Results for 'Mary Devitt'

933 found
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  1.  14
    The paradox of deviance in addicted mexican american mothers.Mary Devitt & Joan Moore - 1989 - Gender and Society 3 (1):53-70.
    Two aspects of mothering—using drugs during pregnancy and giving up the rearing of one's children—are the focus of this analysis of 58 addicted Chicana mothers who spent their adolescent years in barrio gangs. From a traditional stance, such women were doubly deviant, since they violated gender-role prescriptions by joining a barrio gang and by becoming involved in heroin and street life. Half of these women added to this deviance by using heroin during pregnancy, and 40 percent relinquished at least one (...)
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  2. (1 other version)Aristotle on Substance. The Paradox of Unity.Mary Louise Gill - 1991 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 181 (4):668-671.
     
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  3. Philosophical Methodology: The Armchair or the Laboratory?Matthew C. Haug (ed.) - 2013 - New York: Routledge.
    What methodology should philosophers follow? Should they rely on methods that can be conducted from the armchair? Or should they leave the armchair and turn to the methods of the natural sciences, such as experiments in the laboratory? Or is this opposition itself a false one? Arguments about philosophical methodology are raging in the wake of a number of often conflicting currents, such as the growth of experimental philosophy, the resurgence of interest in metaphysical questions, and the use of formal (...)
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  4. (1 other version)Ethics.Mary E. Gladwin - 1930 - Philadelphia and London,: W. B. Saunders company.
     
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  5.  86
    Another view of potentiality and human embryos.Mary B. Mahowald - 2005 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 26 (2):111-113.
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  6.  56
    Minds.Mary A. Mccloskey - 1962 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 40 (3):303-312.
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  7. Neuroethics.Mary Jean Walker - 2022 - In Ezio Di Nucci, Ji-Young Lee & Isaac A. Wagner (eds.), The Rowman & Littlefield Handbook of Bioethics. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
     
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  8.  49
    Developing Mechanisms of Self-Regulation in Early Life.Mary K. Rothbart, Brad E. Sheese, M. Rosario Rueda & Michael I. Posner - 2011 - Emotion Review 3 (2):207-213.
    Children show increasing control of emotions and behavior during their early years. Our studies suggest a shift in control from the brain’s orienting network in infancy to the executive network by the age of 3—4 years. Our longitudinal study indicates that orienting influences both positive and negative affect, as measured by parent report in infancy. At 3—4 years of age, the dominant control of affect rests in a frontal brain network that involves the anterior cingulate gyrus. Connectivity of brain structures (...)
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  9. Secondary sexism and quota hiring.Mary Anne Warren - 1977 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 6 (3):240-261.
  10.  21
    Commercial Biobanks and Genetic Research: Banking Without Checks?Mary R. Anderlik - 2003 - In Bartha Maria Knoppers (ed.), Populations and genetics: legal and socio-ethical perspectives. Boston: Martinus Nijhoff. pp. 345--373.
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  11. The Development of Sartre's Realistic Metaphysics.Mary Edwards - 2022 - Review of Metaphysics 75 (3):559-586.
    This article traces the development of Sartre's metaphysics with three interrelated aims in mind. The first is to situate Sartre's metaphysical views in relation to those of his predecessors, his contemporaries, and current continental philosophy. The second is to show that Sartre's project informs some of the key changes he makes to his existentialism during his career. The third is to bring Sartre the metaphysician into dialogue with key thinkers in the current realism/antirealism debate in Continental philosophy by showing that (...)
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  12.  14
    Women, science, and academia: Graduate education and careers.Mary Frank Fox - 2001 - Gender and Society 15 (5):654-666.
    In the study of gender and society, science is a strategic analytic research site—because of the hierarchical nature of gendered relations, generally, and the hierarchy of science, particularly. Academic science, especially, is crucial to, and revealing of, status in science and society. This article focuses on three questions: What is the status of women in scientific careers and the role of graduate education in these careers? What are the implications for the analysis of gender? Where can we intervene, and how? (...)
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  13.  29
    Beyond Dyadic Coordination: Multimodal Behavioral Irregularity in Triads Predicts Facets of Collaborative Problem Solving.Mary Jean Amon, Hana Vrzakova & Sidney K. D'Mello - 2019 - Cognitive Science 43 (10):e12787.
    We hypothesize that effective collaboration is facilitated when individuals and environmental components form a synergy where they work together and regulate one another to produce stable patterns of behavior, or regularity, as well as adaptively reorganize to form new behaviors, or irregularity. We tested this hypothesis in a study with 32 triads who collaboratively solved a challenging visual computer programming task for 20 min following an introductory warm‐up phase. Multidimensional recurrence quantification analysis was used to examine fine‐grained (i.e., every 10 (...)
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  14. A Serious Proposal to the Ladies. Parts I & II.Mary Astell & Patricia Springborg - 1998 - Utopian Studies 9 (2):225-226.
  15.  87
    Foucault's strategy: Knowledge, power, and the specificity of truth.Mary C. Rawlinson - 1987 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 12 (4):371-395.
    This paper investigates the exemplarity of medicine in Foucault's analyses of knowledge generally. By tracing the development of his concept of power and its relation to knowledge, it offers an account of Foucault's unconventional philosophical project. Finally, it specifies Foucault's strategy for undermining processes of normalisation.
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  16.  61
    Understanding Differences in Wayfinding Strategies.Mary Hegarty, Chuanxiuyue He, Alexander P. Boone, Shuying Yu, Emily G. Jacobs & Elizabeth R. Chrastil - 2023 - Topics in Cognitive Science 15 (1):102-119.
    Navigating to goal locations in a known environment (wayfinding) can be accomplished by different strategies, notably by taking habitual, well-learned routes (response strategy) or by inferring novel paths, such as shortcuts, from spatial knowledge of the environment's layout (place strategy). Human and animal neuroscience studies reveal that these strategies reflect different brain systems, with response strategies relying more on activation of the striatum and place strategies associated with activation of the hippocampus. In addition to individual differences in strategy, recent behavioral (...)
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  17. Perceiving that We See and Hear: Aristotle on Plato on Judgement and Reflection.Mary Margaret McCabe - 2015 - In Platonic Conversations. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
     
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  18.  74
    Worlds Without End: The Many Lives of the Multiverse.Mary-Jane Rubenstein - 2014 - Columbia University Press.
    "Multiverse" cosmologies imagine our universe as just one of a vast number of others. While this idea has captivated philosophy, religion, and literature for millennia, it is now being considered as a scientific hypothesis--with different models emerging from cosmology, quantum mechanics, and string theory. Beginning with ancient Atomist and Stoic philosophies, Mary-Jane Rubenstein links contemporary models of the multiverse to their forerunners and explores the reasons for their recent appearance. One concerns the so-called fine-tuning of the universe: nature's constants (...)
  19.  9
    The Work of Psychoanalysts in the Public Health Sector.Mary Brownescombe Heller & Sheena Pollet (eds.) - 2009 - Routledge.
    This book provides a comprehensive insight into the ways in which psychoanalysts think and work. Mary Brownescombe Heller and Sheena Pollet bring together internationally known contributors trained at the Institute of Psychoanalysis to explore the broad range of clinical work, thinking, and teaching undertaken with children, families, adults and staff by psychoanalysts in the UK public health sector. Divided into four sections, _The Work of Psychoanalysts in the Public Health Sector_ covers: clinical work with parents and young children clinical (...)
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  20.  64
    (1 other version)Auguste Comte.Mary Pickering - 1993 - The Philosophers' Magazine 59 (59):62-64.
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  21.  11
    Masculine Shame: From Succubus to the Eternal Feminine.Mary Ayers - 2011 - Routledge.
    _How does the image of the succubus relate to psychoanalytic thought?_ _Masculine Shame: From Succubus to the Eternal Feminine_ explores the idea that the image of the succubus, a demonic female creature said to emasculate men and murder mothers and infants, has been created out of the masculine projection of shame and looks at how the transformation of this image can be traced through Western history, mythology, and Judeo-Christian literature. Divided into three parts areas of discussion include: the birth of (...)
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  22.  22
    Actions and Attitudes: Understanding Greek (and Latin) Verbal Paradigms.Mary R. Bachvarova - 2007 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 100 (2):123-132.
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  23.  32
    Appeals for Pity in the Heptaméron.Mary J. Baker - 2001 - Renascence 53 (3):191-205.
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  24.  23
    Some Difficult Words in the Ancrene Riwle.Mary Baldwin - 1976 - Mediaeval Studies 38 (1):268-290.
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  25.  79
    Dream bodies and dream pains in Augustine's "de natura et origine animae".Mary Sirridge - 2005 - Vivarium 43 (2):213-249.
    In his De Natura et Origine Animae, an answer to a work by Vincentius Victor, Augustine was drawn into attempting to answer some questions about what kind of reality dream-bodies, dream-worlds and dream-pains have. In this paper I concentrate on Augustine's attempts to show that none of Victor's arguments for the corporeality of the soul are any good, and that Victor's inflated claims about the extent of the soul's self-knowledge are the result of mistaking self-awareness for self-knowledge. Augustine takes the (...)
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  26.  8
    Aristotle on Teaching.Mary Michael Spangler - 1998 - Upa.
    Aristotle on Teaching examines teaching in general, and analyzes the objects, procedures, and order found in all student learning, furnishing the guidelines for the culminating section on the inductive and deductive procedures underlying all teaching. It explores Aristotle's doctrine to discover its relevance for the art of teaching, defined as the act of explaining the truth to those being taught, through the lucid explanations of Thomas Aquinas on the writings of Aristotle.
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  27. Wilhelm Dilthey's Descriptive Psychology.Mary Katherine Tillman - 1974 - Dissertation, New School for Social Research
     
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  28. Lovesickness in the Middle Ages. The Viaticum and Its Commentaries.Mary F. Wack & Vittoria Perrone Compagni - 1995 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 17 (2):337.
  29. Perpetrators of Violent Crime as Potential Victims of Research in Prison.Mary Ellen Waithe - 1991 - In Diane Sank & David I. Caplan (eds.), To Be a Victim: Encounters with Crime and Injustice. Plenum.
     
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  30. Should we invest in biobanking in Hong Kong? Using biobanking for dyslexic studies in Hong Kong as an example.Mary Miu Yee Waye & Connie Ho - 2009 - In Margaret Sleeboom-Faulkner (ed.), Human genetic biobanks in Asia: politics of trust and scientific advancement. New York: Routledge.
     
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  31.  19
    The prosodic domain of phonological encoding: Evidence from speech errors.Mary-Beth Beirne & Karen Croot - 2018 - Cognition 177 (C):1-7.
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  32.  24
    Ensaiando Gênero, Desejo e Trabalho; Ontologia e Emancipação no Marxismo; Por Feminismos- Emancipacionista e Decolonial.Mary Garcia Castro - 2019 - Odeere 4 (8):173.
    Este ensaio revisita artigo em que abordamos conceito chave no marxismo, o de emancipação, relacionando entrelaces sobre seu norte, o gênero humano, categoria trabalhada na ontologia do ser social por Lukács e Marx, com debates sobre gênero, como elaborado no plano de debates feministas sobre patriarcado. Já neste texto, se insistimos que a centralidade do trabalho deve ser compartida com as de sexualidade e desejo, defendemos que o debate sobre projetos de emancipação, quer do gênero no feminino, quer do gênero (...)
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  33.  17
    It's What Indian Girls Do: Narratives in Caregiving for a Parent With Dementia.Mary M. Chittooran - 2020 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 10 (2):103-105.
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  34.  13
    Agnieszka Piotrowska (2019) The Nasty Woman and the Neo Femme Fatale in Contemporary Cinema.Mary Harrod - 2020 - Film-Philosophy 24 (2):250-253.
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  35. How to do things without words : Whisperers as rustic authorities on interspecies dialogue.Mary Trachsel - 2010 - In Greg Goodale & Jason Edward Black (eds.), Arguments About Animal Ethics. Lexington Books.
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  36. Modern Women Philosophers, 1600-1900.Mary Ellen Waithe - 1991
  37.  20
    Representation= grounded information.Mary-Anne Williams - 2008 - In Tu-Bao Ho & Zhi-Hua Zhou (eds.), PRICAI 2008: Trends in Artificial Intelligence. Springer. pp. 473--484.
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  38.  13
    Packing a Bag for the Journey Ahead: Preparing Nursing Students for Success.Mary Mullaly Worrell - 2005 - Inquiry: The Journal of the Virginia Community Colleges 10 (1):49-53.
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  39.  6
    Milton C. Nahm, Readings in Philosophy of Art and Aesthetics, Prentice-Hall, 1975 (587 + xvi pages).Mary-Barbara Zeldin - 1977 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 4 (1):91-95.
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  40. (1 other version)The persistent problems of philosophy.Mary Whiton Calkins - 1907 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 64:637-640.
     
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  41.  40
    De Trinitate.Mary T. Clark - 2005 - In The Cambridge Companion to Augustine. Cambridge University Press. pp. 91--102.
    St. Augustine of Hippo wrote the ’De Trinitate’ to explain to critics of the Nicene Creed how the Christian doctrine of the divinity and coequality of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit is present in Scripture. He also wanted to convince philosophers that Christ is the Wisdom they sought. Augustine’s third purpose was to correlate the biblical truth that all human persons are created to image God, a Trinity, a communion of love, with the first two Commandments of the Old and (...)
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  42.  54
    Revisiting the Truth-Telling Debate: A Study of Disclosure Practices at a Major Cancer Center.Mary R. Anderlik, R. D. Pentz & K. R. Hess - 2000 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 11 (3):251-259.
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  43.  81
    The Vindications: The Rights of Men and the Rights of Woman.Mary Wollstonecraft - 1997 - Peterborough, CA: Broadview Press.
    The works of Mary Wollstonecraft ranged from the early Thoughts on the Education of Daughters to The Female Reader, a selection of texts for girls, and included two novels. But her reputation is founded on A Vindication of the Rights of Woman of 1792. This treatise is the first great document of feminism—and is now accepted as a core text in western tradition. It is not widely known that the germ of Wollstonecraft's great work came out of an earlier (...)
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  44. The constructible and the intelligible in Newton's philosophy of geometry.Mary Domski - 2003 - Philosophy of Science 70 (5):1114-1124.
    In the preface to the Principia (1687) Newton famously states that “geometry is founded on mechanical practice.” Several commentators have taken this and similar remarks as an indication that Newton was firmly situated in the constructivist tradition of geometry that was prevalent in the seventeenth century. By drawing on a selection of Newton's unpublished texts, I hope to show the faults of such an interpretation. In these texts, Newton not only rejects the constructivism that took its birth in Descartes's Géométrie (...)
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  45. Natural Right Or Natural Law?Mary Gregor - 1995 - Jahrbuch für Recht Und Ethik 3.
    If Kant's account of rights had continued the "early modern Natural Law tradition", basing rights on some notion of human flourishing, there would be no difficulty about including socio-economic rights for the needy in his theory. However, his division of moral philosophy into Rechtslehre and Tugendlehre limits Rechtspflichten to duties that a moral agent can be coerced to fulfill. If a state is to give the needy statutory rights, the justification for using coercion on its citizens cannot be that they (...)
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  46.  14
    Attributes of sensation.Mary Whiton Calkins - 1899 - Psychological Review 6 (5):506-514.
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  47.  25
    Experimentelle Studien über Associationen. I. Theil. Die Associationen im normalen Zustande.Mary Whiton Calkins - 1897 - Psychological Review 4 (3):329-331.
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  48.  24
    Selected bibliography on HECs, 1993–1994.Mary Carrington Coutts - 1995 - HEC Forum 7 (1):54-71.
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  49.  14
    Suffering narratives of older adults: a phenomenological approach to serious illness, chronic pain, recovery and maternal care.Mary Beth Quaranta Morrissey - 2015 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    This book exploits the power of phenomenological methods to access and describe lived moral experiences of pain and suffering for patients, their families and the wider community. Creating new fields of communication for patients, their family members and health professionals in shared decision making processes, this book builds on knowledge about suffering to help and guide correct action in preventing and relieving chronic pain and improving systems of care. It offers a new phenomenology for understanding moral experience in serious illness (...)
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  50.  13
    Participating in Life’s Rich Tapestry.Mary Nichols - 2019 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 9 (1):E1-E3.
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