Results for 'Mark J. D. Jordans'

972 found
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  1.  24
    Understanding Stigmatisation: Results of a Qualitative Formative Study with Adolescents and Adults in DR Congo.Kim Hartog, Ruth M. H. Peters & Mark J. D. Jordans - 2022 - Foundations of Science 27 (2):805-828.
    While stigmatisation is universal, stigma research in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) is limited. LMIC stigma research predominantly concerns health-related stigma, primarily regarding HIV/AIDS or mental illness from an adult perspective. While there are commonalities in stigmatisation, there are also contextual differences. The aim of this study in DR Congo (DRC), as a formative part in the development of a common stigma reduction intervention, was to gain insight into the commonalities and differences of stigma drivers (triggers of stigmatisation), facilitators (factors (...)
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  2. Nagging doubts and a glimmer of hope: The role of implicit self-esteem in self-image maintenance.Steven J. Spencer, Christian H. Jordan, Christine Er Logel, Mark P. Zanna, A. Tesser, J. V. Wood & D. A. Stapel - 2005 - In Abraham Tesser, Joanne V. Wood & Diederik A. Stapel, On Building, Defending, and Regulating the Self: A Psychological Perspective. Psychology Press.
     
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  3. The Invention of Sodomy in Christian Theology. By Mark D. Jordan.J. E. Weakland - 2001 - The European Legacy 6 (1):123-124.
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  4.  46
    An Examination of the Contribution of Dispositional Affect on Ethical Lapses.D. Jordan Lowe & Philip M. J. Reckers - 2012 - Journal of Business Ethics 111 (2):179-193.
    The popular press and academic research has focused primarily on the characteristics of corporate leaders. Subordinates have been studied much less frequently than leaders and yet they play a pivotal role in destructive leadership processes. An area holding significant potential to bring clarity to subordinates’ ability to withstand (or succumb) to pressures from superiors is dispositional affect. In our exploratory study, we examine how specific affective states influence subordinates’ unethical behavior. We performed an experiment with 63 mid-level managers having significant (...)
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  5.  35
    Ordering Wisdom. The Hierarchy of Philosophical Discourses in Aquinas. By Mark D. Jordan. [REVIEW]Vernon J. Bourke - 1990 - Modern Schoolman 68 (1):91-93.
  6.  21
    Publishing Research With Undergraduate Students via Replication Work: The Collaborative Replications and Education Project.Jordan R. Wagge, Mark J. Brandt, Ljiljana B. Lazarevic, Nicole Legate, Cody Christopherson, Brady Wiggins & Jon E. Grahe - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
  7.  33
    Who Follows the Unethical Leader? The Association Between Followers’ Personal Characteristics and Intentions to Comply in Committing Organizational Fraud.Eric N. Johnson, Linda A. Kidwell, D. Jordan Lowe & Philip M. J. Reckers - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 154 (1):181-193.
    The role of followers in financial statement fraud has not been widely examined, even though these frauds typically involve collusion between followers and destructive leaders. In a study with 140 MBA students in the role of followers, we examined whether two follower personality traits were associated with behavioral intentions to comply with the demands of an unethical chief executive officer to be complicit in committing financial statement fraud. These personality traits are self-sacrificing self-enhancement, a form of maladaptive narcissism characterized by (...)
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  8. The Order of Lights: Aquinas on Immateriality as Hierarchy.Mark D. Jordan - 1978 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 52:113.
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  9. The alleged aristotelianism of Thomas Aquinas (1990).Mark D. Jordan - 2008 - In James P. Reilly, The Gilson Lectures on Thomas Aquinas. Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.
     
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  10.  18
    Authority and Persuasion in Philosophy.Mark D. Jordan - 1985 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 18 (2):67 - 85.
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  11.  35
    Esotericism and Accessus in Thomas Aquinas.Mark D. Jordan - 1992 - Philosophical Topics 20 (2):35-49.
  12.  15
    Ordering wisdom: the hierarchy of philosophical discourses in Aquinas.Mark D. Jordan - 1986 - Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press.
  13.  38
    Thomas as Commentator in Some Programs of Neo-Thomism.Mark D. Jordan - 2004 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 78 (3):379-386.
    Arguments that Aquinas’s literal commentaries on Aristotle present his own philosophy are often proxies for larger claims about the relation of philosophy to theology. While trying to secure a place for Thomas in philosophic conversation, such arguments impose modern notions of an autonomous and apodictic philosophy, with fixed genres of declarative speech. The result is neither a plausiblereading of the Thomistic corpus nor a helpful exemplar for contemporary Catholic philosophy.
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  14.  69
    Sacramental Characters.Mark D. Jordan - 2006 - Studies in Christian Ethics 19 (3):323-338.
    Thomas Aquinas’s explanation of the (then new) doctrine of sacramental character can seem a crudely mechanical view of the causality of rites of church membership. It explains in fact the capacity and horizon for moral action in salvation history. Participation in the priesthood of Christ enables the believer to inhabit the pedagogy through which history is brought back to Trinitarian life. This sort of account, which is for Thomas the indispensable ground of moral theology, sounds archaic to many contemporary Christian (...)
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  15.  84
    Wild Bodies Don't Need to Perceive, Detect, Capture, or Create Meaning: They ARE Meaning.J. Scott Jordan, Vincent T. Cialdella, Alex Dayer, Matthew D. Langley & Zachery Stillman - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
  16.  49
    Cicero, Ambrose, and Aquinas “on duties”or the limits of genre in morals.Mark D. Jordan - 2005 - Journal of Religious Ethics 33 (3):485-502.
    To compose a Christian book on exemplary Christian living, Ambrose appropriates and criticizes Cicero's book on "duties," "De officiis." In many passages within the moral part of his "Summa of Theology," Thomas Aquinas incorporates quotations from both Cicero and Ambrose. Comparison of the three texts raises issues about the relation of genres to terms, arguments, rules, and ideals in religious teaching. Genre becomes a useful category for analyzing religious rhetoric only when it is conceived as a set of persuasive or (...)
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  17. Aquinas's Construction of a Moral Account of the Passions.Mark D. Jordan - 1986 - Freiburger Zeitschrift für Philosophie Und Theologie 33:71-97.
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  18. Juan José Sanguineti: "La filosofía de la ciencia según Santo Tomás". [REVIEW]Mark D. Jordan - 1981 - The Thomist 45 (2):333.
     
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  19.  25
    9 Theology and philosophy.Mark D. Jordan - 1993 - In Norman Kretzmann & Eleonore Stump, The Cambridge Companion to Aquinas. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. pp. 232.
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  20. The Evidence of the Transcendentals and the Place of Beauty in Thomas Aquinas.Mark D. Jordan - 1989 - International Philosophical Quarterly 29 (4):393-407.
  21.  59
    The Intelligibility of the World and the Divine Ideas in Aquinas.Mark D. Jordan - 1984 - Review of Metaphysics 38 (1):17 - 32.
    THERE are several answers in Aquinas to the question, what is the ground of the world's intelligibility. The fullest- answer is contained by the account of creation and expressed in the doctrine of divine Ideas. I would like to trace the lines of that doctrine in Aquinas's corpus as a means of showing how an account of creation at once clarifies and inverts the analysis of natural intelligibility.
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  22.  26
    The Competition of Authoritative Languages and Aquinas's Theological Rhetoric.Mark D. Jordan - 1994 - Medieval Philosophy & Theology 4:71-90.
  23.  6
    The Pars moralis of the Summa theologiae as Scientia and as Ars.Mark D. Jordan - 1994 - In Andreas Speer & Ingrid Craemer-Ruegenberg, Scientia und Ars im Hoch- und Spätmittelalter. de Gruyter. pp. 468-481.
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  24.  28
    Democratic Moral Education and the Gifts of the Holy Spirit.Mark D. Jordan - 2016 - Journal of Religious Ethics 44 (2):246-259.
    How far is Thomas Aquinas available for current discussions in political philosophy? While there are certainly things to be learned from him about our political preoccupations, the pedagogy of his moral teaching typically resists our familiar questions. This holds even when the question is put in terms that Thomas should recognize—say, as a question about the virtues appropriate for a democracy. Thomas not only gives different meanings to these terms, he moves political topics away from the center of theological attention (...)
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  25. The names of God and the being of names.Mark D. Jordan - 1983 - In Alfred J. Freddoso, The Existence and Nature of God. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press. pp. 161--90.
     
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  26.  46
    Existant et Acte d'être, II. [REVIEW]Mark D. Jordan - 1982 - Review of Metaphysics 36 (2):470-472.
    This is the second volume of an "essay in existential philosophy." The first, published in 1977, was intended to "do justice to certain experiential givens of immediate experience" which, once subjected to "severe" testing, could be established as "scientific hypotheses at the level of an existential critique of knowledge". The second volume now means to provide "an ensemble of ideal base intuitions, expressible as a 'system', of which each constitutes the concrete taking of a position before a certain state of (...)
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  27.  20
    A Deep Evolutionary Approach to Bioinspired Classifier Optimisation for Brain-Machine Interaction.Jordan J. Bird, Diego R. Faria, Luis J. Manso, Anikó Ekárt & Christopher D. Buckingham - 2019 - Complexity 2019:1-14.
    This study suggests a new approach to EEG data classification by exploring the idea of using evolutionary computation to both select useful discriminative EEG features and optimise the topology of Artificial Neural Networks. An evolutionary algorithm is applied to select the most informative features from an initial set of 2550 EEG statistical features. Optimisation of a Multilayer Perceptron is performed with an evolutionary approach before classification to estimate the best hyperparameters of the network. Deep learning and tuning with Long Short-Term (...)
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  28.  25
    The modernity of Christian theology or writing Kierkegaard again for the first time.Mark D. Jordan - 2011 - Modern Theology 27 (3):442-451.
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  29. The Modes of Thomistic Discourse: Questions for Corbin's "Le chemin de la théologie chez Thomas d'Aquin".Mark D. Jordan - 1981 - The Thomist 45 (1):80.
     
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  30.  78
    Foucault's Ironies and the Important Earnestness of Theory.Mark D. Jordan - 2012 - Foucault Studies 14:7-19.
    Foucault’s History of Sexuality 1 cannot be understood without sustained attention to its ironies, which are written into every level from diction to structure. The little book does not intend to deliver a theory, queer or otherwise. It means rather to display and then to frustrate the desire for theory—especially when it comes to sexuality.
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  31.  28
    The Competition of Authoritative Languages and Aquinas's Theological Rhetoric.Mark D. Jordan - 1994 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 4:71-90.
  32.  34
    The Order of Lights.Mark D. Jordan - 1978 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 52:112-120.
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  33.  19
    The Disappearance of Galen in Thirteenth-Century Philosophy and Theology.Mark D. Jordan - 1991 - In Albert Zimmermann & Andreas Speer, Mensch und Natur im Mittelalter, 2. Halbbd. De Gruyter. pp. 703-717.
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  34.  18
    18 ‘Medieval Ethics’ in the History of Philosophy.Mark D. Jordan - 2020 - In Andrew LaZella & Richard A. Lee, The Edinburgh Critical History of Middle Ages and Renaissance Philosophy. Edinburgh: Edinburgh Critical History of Philosophy. pp. 332-343.
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  35.  38
    A Preface to the Study of Philosophic Genres.Mark D. Jordan - 1981 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 14 (4):199 - 211.
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  36.  11
    Teaching bodies: moral formation in the Summa of Thomas Aquinas.Mark D. Jordan - 2017 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    This book is an interpretation of the moral teaching of Thomas Aquinas's Summa of Theology. It argues that teaching on the virtues can only be understood by turning to the patterns of divine teaching in the incarnation and the sacraments. It presents this not only as Thomas's great originality in the Summa but also as his contribution to Christian thought in the present.
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  37.  21
    Faith, Order, Understanding: Natural Theology in the Augustinian Tradition (review).Mark D. Jordan - 2012 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 50 (3):454-455.
  38.  9
    The Alleged Aristotelianism of Thomas Aquinas.Mark D. Jordan - 1992 - Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.
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  39.  24
    Spheres of Philosophical Inquiry and the Historiography of Medieval Philosophy (review).Mark D. Jordan - 1999 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 37 (3):530-531.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Spheres of Philosophical Inquiry and the Historiography of Medieval Philosophy by John InglisMark D. JordanJohn Inglis. Spheres of Philosophical Inquiry and the Historiography of Medieval Philosophy. Brill’s Studies in Intellectual History, volume 81. Leiden, Boston, Köln: Brill, 1998. Pp. x + 324. Cloth, $99.50.Modern philosophers have shown themselves quite unphilosophical about the academic history of their own discipline. Content with grand stories that move from Plato to themselves, (...)
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  40.  47
    Philoponus and the Rejection of Aristotelian Science.Mark D. Jordan & Richard Sorabji - 1990 - Philosophical Review 99 (1):107.
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  41.  53
    Albert the Great and the Hierarchy of Sciences.Mark D. Jordan - 1992 - Faith and Philosophy 9 (4):483-499.
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  42. The Protreptic Structure of the "Summa Contra Gentiles".Mark D. Jordan - 1986 - The Thomist 50 (2):173.
     
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  43.  66
    Words and Word: Incarnation and Signification in Augustine’s De Doctrina Christiana.Mark D. Jordan - 1980 - Augustinian Studies 11:177-196.
  44. Book Review: Alien Sex: The Body and Desire in Cinema and Theology. [REVIEW]Mark D. Jordan - 2006 - Studies in Christian Ethics 19 (3):419-423.
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  45.  16
    Quaestiones super Libro elenchorum. [REVIEW]Mark D. Jordan - 1986 - Speculum 61 (1):251-252.
  46. The role of "control" in an embodied cognition.J. Scott Jordan - 2000 - Philosophical Psychology 13 (2):233 – 237.
    Borrett, Kelly, and Kwan follow the lead of Merleau-Ponty and develop a theory of neural-network modeling that emerges out of what they find wrong with current approaches to thought and action. Specifically, they take issue with "cognitivism" and its tendency to model cognitive agents as controlling, representational systems. While attempting to make the point that pre-predicative experience/action/place (i.e. grasping) involves neither representation nor control, the authors imply that control-theoretic concepts and representationalism necessarily go hand-in-hand. The purpose of the present paper (...)
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  47. (1 other version)Estimating the Reproducibility of Experimental Philosophy.Florian Cova, Brent Strickland, Angela Abatista, Aurélien Allard, James Andow, Mario Attie, James Beebe, Renatas Berniūnas, Jordane Boudesseul, Matteo Colombo, Fiery Cushman, Rodrigo Diaz, Noah N’Djaye Nikolai van Dongen, Vilius Dranseika, Brian D. Earp, Antonio Gaitán Torres, Ivar Hannikainen, José V. Hernández-Conde, Wenjia Hu, François Jaquet, Kareem Khalifa, Hanna Kim, Markus Kneer, Joshua Knobe, Miklos Kurthy, Anthony Lantian, Shen-yi Liao, Edouard Machery, Tania Moerenhout, Christian Mott, Mark Phelan, Jonathan Phillips, Navin Rambharose, Kevin Reuter, Felipe Romero, Paulo Sousa, Jan Sprenger, Emile Thalabard, Kevin Tobia, Hugo Viciana, Daniel Wilkenfeld & Xiang Zhou - 2018 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology (1):1-36.
    Responding to recent concerns about the reliability of the published literature in psychology and other disciplines, we formed the X-Phi Replicability Project to estimate the reproducibility of experimental philosophy. Drawing on a representative sample of 40 x-phi studies published between 2003 and 2015, we enlisted 20 research teams across 8 countries to conduct a high-quality replication of each study in order to compare the results to the original published findings. We found that x-phi studies – as represented in our sample (...)
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  48.  22
    Formal modeling for work systems design.W. J. Clancey, B. Jordan, P. Sachs & D. Torok - unknown
    One approach to applied AI is to automate business processes and remove people from the system. Another approach is to use AI methods to model how work actually gets done, so we can understand the essential role of knowledge people have about each other ("social knowledge") in allocating resources, assigning jobs, and forming teams.
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  49.  11
    Beginning with biology: “Aspects of cognition” exist in the service of the brain's overall function as a resource-regulator.Jordan E. Theriault, Matt Coleman, Mallory J. Feldman, Joseph D. Fridman, Eli Sennesh, Lisa Feldman Barrett & Karen S. Quigley - 2020 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 43:e26.
    Lieder and Griffiths rightly urge that computational cognitive models be constrained by resource usage, but they should go further. The brain's primary function is to regulate resource usage. As a consequence, resource usage should not simply select among algorithmic models of “aspects of cognition.” Rather, “aspects of cognition” should be understood as existing in the service of resource management.
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  50.  28
    Graceful Reason: Essays in Ancient and Medieval Philosophy Presented to Joseph Owens, CSSR, on the Occasion of His Seventy-Fifth Birthday and the Fiftieth Anniversary of His Ordination. [REVIEW]Mark D. Jordan - 1985 - Speculum 60 (4):1047-1048.
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