Results for 'Susan Rodgers'

957 found
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  1. Protective cloaks, enveloping baby carriers : embodiment and ritual practice in Angkola Batak Ulos textiles.Susan Rodgers - 2023 - In Urmila Mohan (ed.), The efficacy of intimacy and belief in worldmaking practices. Abingdon, Oxon ; New York: Routledge.
     
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  2.  56
    What Has Covid‐19 Exposed in Bioethics? Four Myths.Susan M. Wolf - 2021 - Hastings Center Report 51 (3):3-4.
    The Covid‐19 pandemic has exposed four myths in bioethics. First, the flood of bioethics publications on how to allocate scarce resources in crisis conditions has assumed authorities would declare the onset of crisis standards of care, yet few have done so. This leaves guidelines in limbo and patients unprotected. Second, the pandemic's realities have exploded traditional boundaries between clinical, research, and public health ethics, requiring bioethics to face the interdigitation of learning, doing, and allocating. Third, without empirical research, the success (...)
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  3.  42
    Justice, Human Rights, and Reconciliation in Postconflict Cambodia.Susan Dicklitch & Aditi Malik - 2010 - Human Rights Review 11 (4):515-530.
    Retribution? Restitution? Reconciliation? “Justice” comes in many forms as witnessed by the spike in war crimes tribunals, Truth & Reconciliation Commissions, hybrid tribunals and genocide trials. Which, if any form is appropriate should be influenced by the culture of the people affected. It took Cambodia over three decades to finally address the ghosts of its Khmer Rouge past with the creation of a hybrid Khmer Rouge Tribunal. But how meaningful is justice to the majority of survivors of the Khmer Rouge (...)
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  4.  69
    Philosophy and personal loss.Susan Dunston - 2010 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 24 (2):158-170.
    Two years after the death of his small son, Ralph Waldo Emerson famously wrote of the experience, "I cannot get it nearer to me" (CW 3:29). Most readers have been troubled by this remark, reading it as a sign that Emerson's relationship to grief and even to his son was disturbingly oblique, and the predominant response has been that it demonstrates he was detached, cold, and disconnected in the service of his transcendental philosophy.1 Such a response is grounded in the (...)
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  5.  12
    19 Tossed Salad: Ontology and Identity.Susan L. Feagin - 2002 - In Michael Krausz (ed.), Is There a Single Right Interpretation? Pennsylvania State University Press. pp. 360-380.
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  6.  19
    Stucturing Events.Susan Rothstein - 2004 - Blackwell.
    Throughout, the emerging theory of aspect is extensively compared with alternative theories, and the book concludes with general reflections on the semantic ...
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  7. Relational autonomy and freedom of expression.Susan J. Brison - 2000 - In Catriona Mackenzie & Natalie Stoljar (eds.), Relational Autonomy: Feminist Perspectives on Autonomy, Agency, and the Social Self. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  8.  30
    Intact grammars but intermittent access.Susan Edwards & David Lightfoot - 2000 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (1):31-32.
    Grodzinsky examines Broca's aphasia in terms of some specific grammatical deficits. However, his grammatical models offer no way to characterize the distinctions he observes. Rather than grammatical deficits, his patients seem to have intact grammars but defective modules of parsing and production.
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  9. Giving emotions their due.Susan Feagin - 2010 - British Journal of Aesthetics 50 (1):89-92.
    It is a widespread view that affective and emotional responses to many works of literature are often components of an appreciation of literature that is richer than it would be without them. In this paper, I raise three points designed to show that Lamarque does not give emotional and other affective responses their due. First, I propose that he does not sufficiently distinguish emotion and imagination from concerns about knowledge and truth. Second, he does not sufficiently distinguish appreciation, and the (...)
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  10.  30
    The Role of Patients and Patient Advocacy Groups in Educating Patients on the Importance of Legitimate Scientific Research.Susan Foster - 2010 - American Journal of Bioethics 10 (5):49-49.
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  11.  33
    Thanks, but no thanks : response to Henry Kyburg, Jr.Susan Haack - 2007 - In Cornelis De Waal (ed.), Susan Haack: a lady of distinctions: the philosopher responds to critics. Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books.
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  12.  12
    At the Center.Susan M. Wolf - 1992 - Hastings Center Report 22 (4):i-i.
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  13.  19
    Towards an ontological theory of wellness: A discussion of conceptual foundations and implications for nursing.Susan R. Dunlop - 2010 - Nursing Philosophy 11 (3):223-223.
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  14. Ethical dilemmas in the care of pregnant women: rethinking ''maternal–fetal conflicts''.Françoise Baylis, Sanda Rodgers & David Young - 2008 - In Peter A. Singer & A. M. Viens (eds.), The Cambridge textbook of bioethics. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  15.  14
    Si le design n’est pas la réponse, que pourrait-il être?Craig Bremner, Giovanni Innella & Paul Rodgers - 2022 - Multitudes 89 (4):187-192.
    Nous avons voulu procéder à une reformulation de la célèbre énigme de Cedric Price qui remettait en question les promesses de la technologie. Nous avons donc formulé la provocation suivante : « Le design est la réponse, mais quelle était la question? ». Dans ce cas, quelle pourrait être la promesse du design? Nous posons une autre question : « Si le design n’est pas la réponse, qu’est-ce qu’il pourrait être? » Quelle que soit la réponse, nous disons clairement que (...)
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  16. Teaching business ethics: the effectiveness of common pedagogical practices in developing students' moral judgment competence.Susan M. Bosco, David E. Melchar, Laura L. Beauvais & David E. Desplaces - 2010 - Ethics and Education 5 (3):263 - 280.
    This study investigates the effectiveness of pedagogical practices used to teach business ethics. The business community has greatly increased its demands for better ethics education in business programs. Educators have generally agreed that the ethical principles of business people have declined. It is important, then, to examine how common methods of instruction used in business ethics could contribute to the development of higher levels of moral judgment competence for students. To determine the effectiveness of these methods, moral judgment competence levels (...)
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  17.  17
    (7 other versions)In Brief….Susan L. Peck - 1973 - Hastings Center Report 3 (6):16-16.
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  18.  17
    Ethical Issues and Solicitors' Practice.Susan A. Perry - 1998 - Legal Ethics 1 (1):25-26.
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  19.  35
    Modelleerimine, dialoogilisus ja funktsiooniring.Susan Petrilli & Augusto Ponzio - 2013 - Sign Systems Studies 41 (1):114-115.
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  20.  9
    Improvising on the Blue Guitar.Susan Verducci - 2018 - Philosophy of Education 74:550-555.
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  21.  8
    Truth.Susan Wilson - 1973 - [Milton Keynes]: Open University Press.
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  22.  44
    Butterflies of the Soul: Cajal's Neuron Theory and Art.Susan Goetz Zwirn - 2015 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 49 (4):105-119.
    [M]y attention was drawn to the flower garden of the grey matter, which contained cells with delicate and elegant forms, the mysterious butterflies of the soul, the beating of whose wings may someday... clarify the secret of mental life. Art can actually facilitate scientific understanding, even discovery. Art can be, and has been, the entryway to vision and the understanding of natural phenomena as demonstrated in its role in the development of neuron theory. While developing a course on current brain (...)
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  23.  44
    The Construction of Social Reality.Susan Babbitt - 1997 - Philosophical Review 106 (4):608.
    To explain the causal relation between institutional rules and people’s actions and expectations, Searle relies upon his concept of the Background, the thesis that intentional states function only given a background of capacities that do not themselves consist in intentional phenomena. Any sentence, for instance, only acquires truth conditions or other conditions of satisfaction against a background of capacities, dispositions, know-how, etc. that are not themselves part of the content of the sentence. The Background also structures expectations. La Rouchefoucauld said, (...)
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  24.  70
    The Concept of Futility in Health Care Decision Making.Susan Bailey - 2004 - Nursing Ethics 11 (1):77-83.
    Life saving or life sustaining treatment may not be instigated in the clinical setting when such treatment is deemed to be futile and therefore not in the patient’s best interests. The concept of futility, however, is related to many assumptions about quality and quantity of life, and may be relied upon in a manner that is ethically unjustifiable. It is argued that the concept of futility will remain of limited practical use in making decisions based on the best interests principle (...)
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  25.  37
    Shifting Gears: Technology, Literature, Culture in Modernist America. Cecelia Tichi.Susan Douglas - 1987 - Isis 78 (4):661-662.
  26.  11
    Chronology of Rousseau’s Life.Susan Dunn - 2002 - In Jean-Jacques Rousseau (ed.), The Social Contract and the First and Second Discourses. Yale University Press. pp. 36-256.
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  27. Gender, Sex and the Law.Susan Edwards - 1985
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  28.  18
    Theory and the Novel: Narrative Reflexivity in the British Tradition (review).Susan L. Ferguson - 1999 - Philosophy and Literature 23 (2):447-450.
  29.  24
    A stochastic model for chemical kinetics.Susan Milton & Chris P. Tsokos - 1974 - Acta Biotheoretica 23 (1):18-34.
  30.  72
    The woman of sestos: A plinian theme in the renaissance.Susan Woodford - 1965 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 28 (1):343-348.
  31. Coconsciousness and numerical identity of the person.Susan Leigh Anderson - 1976 - Philosophical Studies 30 (July):1-10.
    The phenomenon of multiple personality--Like the "split-Brain" phenomenon--Involves a disintegration of the normally unified self to the point where one must question whether there is one, Or more than one, Person associated with the body even at a single moment in time. Besides the traditional problem of determining identity over time, There is now a new problem of personal identity--Determining identity at a single moment in time. We need the conceptual apparatus to talk about this new problem and a test, (...)
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  32.  47
    Remorse and Criminal Justice.Susan A. Bandes - 2016 - Emotion Review 8 (1):14-19.
    A defendant’s failure to show remorse is one of the most powerful factors in criminal sentencing, including capital sentencing. Yet there is currently no evidence that remorse can be accurately evaluated in a courtroom. Conversely there is evidence that race and other impermissible factors create hurdles to evaluating remorse. There is thus an urgent need for studies about whether and how remorse can be accurately evaluated. Moreover, there is little evidence that remorse is correlated with future law-abiding behavior or other (...)
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  33. Whither bioethics? How feminism can help reorient bioethics.Susan Sherwin - 2008 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 1 (1):7-27.
    This paper argues that the various approaches to ethics that bioethicists rely on are not adequate to provide effective moral guidance in how to avoid a series of looming human catastrophes (associated with such threats as environmental degradation, war, extreme poverty, and pandemics). It proposes development of a new approach to ethics, dubbed public ethics, that simultaneously investigates moral responsibilities at multiple levels of human organization from the individual to international bodies. It argues that feminist relational theory can provide guidance (...)
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  34.  19
    Meaningless Authenticity: The Ethical Subject in Agamben's Early Works.Susan Dianne Brophy - 2015 - Critical Horizons 16 (3):246-263.
    In this study of Giorgio Agamben's pre-Homo Sacer work, I assess his idea of the ethical subject. Over the course of these early writings, he adopts a Walter Benjamin-inspired redemptive aim as he endeavours to uncover the circumstances of alienated subjectivity and possibility of authentic experience. However, while Agamben borrows from Benjamin to elaborate on the ethical potential of the nihilist pose, a more Kantian conception of idealist autonomy becomes increasingly pronounced. This Kantianism is at odds with the Benjaminian nihilism (...)
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  35. A Report on 'Ordinary Psychosis: Paris English Seminar'.Susan Schwartz - 2008 - Analysis (Australian Centre for Psychoanalysis) 14:245.
     
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  36. Introduction to the Xth Lacan Symposium: The Body and the Unconscious.Susan Schwartz - 2009 - Analysis (Australian Centre for Psychoanalysis) 15:61.
     
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  37.  12
    1. Introduction: About David Braybrooke.Susan Sherwin & Peter Schotch - 2006 - In Susan Sherwin & Peter Schotch (eds.), Engaged Philosophy: Essays in Honour of David Braybrooke. University of Toronto Press. pp. 1-20.
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  38.  17
    Quelques Implications Semiotiques de l'Homonymie Cygne/Signe Telle Qu'elle s'Applique a Milun.Susan Small - 2005 - Mediaevalia 26 (1):95-126.
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  39.  19
    6 Black: White.Susan J. Smith - 2005 - In Paul Cloke & Ron Johnston (eds.), Spaces of geographical thought: deconstructing human geography's binaries. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications. pp. 97.
  40.  44
    Before the nation: Kokugaku and the imagining of community in early modern Japan.Susan L. Burns - 2003 - Durham [N.C.]: Duke University Press.
    Late Tokugawa society and the crisis of community -- Before the Kojikiden : the divine age narrative in Tokugawa Japan -- Motoori Norinaga : discovering Japan -- Ueda Akinari : history and community -- Fujitani Mitsue : the poetics off community -- Tachibana Moribe : cosmology and community -- National literature, intellectual history, and the new Kokugaku -- Conclusion : imagined Japan(s).
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  41.  30
    The Current Crisis in American Morality: How Big Business Has Contributed to, and Ought to Address, the Crisis.Susan Anderson - 2005 - Essays in Philosophy 6 (2):1-9.
    In this paper, I argue that several features of Big Business in the United States, and its influence on our society, have caused far too many Americans to stop thinking about what is morally right as they choose their actions. An ethical vacuum has been created that Big Business has been only too glad to fill with questionable values that Americans have absorbed without consciously embracing. The time is right, and the stakes have never been higher, for us to reflect (...)
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  42. Navigating Life: Merleau-Ponty and Perceptual Development.Susan Bredlau - 2006 - Dissertation, Stony Brook University
     
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  43.  40
    Should Threatened Languages Be Conserved?Susan Feldman - 2004 - International Journal of Applied Philosophy 18 (1):69-76.
    In this paper I examine the justification of proposals to conserve threatened languages, those in danger of dying out from the lack of primary speakers. These proposals presuppose that there is value in the continued existence of languages, and I explore the different kinds of value involved: instrumental, aesthetic, subjective, and cognitive, the last involving the ability of each language to express distinctive thoughts. The attempt to retain the cognitive value of a language underlies proposals to conserve a pool of (...)
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  44.  31
    (1 other version)Is Indispensability Still a Problem for Fictionalism?Susan Vineberg - 2008 - ProtoSociology 25:128-139.
    For quite some time the indispensability arguments of Quine and Putnam were considered a formidable obstacle to anyone who would reject the existence of mathematical objects. Various attempts to respond to the indispensability arguments were developed, most notably by Chihara and Field. Field tried to defend mathematical fictionalism, according to which the existential assertions of mathematics are false, by showing that the mathematics used in applications is in fact dispensable. Chihara suggested, on the other hand, that mathema­tics makes true existential (...)
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  45.  32
    Nurses and the sterilization experiments of Auschwitz: a postmodernist perspective.Susan Benedict & Jane M. Georges - 2006 - Nursing Inquiry 13 (4):277-288.
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  46.  67
    Once people understand that machine ethics is concerned with how intelligent machines should behave, they often maintain that Isaac Asimov has already given us an ideal set of rules for such machines. They have in mind Asimov's three laws of robotics: 1. a robot may not injure a human being, or, through inaction, allow a human.Susan Leigh Anderson - 2011 - In Michael Anderson & Susan Leigh Anderson (eds.), Machine Ethics. Cambridge Univ. Press.
  47.  29
    Evaluating Free Rides and Observational Advantages in Set Visualizations.Andrew Blake, Gem Stapleton, Peter Rodgers & Anestis Touloumis - 2021 - Journal of Logic, Language and Information 30 (3):557-600.
    Free rides and observational advantages occur in visualizations when they reveal facts that must be inferred from an alternative representation. Understanding whether these concepts correspond to cognitive advantages is important: do they facilitate information extraction, saving the ‘deductive cost’ of making inferences? This paper presents the first evaluations of free rides and observational advantages in visualizations of sets compared to text. We found that, for Euler and linear diagrams, free rides and observational advantages yielded significant improvements in task performance. For (...)
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  48.  11
    Editorial Letter.Stephen Foley & Katherine Rodgers - 1998 - Moreana 35 (Number 135-35 (3-4):2-3.
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  49.  19
    Experimental studies of the judgmental theory of feeling. VII. The influence of nonmanipulative responses.Henry N. Peters & Fern Talmadge Rodgers - 1947 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 37 (1):59.
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  50. Once a week is not enough: evaluating current measures of teamworking in stroke.Susan K. Baxter & Shelagh M. Brumfitt - 2008 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 14 (2):241-247.
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