Results for 'Michael C. Mackey'

965 found
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  1. Chaos and dynamical systems.Leon Glass & Michael C. Mackey - 1991 - World Futures 32:259.
     
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  2.  72
    Liberalism without humanism: Michel Foucault and the free-market Creed, 1976–1979*: Michael C. behrent.Michael C. Behrent - 2009 - Modern Intellectual History 6 (3):539-568.
    This article challenges conventional readings of Michel Foucault by examining his fascination with neoliberalism in the late 1970s. Foucault did not critique neoliberalism during this period; rather, he strategically endorsed it. The necessary cause for this approval lies in the broader rehabilitation of economic liberalism in France during the 1970s. The sufficient cause lies in Foucault's own intellectual development: drawing on his long-standing critique of the state as a model for conceptualizing power, Foucault concluded, during the 1970s, that economic liberalism, (...)
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  3.  27
    Laterality and human evolution.Michael C. Corballis - 1989 - Psychological Review 96 (3):492-505.
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  4.  52
    On the evolution of language and generativity.Michael C. Corballis - 1992 - Cognition 44 (3):197-226.
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  5.  58
    Throwing out the Bayesian baby with the optimal bathwater: Response to Endress.Michael C. Frank - 2013 - Cognition 128 (3):417-423.
  6.  92
    Modeling human performance in statistical word segmentation.Michael C. Frank, Sharon Goldwater, Thomas L. Griffiths & Joshua B. Tenenbaum - 2010 - Cognition 117 (2):107-125.
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  7.  17
    The genetics and evolution of handedness.Michael C. Corballis - 1997 - Psychological Review 104 (4):714-727.
  8. (1 other version)Four-dimensionalism.Michael C. Rea - 2003 - In Michael J. Loux & Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.), The Oxford handbook of metaphysics. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 1-59.
    This article characterizes the varieties of four - dimensionalism and provides a critical overview of the main arguments in support of it.
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  9.  10
    Caregiving, Carebots, and Contagion.Michael C. Brannigan - 2022 - Lexington Books.
    This work explores caring robots' lifesaving benefits, particularly during contagion, while probing the threat they pose to interpersonal engagement and genuine human caregiving. As humans, we have a binding moral responsibility to care for the Other, and genuine caring demands our embodied, human-to-human presence.
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  10.  7
    Resuscitating Embodied Presence in Healthcare: The Encounter with le Visage in Levinas.Michael C. Brannigan - 2021 - In Susi Ferrarello (ed.), Phenomenology of Bioethics: Technoethics and Lived Experience. Springer. pp. 131-142.
    Our increasingly sophisticated medical technological interventions yield numerous benefits. At the same time, there are dangerous trade-offs, particularly in the domain of digitized health communication and electronic medical records. These have become the rule of thumb, the default posture, in place of interpersonal, embodied, face-to-face interaction. This foremost stumbling block in our healthcare system generates an urgent moral imperative to resuscitate embodied presence in healthcare. Through applying a phenomenological lens, focusing particularly on insights from Emmanuel Levinas, this essay examines his (...)
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  11.  13
    Toegye: His Life, Learning and Times.Michael C. Kalton - 2017 - In Young-Chan Ro (ed.), Dao Companion to Korean Confucian Philosophy. Springer Verlag. pp. 159-178.
    Toegye Yi Hwang is the most renowned Neo-Confucian thinker of Korea’s Joseon dynasty. The first three sections of this chapter describe his early life, the violent “literati purges” that preceded and extended tragically into his early career, and his career in office, from which he sought retirement only to be recalled repeatedly. The fourth section looks into the primary sources, the books from which he became steeped in the learning of the Cheng-Zhu school of Neo-Confucian thought. His own major written (...)
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  12.  19
    The Evolution of Lateralized Brain Circuits.Michael C. Corballis - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
  13.  24
    Nuclear denial in Japan: the network power of an energy industrial complex.Michael C. Dreiling, Tomoyasu Nakamura & Yvonne A. Braun - 2024 - Theory and Society 53 (1):1-39.
    Given the known hazards of nuclear energy in seismically active Japan after the Fukushima meltdowns as well as the presence of viable conservation and renewable energy options, the question of Japan’s stalled energy transition warrants critical interrogation. To better understand why, after Fukushima, Japan’s energy policy trajectory maintained the nuclear status quo and an increased reliance on fossil fuels, this article employs network and historical analyses to examine the confluence of post-Fukushima political forces connected to Japan’s nuclear energy sector. Our (...)
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  14.  14
    Christian Ethics and Contemporary Moral Problems.Michael C. Banner - 1999 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book addresses such key ethical issues as euthanasia, the environment, biotechnology, abortion, the family, sexual ethics, and the distribution of health care resources. Michael Banner argues that the task of Christian ethics is to understand the world and humankind in the light of the credal affirmations of the Christian faith, and to explicate this understanding in its significance for human action through a critical engagement with the concerns, claims and problems of other ethics. He illustrates both the distinctiveness (...)
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  15.  64
    (M.) Maaß Das antike Delphi. Pp. 128, ills, maps. Munich: C.H. Beck, 2007. Paper, €7.90. ISBN: 978-3-406-53631-.Michael C. Scott - 2008 - The Classical Review 58 (2):623-.
  16. How to Be an Eleatic Monist.Michael C. Rea - 2001 - Noûs 35 (s15):129-151.
    There is a tradition according to which Parmenides of Elea endorsed the following set of counterintuitive doctrines: (a) There exists exactly one material thing. (b) What exists does not change. (g) Nothing is generated or destroyed. (d) What exists is undivided. For convenience, I will use the label ‘Eleatic monism’ to refer to the conjunction of a–d.
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  17.  53
    From critique to reaction: The new right, critical theory and international relations.Michael C. Williams & Jean-Francois Drolet - 2022 - Journal of International Political Theory 18 (1):23-45.
    Across the globe, radical conservative political forces and ideas are influencing and even transforming the landscape of international politics. Yet IR is remarkably ill-equipped to understand and engage these new challenges. Unlike political theory or domestic political analyses, conservatism has no distinctive place in the fields’ defining alternatives of realism, liberalism, Marxism, and constructivism. This paper seeks to provide a point of entry for such engagement by bringing together what may seem the most unlikely of partners: critical theory and the (...)
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  18. Can profit-seekers be virtuous?Michael C. Munger & Daniel C. Russell - 2018 - In Eugene Heath, Byron Kaldis & Alexei M. Marcoux (eds.), The Routledge Companion to Business Ethics. New York: Routledge.
     
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  19.  11
    Propulsions Toward What Capes? Testing Normative Theory Through a Panorama of Consequences.Michael C. Withers & Ryan Krause - 2021 - Journal of Business Ethics 181 (2):317-333.
    AbstractMany management theories have descriptive and normative elements, and no management theory used to generate prescriptions can be totally devoid of normative assumptions. Yet, there remain few useful models for assessing the relative strength or utility of the normative frameworks that inform most management theorizing. In this essay, we offer a model from a field of art rather than science. We introduce the poetry of early twentieth century American writer Hart Crane as providing such a model. Crane uses a panorama (...)
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  20.  54
    Forgetting our facts: the role of inhibitory processes in the loss of propositional knowledge.Michael C. Anderson & Theodore Bell - 2001 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 130 (3):544.
  21.  8
    Practices of Intellectual Labor in the Republic of Letters: Leibniz and Edward Bernard on Language and European Origins.Michael C. Carhart - 2019 - Journal of the History of Ideas 80 (3):365-386.
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  22.  13
    Starting from Where We Are: The Importance of the Status Quo in James Buchanan.Michael C. Munger - 2018 - In Richard E. Wagner (ed.), James M. Buchanan: A Theorist of Political Economy and Social Philosophy. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 39-64.
    One of the key tenets of James Buchanan’s political thought was the centrality of the status quo, embodied in Buchanan’s frequently heard axiom that “we start from where we are.” There is practical political value in “starting from where we are,” because we are in fact there, and not someplace else. Buchanan’s normative concern is that starting from where “we are” means that changes are more likely to be voluntary, and therefore Pareto-improving. The history of this notion of the status (...)
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  23.  18
    A Case for the Young Foucault.Michael C. Behrent - 2022 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 34 (3):299-340.
    Between 1949 and 1961 (or, arguably, 1966), three interconnected dimensions of Foucault’s early thought emerged. First, the young Foucault offered a Hegelian perspective on Kant’s notion of the transcendental. The a priori conditions of thought, Foucault suggested, both shape and arise from historical experience. Second, Foucault drew on Heidegger’s study of Kant to argue that modern thought rests on the premise of human finitude and embraces a problematic epistemology rooted in philosophical anthropology. Foucault argued that anthropology enabled a vast extension (...)
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  24. Euvoluntary or not, exchange is just*: Michael C. munger.Michael C. Munger - 2011 - Social Philosophy and Policy 28 (2):192-211.
    The arguments for redistribution of wealth, and for prohibiting certain transactions such as price-gouging, both are based in mistaken conceptions of exchange. This paper proposes a neologism, “euvoluntary” exchange, meaning both that the exchange is truly voluntary and that it benefits both parties to the transaction. The argument has two parts: First, all euvoluntary exchanges should be permitted, and there is no justification for redistribution of wealth if disparities result only from euvoluntary exchanges. Second, even exchanges that are not euvoluntary (...)
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  25.  16
    Processing Contradictory CSR Information: The Influence of Primacy and Recency Effects on the Consumer-Firm Relationship.Michael C. Peasley, Parker J. Woodroof & Joshua T. Coleman - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 172 (2):275-289.
    Drawing on the influence of primacy and recency effects in processing information about corporate social responsibility, the authors examine how internal and external factors impact the consumer-firm relationship in the presence of contradictory CSR information. Evaluating these factors provides a more comprehensive understanding of how consumers react to unethical and socially irresponsible actions. Contrary to recent research that suggests a reactive CSR communication strategy to be best due to recency effects, the present findings show that past customer experiences with the (...)
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  26.  18
    Swarm intelligence for self-organized clustering.Michael C. Thrun & Alfred Ultsch - 2021 - Artificial Intelligence 290 (C):103237.
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  27.  42
    Mirror-Image Equivalence and Interhemispheric Mirror-Image Reversal.Michael C. Corballis - 2018 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
  28.  36
    Language, Memory, and Mental Time Travel: An Evolutionary Perspective.Michael C. Corballis - 2019 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 13.
  29.  55
    On the biological basis of human laterality: I. Evidence for a maturational left–right gradient.Michael C. Corballis & Michael J. Morgan - 1978 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 1 (2):261-269.
  30.  21
    Commentary on “better communication between engineers and managers” (michael davis).Michael C. Loui - 1997 - Science and Engineering Ethics 3 (2):215-216.
  31.  22
    Toward an evolutionary perspective on hemispheric specialization.Michael C. Corballis - 1981 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 4 (1):69-70.
  32.  24
    Élections américaines : Joe Biden au cœur de la « guerre des deux Amériques ».Michael C. Behrent - 2021 - Cités 85 (1):107-119.
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  33.  69
    What price cheap food?Michael C. Appleby, Neil Cutler, John Gazzard, Peter Goddard, John A. Milne, Colin Morgan & Andrew Redfern - 2003 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 16 (4):395-408.
    This paper is the report of a meetingthat gathered many of the UK's most senioranimal scientists with representatives of thefarming industry, consumer groups, animalwelfare groups, and environmentalists. Therewas strong consensus that the current economicstructure of agriculture cannot adequatelyaddress major issues of concern to society:farm incomes, food security and safety, theneeds of developing countries, animal welfare,and the environment. This economic structure isbased primarily on competition betweenproducers and between retailers, driving foodprices down, combined with externalization ofmany costs. These issues must be addressed (...)
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  34.  27
    Plato's Socratic conversations: drama and dialectic in three dialogues.Michael C. Stokes - 1986 - Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  35.  54
    Substances and substrata.Michael C. LaBossiere - 1994 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 72 (3):360 – 370.
  36.  45
    Precursors to Language.Michael C. Corballis - 2018 - Topoi 37 (2):297-305.
    One view of language is that it emerged in a single step in Homo sapiens, and depended on a radical transformation of human thought, involving symbolic representations and computational rules for combining them. I argue instead that language should be viewed as a communication system for the sharing of thoughts, and that thought processes themselves evolved well before the capacity to share them. One property often considered unique to language is generativity—the capacity to generate a potentially infinite variety of sentences. (...)
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  37.  25
    The Gradual Evolution of Language.Michael C. Corballis - 2014 - Humana Mente 7 (27).
    Language is commonly held to be unique to humans, and to have emerged suddenly in a single “great leap forward” within the past 100,000 years. The view is profoundly anti-Darwinian, and I propose instead a framework for understanding how language might have evolved incrementally from our primate heritage. One major proposition is that language evolved from manual action, with vocalization emerging as the dominant mode late in hominin evolution. The second proposition has to do with the role of language as (...)
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  38.  51
    Review of Michael Keeley: A Social-Contract Theory of Organizations.[REVIEW]Michael C. Keeley - 1990 - Ethics 100 (3):681-682.
  39.  31
    Crossing the Rubicon: Behaviorism, Language, and Evolutionary Continuity.Michael C. Corballis - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11:523263.
    Euan Macphail’s work and ideas captured a pivotal time in the late 20th century when behavioral laws were considered to apply equally across vertebrates, implying equal intelligence, but it was also a time when behaviorism was challenged by the view that language was unique to humans, and bestowed a superior mental status. Subsequent work suggests greater continuity between humans and their forebears, challenging the Chomskyan assumption that language evolved in a single step (“the great leap forward”) in humans. Language is (...)
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  40. Universalism and extensionalism: A reply to Varzi.Michael C. Rea - 2010 - Analysis 70 (3):490-496.
    In a recent article in this journal, Achille Varzi (2009) argues that mereological universalism (U) entails mereological extensionalism (E). The thesis that U entails E (call it ‘T’) has important implications. For example, as is well known, T plays a crucial role in Peter van Inwagen’s argument against universalism (1990: 74–79). In what follows, I show that Varzi’s arguments for T rely on a tendentious assumption about parthood.
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  41.  25
    Synaptic Pruning in Schizophrenia: Does Minocycline Modulate Psychosocial Brain Development?Michael C. Jones, Jin Ming Koh & Kang Hao Cheong - 2020 - Bioessays 42 (9):2000046.
    Recent studies suggest that the tetracycline antibiotic minocycline, or its cousins, hold therapeutic potential for affective and psychotic disorders. This is proposed on the basis of a direct effect on microglia‐mediated frontocortical synaptic pruning (FSP) during adolescence, perhaps in genetically susceptible individuals harboring risk alleles in the complement component cascade that is involved in this normal process of CNS circuit refinement. In reviewing this field, it is argued that minocycline is actually probing and modulating a deeply evolved and intricate system (...)
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  42.  15
    Is the handedness gene on the X chromosome? Comment on Jones and Martin (2000).Michael C. Corballis - 2001 - Psychological Review 108 (4):805-809.
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  43.  49
    Oxford Readings in Philosophical Theology: Volume 1: Trinity, Incarnation, and Atonement.Michael C. Rea (ed.) - 2009 - Oxford University Press.
    Over the past sixty years, within the analytic tradition of philosophy, there has been a significant revival of interest in the philosophy of religion. More recently, philosophers of religion have turned in a more self-consciously interdisciplinary direction, with special focus on topics that have traditionally been the provenance of systematic theologians in the Christian tradition. The present volumes Oxford Readings in Philosophical Theology, volumes 1 and 2 aim to bring together some of the most important essays on six central topics (...)
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  44.  49
    The extensions of the modal logic K.Michael C. Nagle & S. K. Thomason - 1985 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 50 (1):102-109.
  45.  19
    Becoming Foucault: The Poitiers Years.Michael C. Behrent - 2023 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: University of Pennsylvania Press.
    Though Michel Foucault is one of the most important thinkers of the twentieth century, little is known about his early life. Even Foucault’s biographers have neglected this period, preferring instead to start the story when the future philosopher arrives in Paris. Becoming Foucault is a historical reconstruction of the world in which Foucault grew up: the small city of Poitiers, France, from the 1920s until the end of the Second World War. Beyond exploring previously unexamined aspects of Foucault’s childhood, including (...)
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  46.  55
    Mutually algebraic structures and expansions by predicates.Michael C. Laskowski - 2013 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 78 (1):185-194.
    We introduce the notions of a mutually algebraic structures and theories and prove many equivalents. A theory $T$ is mutually algebraic if and only if it is weakly minimal and trivial if and only if no model $M$ of $T$ has an expansion $(M,A)$ by a unary predicate with the finite cover property. We show that every structure has a maximal mutually algebraic reduct, and give a strong structure theorem for the class of elementary extensions of a fixed mutually algebraic (...)
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  47.  73
    Psychology's place in the science of the mind/brain?Michael C. Corballis - 1988 - Biology and Philosophy 3 (3):363-373.
  48.  36
    Early signs of brain asymmetry.Michael C. Corballis - 2013 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 17 (11):554-555.
  49.  31
    The trade-off between symmetry and asymmetry.Michael C. Corballis - 2005 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (4):594-595.
    Population-level asymmetry may be maintained, not by an “evolutionarily stable strategy” pitting a dominant bias against its nondominant opposite, but rather by a genetically based system pitting a directional bias against the absence of any such bias. Stability is then achieved through a heterozygotic advantage, maintaining balanced polymorphism. This model may better capture the fundamental trade-off between lateralization and bilateral symmetry.
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  50. Informative communication in word production and word learning.Michael C. Frank, Noah D. Goodman, Peter Lai & Joshua B. Tenenbaum - 2009 - In N. A. Taatgen & H. van Rijn (eds.), Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society.
     
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