Results for 'Steven G. Candy'

951 found
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  1.  39
    Attention bias to threat in mothers with emotional disorders predicts increased offspring anxiety symptoms: a joint cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis.Allison M. Waters, Elise M. Candy & Steven G. Candy - 2018 - Cognition and Emotion 32 (4):892-903.
    There is convincing evidence of the transmission of anxiety and depression from parents to children; however, mechanisms by which this vulnerability is passed on are unclear. Cognitive models and a small body of cross-sectional research suggest that parental attention biases (ABs) may be one mechanism involved in transmission. Longitudinal associations of maternal and offspring ABs with offspring symptoms have been scarcely studied. Forty-three mothers–child dyads were included. All children (7–12 years old) were diagnosis-free while 24 mothers had a lifetime emotional (...)
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  2. The Force of Freedom.Steven G. Affeldt - 1999 - Political Theory 27 (3):299-333.
    In ancient times, when persuasion played the role of public force, eloquence was necessary. Of what use would it be today, when public force has replaced persuasion. One needs neither art nor metaphor to say such is my pleasure. Jean Jacques Rousseau.
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  3.  24
    Abolition of cyclic activity changes following amygdaloid lesions in rats.Steven G. Barta, Ernest D. Kemble & Eric Klinger - 1975 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 5 (3):236-238.
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  4.  73
    (1 other version)Why even Kim-style psychophysical laws are impossible.Steven G. Daniel - 1999 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 80 (3):225-237.
    If the mental is subject to indeterminacy, does this rule out the possibility of psychophysical laws? One might think so. However, Jaegwon Kim has argued for the existence of a kind of psychophysical law that is not obviously susceptible to problems posed by indeterminacy. I begin by introducing a weak and relatively uncontroversial indeterminacy thesis. Then, by appealing to constraints on theories of strong supervenience and to general considerations about the nature of indeterminacy, I argue that even Kim’s laws cannot (...)
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  5.  52
    Priming a natural or human-made environment directs attention to context-congruent threatening stimuli.Steven G. Young, Christina M. Brown & Nalini Ambady - 2012 - Cognition and Emotion 26 (5):927-933.
  6.  20
    Could these sex differences be due to genes?Steven G. Vandenberg - 1988 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 11 (2):212-214.
  7.  19
    A dual process for the cognitive control of emotional significance: implications for emotion regulation and disorders of emotion.Steven G. Greening, Tae-Ho Lee & Mara Mather - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  8.  40
    Comment On Manuel Davenport’s “Poetry, Truth, and Phenomenology”.Steven G. Crowell - 1985 - Southwest Philosophy Review 2:174-179.
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  9.  89
    Captivating Pictures and Liberating Language.Steven G. Affeldt - 1999 - Philosophical Topics 27 (2):255-285.
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  10. On the difficulty of seeing aspects and the 'therapeutic' reading of Wittgenstein.Steven G. Affeldt - 2010 - In William Day & Víctor J. Krebs (eds.), Seeing Wittgenstein Anew. Cambridge University Press.
     
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  11.  9
    Full history: a philosophy of shared action.Steven G. Smith - 2016 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing.
    How can we take history seriously as real and relevant? Despite the hazards of politically dangerous or misleading accounts of the past, we live our lives in a great network of cooperation with other actors; past, present, and future. We study and reflect on the past as a way of exercising a responsibility for shared action. In each of the chapters of Full History Smith poses a key question about history as a concern for conscious participants in the sharing of (...)
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  12.  10
    Worth Doing.Steven G. Smith - 2004 - State University of New York Press.
    A comprehensive look at how we rely on ideals of worthy action in the pursuit of moral happiness.
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  13.  4
    Fraught Encounters on the Focus Plane.Steven G. Smith - 2025 - Film and Philosophy 29:93-105.
    A fraughtness in the human communicative situation—the impossibility of assuring collegial equality in our presentations to each other, given that we are striving to control each other’s attention—is compellingly figured in the treatment of the focus plane of show entertainment in film musicals. In Busby Berkeley’s seminal work in 42nd Street (1933), the portrait of the Great Showman in The Great Ziegfeld (1936), and Brian De Palma’s satirical Phantom of the Paradise (1974) it may be seen that the show musical (...)
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  14.  18
    Gesture: Second Language Acquistion and Classroom Research.Steven G. McCafferty & Gale Stam (eds.) - 2008 - Routledge.
    This book demonstrates the vital connection between language and gesture, and why it is critical for research on second language acquisition to take into account the full spectrum of communicative phenomena. The study of gesture in applied linguistics is just beginning to come of age. This edited volume, the first of its kind, covers a broad range of concerns that are central to the field of SLA. The chapters focus on a variety of second-language contexts, including adult classroom and naturalistic (...)
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  15.  27
    Survey of Heteronormative Attitudes and Tolerance Toward Gender Non-conformity in Mountain West Undergraduate Students.Steven G. Duncan, Gabrielle Aguilar, Cole G. Jensen & Brianna M. Magnusson - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  16.  32
    Synchronizing Karma: The Internalization and Externalization of a Shared, Personal Belief.Steven G. Carlisle - 2008 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 36 (2):194-219.
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  17.  55
    How trivial is the “trivial neuron doctrine”?Steven G. Daniel - 1999 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (5):834-835.
    I argue that Gold & Stoljar's “trivial neuron doctrine” is not in fact trivial. Many familiar positions in the philosophy of mind run afoul of it, and it is unclear that even those whom Gold & Stoljar identify as adherents of the trivial neuron doctrine can be comfortably described as such.
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  18.  8
    Importin α/β and the tug of war to keep TDP‐43 in solution: quo vadis?Steven G. Doll & Gino Cingolani - 2022 - Bioessays 44 (12):2200181.
    The transactivation response‐DNA binding protein of 43 kDa (TDP‐43) is an aggregation‐prone nucleic acid‐binding protein linked to the etiology of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) and Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (FTLD). These conditions feature the accumulation of insoluble TDP‐43 aggregates in the neuronal cytoplasm that lead to cell death. The dynamics between cytoplasmic and nuclear TDP‐43 are altered in the disease state where TDP‐43 mislocalizes to the cytoplasm, disrupting Nuclear Pore Complexes (NPCs), and ultimately forming large fibrils stabilized by the C‐terminal prion‐like (...)
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  19.  33
    Intrinsic Value, Goodness, and the Appeals of Things.Steven G. Smith - 2010 - International Philosophical Quarterly 50 (2):167-181.
    “Intrinsic value” is a perplexing notion in that it purports to establish a relationship with a thing that cannot in fact be established by the valuing subject butcan only be welcomed. An important sense of “good” expresses the non-axiological side of shared flourishing. We do need the concept of intrinsic value to put our different kinds of value in order, but we can also recognize that the positing of intrinsic value is grounded on events of appeal wherein perceived beings promise (...)
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  20.  12
    The Structure of Unlimited Action Sharing.Steven G. Smith - 2009 - Philosophical Frontiers: A Journal of Emerging Thought 4 (2):57-71.
    An unrestricted conception of actors and their interdependence in action has now been deployed effectively in various fields of study, but the question remains how we can discriminate reasonably in our action sharing if there is more to consider than simply putting persons ahead of things. By what general practical realizations can a universal action sharer be guided? I identify four primary levels of action sharing—-coexistence, cooperation, collaboration, and communion—-showing a distinctive complex of factual and directive considerations in each. I (...)
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  21. Karen Green: Dummett: Philosophy of Language.G. Stevens - 2002 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 10 (4):691-696.
     
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  22. (2 other versions)The Concept of the Spiritual.Steven G. Smith - 1988
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  23.  33
    The Work of Service: Levinas’s Eventual Philosophy of Culture.Steven G. Smith - 2009 - Levinas Studies 4:157-176.
    Although Emmanuel Levinas later expressed regret that he sided with Martin Heidegger rather than the more “ideal”-minded Ernst Cassirer in their 1929 Davos encounter, Cassirer’s philosophy of culture would never have been an apt framework for Levinas’s own project, which was always directed more to fundamental orientation than to formative activities or achievements. In “Meaning and Sense” (1964), Levinas conceived a totalizing cultural “meaning” as a foil to transcendent ethical “sense.” In a 1983 paper, however, he proposed an ethical conception (...)
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  24. The Disinterested Love of God according to St. Thomas and some of his Modern Interpreters.G. Stevens - 1953 - The Thomist 16:307-333.
     
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  25.  44
    The Influence of Content Meaningfulness on Eye Movements across Tasks: Evidence from Scene Viewing and Reading.Steven G. Luke & John M. Henderson - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
  26.  21
    Sympathy, Scruple, and Piety: The Moral and Religious Valuation of Nonhumans.Steven G. Smith - 1993 - Journal of Religious Ethics 21 (2):319 - 342.
    Our moral valuation of nonhuman and human beings alike may arise in sympathy, the realization in feeling of a significant commonality between self and others; in scrupulous observance of policy, the affirmation in practical consistency of a system of relations with others; and in piety, the attitude of boundless appreciation and absolute scruple with respect to objects as sacred - that is, as valued for the sake of adequate valuation of the holy. Differences between the moral status of humans and (...)
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  27.  27
    The religious appeals of transworth and transtrying.Steven G. Smith - 2004 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 55 (2):109-125.
    The sense of a religious life ideal typically depends on an ordinary practical understanding of selfhood and success (worthiness) that it both departs from (toward a higher excellence) and trades on. Serenity and passion are examined as ways of transmuting ordinary trying and worth.
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  28.  45
    (1 other version)A minimal ingroup advantage in emotion identification confidence.Steven G. Young & John Paul Wilson - 2016 - Cognition and Emotion:1-8.
    Emotion expressions convey valuable information about others’ internal states and likely behaviours. Accurately identifying expressions is critical for social interactions, but so is perceiver confidence when decoding expressions. Even if a perceiver correctly labels an expression, uncertainty may impair appropriate behavioural responses and create uncomfortable interactions. Past research has found that perceivers report greater confidence when identifying emotions displayed by cultural ingroup members, an effect attributed to greater perceptual skill and familiarity with own-culture than other-culture faces. However, the current research (...)
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  29.  43
    Daimon Thinking and the Question of Spiritual Power.Steven G. Smith - 2014 - Heythrop Journal 55 (2):173-187.
    The notion of a “daimon” or compellingly life-commanding being represents a certain stage in the historical articulation of conceptions of spiritual power, in the perspective of a general phenomenology of spiritual life like van der Leeuw’s, but also a certain relationship with spiritual power that remains meaningful at any time, as Plato and Neoplatonists theorized. Focusing on normative rather than psychological issues, I propose several topics and tasks for a renewed agenda for reflective daimon thinking.
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  30.  11
    The History of Economic Thought: A Reader; Second Edition.Steven G. Medema & Warren J. Samuels - 2013 - Routledge.
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  31.  97
    Worthiness to be Happy and Kant’s Concept of the Highest Good.Steven G. Smith - 1984 - Kant Studien 75 (1-4):168-190.
    Some of kant's rationales for conceiving the highest good of morality as virtue rewarded with happiness rest on the subject's "necessary" natural desire for happiness, While others appeal to a still-Obscure principle of moral desert. The principle, I argue, Is that the moral agent qua moral necessarily hopes for the "approval" of fellow moral legislators and god, Who "would" (did they exist, And if they could) signify their approval by bestowing the means of happiness.
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  32.  40
    What is merit, that it can be transferred?Steven G. Smith - 2021 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 90 (3):191-207.
    A concept of merit is used for spiritual accounting in many religious traditions, seemingly a substantial point of connection between religion and ordinary morality. Teachings of “merit transfer” (as in Buddhism and Roman Catholicism) might make us doubt this connection since they violate the principle that merit must be earned. If we examine the structure of ordinary schemes of desert, however, we find that personal worth is posited for a variety of reasons; the basic requirement in this realm is not (...)
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  33.  91
    Supporting the best charities is harder than it seems.Steven G. Brown - 2016 - Journal of Global Ethics 12 (2):240-244.
    Once upon a time, I attempted to create a web-based one-stop-shop for global poverty relief called the Maximin Project. Drawing on aspects of that experience, I show that although some existing ways of rating and recommending charities are significantly better than others, there remain certain challenges that need to be overcome. Specifically, I argue that the emerging Effective Altruism movement, with its emphasis on measurable effectiveness, runs the risk of neglecting a whole range of projects that are necessary for a (...)
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  34.  21
    Differences in negativity bias probably underlie variation in attitudes toward change generally, not political ideology specifically.Steven G. Ludeke & Colin G. DeYoung - 2014 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 37 (3):319-320.
  35.  30
    How to Expand Musical Formalism.Steven G. Smith - 2015 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 49 (2):20-38.
    Word usage and behavior show that most people think of music as a distinct category of valuable experience, yet music lovers are known to have widely different ideas of what music offers. Some love its power to express or arouse emotions; some love the immediate sensuous-kinetic pleasure of tone and beat; some find a compelling sense of individual or communal identity in it; some are caught by the puzzle-solving interest of its compositional designs. Most will agree, nonetheless, that music is (...)
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  36. The Argument to the Other. Reason beyond Reason in the Thought of Karl Barth and Emmanuel Levinas.Steven G. Smith - 1985 - Religious Studies 21 (1):125-126.
    This study examines developments in Karl Barth's early theology (to 1932) and Emmanuel Levinas's philosophy (as far as Otherwise than Being) to show how the concept of the Totally Other addresses the most radical problem of justification for theological and philosophical thought.
     
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  37.  11
    Historians of Economics and Economic Thought: The Construction of Disciplinary Memory.Steven G. Medema & Warren J. Samuels (eds.) - 2001 - Routledge.
    The history of economic thought has always attracted some of the brightest minds in the discipline. These chroniclers of development have helped form our current views, and it is no surprise that many among them have been at the forefront of new movements in the history of ideas. This notable collection summarizes the work of these key historians of economics and attempts to quantify their impact. Some of the writers covered, such as Friedrich Hayek and Joan Robinson, are already assured (...)
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  38.  78
    Logic, Vagueness, and the Use Theory.Steven G. Daniel - 2003 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 33 (2):259 - 283.
    In numerous essays over the years, and most recently in his Meaning, Paul Horwich has worked to articulate and defend a version of the use theory of meaning. At the heart of his project is the idea that the meaning of a word is constituted by a regularity in speakers’ use of it — i.e., by a regularity in speakers’ dispositions to accept as true, to reject as false, or neither to accept nor to reject sentences containing it. A ‘use (...)
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  39.  10
    Age effects in neurometrics.Steven G. Vandenberg - 1980 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 3 (2):249-249.
  40.  2
    Appeal and Attitude.Steven G. Smith - 2005 - Indiana University Press.
    This book develops the idea that meaningfulness is specified as a relation between an acknowledged appeal and an adopted attitude. In the Axial Age classics and again in modern refoundings of philosophy and theology, ideals of a fully commanding supreme appeal and a fully adequate orientation to the world in cognizance of that appeal--a sovereign attitude--are intellectually and spiritually central. Some of the most fundamental challenges of pluralism stem from differences in appeal and attitude ideals.
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  41.  25
    Great Experience.Steven G. Smith - 1995 - The Journal of Aesthetic Education 29 (1):17-31.
    This essay examines the logic of greatness attributions in general and the implications of aesthetic positions taken by Hume, Shelley, and T. M. Greene in order to show how the attitude of faith, i.e. a disposition for unbounded personal growth, can constitute greatness in experiences or in objects or occasions of experience. On this basis the role of great experiences in education is elucidated. It is argued that faith takes a distinctively free aesthetic form in the educational frame of reference (...)
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  42.  24
    Idealism And Exteriority: The Case Of Eberhard Grisebach.Steven G. Smith - 1989 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 20 (May):136-149.
    What is the relation between the thought of exteriority (that is, of an intellectually unencompassable Other taken to be a supreme source or condition of meaning) and the idealism, subjective or objective, that it reacts against? Eberhard Grisebach makes a good case study because his exteriority statement (Gegenwart, 1928) is unsurpassably extreme yet evolves in discernible stages from an idealist starting-point. After considering parallels with Buber and Levinas and criticisms from several sources, I argue that the exteriority strategy for thinking (...)
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  43.  24
    The Causation of Finality.Steven G. Smith - 1985 - American Philosophical Quarterly 22 (4):311 - 320.
    This paper revives the idea of final cause as a way of considering how the meaning of occurrences--what they have permitted in our lives, as opposed to what produced them or how they fit into a prior plan--is essential to our understanding them.
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  44.  30
    Three Religious Attitudes.Steven G. Smith - 1998 - Philosophy and Theology 11 (1):3-24.
    Attitude is an important criterion and cause of religiousness, though it is commonly mishandled in religious reflection by (1) skewing the anthropologically central variable of attitude toward “feeling,” on the side of affect, or toward “disposition,” on the side of will, and (2) obscuring different basic forms and validities of religious attitude by insisting on one overly narrow or misleadingly rounded-out conception of devoutness (most often, “faith”). This paper develops a more adequate conception of attitude in general and of the (...)
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  45.  19
    The Unavoidable Guidance in Language.Steven G. Smith - 2020 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 28 (1):18-35.
    Considering the profoundly collaborative nature of human communication, the notion of guidance needs more careful consideration and foregrounding in the philosophy of language. The practically cruc...
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  46.  21
    The Watcher and the Lens.Steven G. Smith - 2015 - British Journal of Aesthetics 55 (2):199-208.
    A Lens Problem arises when a movie viewer is dissatisfied with the physical information provided by shots taken with non-normal lenses. Experiences will vary, but the real possibility of the Lens Problem points to an important dimension of movie experience that is neglected by theories oriented to realistic seeing or imaginative seeing-as. Before we construe a presentation as documentary or fictional, we are in the first place watchers: our more or less constant watchful interest in gleaning useful information about position (...)
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  47.  13
    The Worth of Owning.Steven G. Smith - 2002 - Public Affairs Quarterly 16 (2):155-172.
    Argues against a consumption-oriented vision of agents' relation with material things that there are worthy, morally happy kinds of owner-partnership with things and that expansion of access to owner worth should be among the goals of moral, political, and economic policy.
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  48.  39
    Worthy actions.Steven G. Smith - 2001 - The Journal of Ethics 5 (4):315-333.
    Concrete worthy actions have not been aterminus of discernment for moral theory in theway that they often are for the deliberatingmoral agent. Some ordinary hallmarks of worthyactions challenge the unworldly and impersonalways of envisioning life that dominatephilosophical ethics. I discuss six: a worthyaction (1) improves the world in moralperspective, (2) discloses the agent''s power,(3) is personally rewarding, (4) unites virtue,justice, and happiness, (5) is a prime objectof moral choice, and (6) belongs to a practicalgenre (such as work or love). Appreciatingworthy (...)
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  49.  44
    Homicide and Love.Steven G. Smith - 1991 - Philosophy and Theology 5 (3):259-276.
    For perspicuous comparison and evaluation of moral positions on life-and-death issues, it is necessary to take into account the different meanings that killing and getting killed can bear in the two dimensions of dealing with persons (intention meeting intention) and handling them. A homicidal scenario in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight shows the possibility of courteous dealing coinciding with lethal handling. The extreme possibility of lovingly affirming persons while killing them, suggested by the Augustinian “kindly severity” ideal for state-sponsored (...)
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  50.  32
    The Evidence of God Having Spoken.Steven G. Smith - 1986 - Faith and Philosophy 3 (1):68-77.
    God’s revelation is not uncommonly represented as a past speaking---“God has spoken,” “We have heard.” In order to study how the possibilities of reasoning are affected when the crucial evidence to which reasoning may appeal is a remembered speaking, a parableis offered in which three young brothers dispute whether their mother has called them home. Their arguments necessarily take an ad hominem tum. It is found that the claims of the brother who remembers hearing are provisionally, partially, and prescriptively reasonable. (...)
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