjective and objective stressors. Drawing on stress physiology and ethnographic, social science, and public health literature, we lay out the rationale for this hypothesis. We also perform a first population-based test of its plausibility, focusing on telomere length, a biomeasure of aging that may be shortened by stressors. Analyzing data from the Study of Women’s Health Across the Nation (SWAN), we estimate that at (...)
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  11.  29
    The scientific works of Robert Grosseteste.John Coleman, Jack Cunningham, Nader El-Bizri, Giles E. M. Gasper, Joshua S. Harvey, Margaret Healy-Varley, David M. Howard, Neil Timothy Lewis, Anne Lawrence-Mathers, Tom McLeish, Cecilia Panti, Nicola Polloni, Clive R. Siviour, Hannah E. Smithson, Sigbjørn Olsen Sønnesyn, David Thomson, Rebekah C. White & Robert Grosseteste (eds.) - 2019 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Few figures of the Middle Ages command the attention of so many modern disciplines as Robert Grosseteste (c. 1170-1253). Theology, Philosophy, History, and Science are all areas which his life and thought continue to have significance and to inspire re-interpretation. Accompanied by a series of original commentaries, this new edition of Grosseteste's work, with English translation, draws together the perspectives of modern scientists and medieval specialists. Volume I of a six volume series, Knowing and Speaking presents two of the earliest (...)
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  12.  11
    Between paid and unpaid work: Gender patterns in supplemental economic activities among white, rural families.Margaret K. Nelson - 1999 - Gender and Society 13 (4):518-539.
    This article explores gender differences in three varieties of economic activities that supplement regular employment and housework: entrepreneurial moonlighting, self-provisioning, and casual exchanges with the members of other households. Drawing on data gathered through a random survey and interviews conducted with a white, rural, working-class population, gender differences were found in the content of these activities, their location, the time devoted to them, the degree to which they were delineated from other activities, and the opportunities they provided for sociability. (...)
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  13. Kenelm Digby (and Margaret Cavendish) on Motion.Daniel Whiting - 2024 - Journal of Modern Philosophy 6 (1):1-27.
    Motion—and, in particular, local motion or change in location—plays a central role in Kenelm Digby’s natural philosophy and in his arguments for the immateriality of the soul. Despite this, Digby’s account of what motion consists in has yet to receive much scholarly attention. In this paper, I advance a novel interpretation of Digby on motion. According to it, Digby holds that for a body to move is for it to divide from and unify with other bodies. This is a view (...)
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  14.  13
    Enlightenment Thought: An Anthology of Sources.Margaret L. King - 2019 - Hackett Publishing Company.
    "Margaret L. King has put together a highly representative selection of readings from most of the more significant—but by no means the most obvious—texts by the authors who made up the movement we have come to call the 'Enlightenment.' They range across much of Europe and the Americas, and from the early seventeenth century until the end of the eighteenth. In the originality of the choice of texts, in its range and depth, this collection offers both wide coverage and (...)
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  15.  25
    Eiríkur þormóđsson and Guđrún Ása Grímsdóttir, eds., Oddaannélar og Oddver jaannáll. Reykjavík: Stofnun Árna Magnússonar á Íslandi, 2003. Paper. Pp. clxxxi, 236; black-and-white figures. [REVIEW]Margaret Cormack - 2005 - Speculum 80 (3):864-865.
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  16.  29
    Racism and the Health of White Americans.Hedwig Lee & Margaret T. Hicken - 2018 - American Journal of Bioethics 18 (10):21-23.
    In her article “Shrinking Poor White Life Spans: Class, Race, and Health Justice," Erika Blacksher poses a provocative question: “How ought we ethically evaluate [the] life-span contraction in low-...
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  17.  24
    The human hearth and the dawn of morality.Margaret Boone Rappaport & Christopher Corbally - 2016 - Zygon 51 (4):835-866.
    Stunned by the implications of Colagè's analysis of the cultural activation of the brain's Visual Word Form Area and the potential role of cultural neural reuse in the evolution of biology and culture, the authors build on his work in proposing a context for the first rudimentary hominin moral systems. They cross-reference six domains: neuroscience on sleep, creativity, plasticity, and the Left Hemisphere Interpreter; palaeobiology; cognitive science; philosophy; traditional archaeology; and cognitive archaeology's theories on sleep changes in Homo erectus and (...)
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  18.  39
    Harriet M. Sonne de Torrens and Miguel A. Torrens, eds., The Visual Culture of Baptism in the Middle Ages: Essays on Medieval Fonts, Settings and Beliefs. Farnham, Surrey, UK, and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2013. Pp. xviii, 232; many black-and-white figures. $109.95. ISBN: 978-1-4094-5675-9. [REVIEW]Robin Margaret Jensen - 2014 - Speculum 89 (3):830-832.
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  19.  51
    Behind the smoke and mirrors of the Treaty of Waitangi claims settlement process in New Zealand: no prospect for justice and reconciliation for Māori without constitutional transformation.Margaret Mutu - 2018 - Journal of Global Ethics 14 (2):208-221.
    Governments in New Zealand have legislated a large number of settlements extinguishing many hundreds of claims taken by Māori against the Crown for breaches of the country’s founding document, Te Tiriti o Waitangi. They portray settlements as a great success for Māori and the Crown. Māori disagree. Settlements are government-determined and imposed on Māori using a smoke and mirrors approach that masks successive governments’ true intentions: to claw back Māori legal rights; to extinguish all claims; and to maintain White (...)
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  20.  36
    Forrest S. Scott, ed., Eyrbyggja saga: The Vellum Tradition. (Editiones Arnamagnæanæ, A/18.) Copenhagen: C. A. Reitzel, 2003. Paper. Pp. xv, 156*, 339 plus 8 black-and-white plates; diagrams and tables. [REVIEW]Margaret Clunies Ross - 2006 - Speculum 81 (2):599-600.
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  21.  8
    Through an American Lens, Hungary, 1938: Photographs of Margaret Bourke-White.Karoly Szerences, Katalin Kádár Lynn & Peter Strausz - 2010 - Columbia University Press.
    Noted Hungarian historian Karoly Szerencses provides brief, steam-of-consciousness essays to accompany each photo. Acting as the photographer's fictive guide, Szerencses introduces "Margaret" to each of her photos, providing her with an encapsulated historical background of the subject and in the process revealing the soul and conscience of the nation in 1938. As he says in farewell to Margaret at the end of their "tour": "... please remember us, our terrible fears; recite a prayer for us so that we (...)
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  22. Margaret M. Manion, Vera F. Vines, and Christopher de Hamel, Medieval and Renaissance Manuscripts in New Zealand Collections. Melbourne, London, and New York: Thames and Hudson, 1989. Pp. 200; 174 black-and-white figures, 24 color plates. $45. [REVIEW]A. S. G. Edwards - 1992 - Speculum 67 (4):1002-1003.
     
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  23. "You Have Seen Their Faces": Gisèle Freund, Walter Benjamin and Margaret Bourke-White as Headhunters of the Thirties.M. Kay Flavell - manuscript
    “You Have Seen Their Faces”: Gisèle Freund, Walter Benjamin and Margaret Bourke-White as Headhunters of the Thirties -/- Abstract This paper concentrates on one work by each of three authors: Walter Benjamin’s Deutsche Menschen (Germans), an anthology of twenty-five 18th and 19th century German personal letters; Margaret Bourke-White and Erskine Caldwell’s You Have Seen Their Faces; and Gisèle Freund’s collection of photographic portraits of writers and artists, compiled between 1936 and 1939. The purpose of this paper (...)
     
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  24. Cavendish’s Aesthetic Realism.Daniel Whiting - 2023 - Philosophers' Imprint 23 (15):1-17.
    In this paper, I offer a new interpretation of Margaret Cavendish’s remarks on beauty. According to it, Cavendish takes beauty to be a real, response-independent quality of objects. In this sense, Cavendish is an aesthetic realist. This position, which remains constant throughout her philosophical writings, contrasts with the non-realist views that were soon after to dominate philosophical reflections on matters of taste in the early modern period. It also, I argue, contrasts with the realism of Cavendish’s contemporary, Henry More. (...)
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  25.  18
    Status consistency and work satisfaction among professional and managerial women and men.Bruce O. Warren & Margaret L. Cassidy - 1991 - Gender and Society 5 (2):193-206.
    This study examined whether holding a status-consistent or status-inconsistent position affected the work satisfaction of college-educated, white-collar employees. The status-consistent group contained 128 women and 118 men. The status-inconsistent group was composed of 89 women and 102 men. Our results indicated that workers in occupations in which the majority of workers are the same gender had significantly higher levels of work satisfaction than those in status-inconsistent occupations. However, subsequent analyses revealed that men and women employed in occupations in which (...)
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  26.  40
    The Scandal of White Complicity in US Hyper-Incarceration: A Nonviolent Spirituality of White Resistance by Alex Mikulich, Laurie Cassidy, and Margaret Pfeil.Nancy M. Rourke - 2015 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 35 (2):195-196.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Scandal of White Complicity in US Hyper-Incarceration: A Nonviolent Spirituality of White Resistance by Alex Mikulich, Laurie Cassidy, and Margaret PfeilNancy M. RourkeThe Scandal of White Complicity in US Hyper-Incarceration: A Nonviolent Spirituality of White Resistance Alex Mikulich, Laurie Cassidy, and Margaret Pfeil new york: palgrave macmillan, 2013. 203 pp. $90.00As a white American Catholic ethicist, I often envy my (...)
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  27.  11
    Margaret A. Simons, Rebel at Heart.Margaret A. Simons & Erika Ruonakoski - 2021 - Simone de Beauvoir Studies 31 (2):317-335.
    In this interview, Margaret A. Simons describes her path to philosophy and existentialism, her struggles in the male-dominated field in the 1960s and 1970s, and her political activism in the civil rights and women’s liberation movements. She also discusses her encounters with Simone de Beauvoir and Beauvoir’s refusal to own her philosophical originality, suggesting that Beauvoir may have adopted a more conventional narrative of a female intellectual to circumvent the public’s resistance to her radical ideas in the 1950s.
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  28. Margaret Dauler Wilson: A Life in Philosophy.Catherine Wilson - 1999 - The Leibniz Review 9:1-15.
    Margaret Wilson, who died last year, has been described as the most eminent English-language historian of early modern philosophy of her generation. She was President of the Leibniz Society of North America for four years, from 1986 to 1990. Within this organization she is remembered both for her contributions to Leibniz-studies and for her attention to and support of younger researchers and her governing role in the Society. Her Harvard Ph.D. dissertation on “Leibniz’s Doctrine of Necessary Truth,” written under (...)
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  29.  14
    The Role of Expectations of Science in Shaping Research Policy: A Discursive Analysis of the Creation of Genome Canada.Margaret A. Lemay - 2020 - Minerva 58 (2):235-260.
    This paper examines the promise of science and its role in shaping research policy. The promise of science is characterized by expectations of science, which are embedded in promissory discourses that envision futures made possible through advances in promising science. Through a single case study of the origins of Genome Canada, the research was guided by the question: How did expectations of genomics shape the creation of Genome Canada? A conceptualization of discursive power and expectations of genomics storylines provide the (...)
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  30.  80
    The Impact of DNA Exonerations on the Criminal Justice System.Margaret A. Berger - 2006 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (2):320-327.
    One obvious result of DNA exonerations has been the enactment of legislation regulating postconviction DNA testing. But the impact on our criminal justice system goes beyond formal statutory change. The DNA exonerations are changing attitudes towards the death penalty, are focusing attention on how forensic laboratories operate, and are leading to the stricter scrutiny of forensic science.
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  31. Computer Models On Mind: Computational Approaches In Theoretical Psychology.Margaret A. Boden - 1988 - Cambridge University Press.
    What is the mind? How does it work? How does it influence behavior? Some psychologists hope to answer such questions in terms of concepts drawn from computer science and artificial intelligence. They test their theories by modeling mental processes in computers. This book shows how computer models are used to study many psychological phenomena--including vision, language, reasoning, and learning. It also shows that computer modeling involves differing theoretical approaches. Computational psychologists disagree about some basic questions. For instance, should the mind (...)
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  32.  15
    Minds And Mechanisms: Philosophical Psychology And Computational Models.Margaret A. Boden - 1981 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
  33.  9
    Beauvoir and The Second Sex.Margaret A. Simons - 2019 - Simone de Beauvoir Studies 30 (1):127-147.
    Colette Audry pointed to a mystery in observing that during the 1930s Simone de Beauvoir had not been concerned with the “woman question” and that her friend must have encountered a “serious obstacle” that “made her change her mind” and write The Second Sex. Unfortunately, Beauvoir obscured the genesis of her most important work. Using evidence uncovered by her biographers about her relationship with Sartre, and digging more deeply into their posthumously published letters and diaries, this paper uncovers a series (...)
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  34.  61
    A developmental dissociation between category and function judgments about novel artifacts.Margaret A. Defeyter, Jill Hearing & Tamsin C. German - 2009 - Cognition 110 (2):260-264.
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  35.  88
    Machine perception.Margaret A. Boden - 1969 - Philosophical Quarterly 19 (January):33-45.
  36.  57
    The "Social Etymology" of 'Sexual Harassment'.Margaret A. Crouch - 1998 - Journal of Social Philosophy 29 (3):19-40.
    Language does not simply symbolize a situation or object which is already there in advance; it makes possible the existence or the appearance of that situation or object for it is a part of the mechanism whereby that situation or object is created. (Mead 1934, p. 78).
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  37.  25
    Campus Consensual Relationship Policies.Margaret A. Crouch - 1998 - Social Philosophy Today 14:317-343.
  38.  20
    Guest Editors' Introduction.Margaret A. McLaren & Joshua Mills-Knutsen - 2016 - Radical Philosophy Review 19 (2):289-296.
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  39.  9
    Social communication interventions.Margaret A. Struchen - 2005 - In Walter M. High, Angelle M. Sander, Margaret A. Struchen & Karen A. Hart (eds.), Rehabilitation for Traumatic Brain Injury. Oxford University Press. pp. 88--117.
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  40.  13
    (2 other versions)Death Talk, First Edition: The Case Against Euthanasia and Physician-Assisted Suicide.Margaret A. Somerville - 1972 - Mcgill-Queen's University Press.
    There are vast ethical, legal, and social differences between natural death and euthanasia. In Death Talk Margaret Somerville argues that legalizing euthanasia would cause irreparable harm to society's value of respect for human life, which in secular societies is carried primarily by the institutions of law and medicine. Death has always been a central focus of the discussion that we engage in as individuals and as a society in searching for meaning in life. Moreover, we accommodate the inevitable reality (...)
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  41.  5
    Changing the questions: explorations in Christian ethics.Margaret A. Farley - 2015 - Maryknoll, New York: Orbis Books.
    A collected volume of essays by renowned ethicist Margaret Farley, including articles previously published in scholarly periodicals as well as unpublished lectures and spiritual writings. Essays from throughout Farley's long scholarly career, both published and unpublished, focusing on the intersection of ethics and public life. Farley's sermons as well as her essays on ecclesiology and feminism are also included, expanding this into a far-ranging summary of her interests and contributions to theology over the past four decades. The collection is (...)
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  42. Piaget.Margaret A. Boden - 1981 - Philosophy 56 (218):589-591.
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  43. Could a robot be creative--and would we know?Margaret A. Boden - 1995 - In Android Epistemology. Cambridge: MIT Press.
  44.  35
    Petrarch and De contemptu mundi.Margaret A. Holland - 1997 - The European Legacy 2 (4):730-732.
  45. Android Epistemology.Margaret A. Boden - 1995 - Cambridge: MIT Press.
     
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  46.  14
    National crisis and national government. British politics, the economy and empire, 1926–1932.Margaret A. Majumdar - 1995 - History of European Ideas 21 (2):294-295.
  47. Methodological Links Between Ai and Other Disciplines.Margaret A. Boden - 1982 - University of Sussex, School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences.
  48.  15
    Extra-European national minorities in France and the concept of European identity.Margaret A. Majumdar - 1994 - History of European Ideas 19 (4-6):647-653.
  49.  1
    The Impact of AI on Philosophy.Margaret A. Boden - 1991 - School of Cognitive and Computing Sciences, University of Sussex.
  50.  11
    The policy challenge of ethnic diversity. Immigrant politics in France and Switzerland.Margaret A. Majumdar - 1996 - History of European Ideas 22 (1):51-52.
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