Results for 'Tom Masselter'

949 found
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  1.  35
    Faster than their prey: New insights into the rapid movements of active carnivorous plants traps.Simon Poppinga, Tom Masselter & Thomas Speck - 2013 - Bioessays 35 (7):649-657.
    Plants move in very different ways and for different reasons, but some active carnivorous plants perform extraordinary motion: Their snap‐, catapult‐ and suction traps perform very fast and spectacular motions to catch their prey after receiving mechanical stimuli. Numerous investigations have led to deeper insights into the physiology and biomechanics of these trapping devices, but they are far from being fully understood. We review concisely how plant movements are classified and how they follow principles that bring together speed, actuation and (...)
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  2.  10
    Professional Doctorates: The Development of Professional Doctorates in England in the 1990s.Tom Bourner, Rachel Bowden & Stuart Laing - 2000
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  3.  49
    Should Managers Talk About Rights?Tom Campbell - 2003 - Philosophy of Management 3 (2):3-11.
    Controversy surrounds the ‘intrusion’ of the discourse of rights into workplace relationships. This is explored by examining the nature of rights through the analysis of the idea of a ‘right to manage’. Purported justifications of the right to manage in terms of either property or contract are shown to be inadequate, thus illustrating the need to incorporate a degree of consequentialism in the articulation and justification of rights. The value of a rights-approach is argued to lie in the identification of (...)
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  4.  14
    The Oddest Word: Paradoxes of Theological Discourse.Tom Christenson - 2008 - In Paul David Numrich (ed.), The boundaries of knowledge in Buddhism, Christianity, and science. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. pp. 179.
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  5.  19
    The re‐discovery of contemplation through science.Tom McLeish - 2021 - Zygon 56 (3):758-776.
    Some of the early‐modern changes in the social framing of science, while often believed to be essential, are shown to be contingent. They contribute to the flawed public narrative around science today, and especially to the misconceptions around science and religion. Four are examined in detail, each of which contributes to the demise of the contemplative stance that science both requires and offers. They are: (1) a turn from an immersed subject to the pretense of a pure objectivity, (2) a (...)
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  6. The worlds of David Lewis.Tom Richards - 1975 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 53 (2):105 – 118.
    Arguments are advanced that a theory of possible worlds cannot be a theory of meaning for modal statements, And lewis's version of the theory in his "counterfactuals" is used as a particular stalking-Horse. (a) 'possible world', Though used referentially, Is defined in a way that makes it non-Referential, And moreover, The theory does not supply or validate proposals for criteria that individuate worlds; hence the theory seems incomprehensible. (b) the theory yields no useable account of truth-Conditions for modal statements. (c) (...)
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  7. Questioning cosmopolitan justice.Tom Campbell - 2010 - In Stan van Hooft & Wim Vandekerckhove (eds.), Questioning Cosmopolitanism. Springer. pp. 121--135.
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  8.  13
    Young, Gay, and Suicidal: Dynamic Nominalism and the Process of Defining a Social Problem with Statistics.Tom Waidzunas - 2012 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 37 (2):199-225.
    Since 1989, widely circulating statistics on gay teen suicide in the United States have acted as catalysts for institutional reforms, scientific research, and the creation of an identity category “gay youth.” While one figure has been replicated scientifically, these numbers originated not from a scientific research study but as risk estimates developed by a social worker and published in a government document. Many people within the public took up these original numbers, attributing their author the status of scientific researcher. In (...)
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  9. The Paradigm of Unity.Tom Foster Digby - 1982 - Dissertation, University of Colorado at Boulder
    This dissertation consists of four essays, all having in common the theme of nondelimited unity. The first essay, "Mystical Unity," characterizes the introvertive and extrovertive mystical unitive experiences and gives a phenomenological description of how extrovertive unity can develop from introvertive unity. The second essay, "Mystical Nonduality," defends the non-dualist interpretation of the mystical experience of introvertive unity against the criticisms of L. Stafford Betty . The third essay, "Unity as a Metaphysical Paradigm," offers an extensive characterization of nondelimited unity (...)
     
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  10.  25
    (1 other version)Philosophy & Film.Tom Wartenberg - 2001 - Philosophy Now 34:48-49.
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  11. A Defense of Universal Principles in Biomedical Ethics.Tom Beauchamp - 2019 - In Juan Lecaros & Erick Valdés (eds.), Biolaw and Policy in the Twenty-First Century: Building Answers for New Questions. Springer Verlag.
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  12.  8
    The concept of benevolence: aspects of eighteenth-century moral philosophy.Tom Aerwyn Roberts - 1973 - London,: Macmillan.
  13.  7
    Charles Darwin: an Australian selection.Tom Frame, Nicholas Drayson & Robyn Williams (eds.) - 2008 - Canberra: National Museum of Australia Press.
    Charles Darwin found much in Australia to challenge and inform his thinking. This book explores the impact that Darwin’s short visit to Australia in 1836 had on the man himself and on the emerging nation. Now, more than 170 years later, Darwin continues to influence Australian attitudes to life and living.
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  14.  64
    Studies in Tectonic Culture: The Poetics of Construction in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century ArchitectureThirteen Ways: Theoretical Investigations in ArchitectureOn the Aesthetics of Architecture: A Psychological Approach to the Structure and the Order of Perceived Architectural Space.Tom Leddy, Kenneth Frampton, Robert Harbison & Ralf Weber - 2000 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 58 (1):79.
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  15.  16
    No One is Guilty: Crime, Patriarchy, and Individualism.Tom Foster - 1994 - Journal of Social Philosophy 25 (1):180-205.
    Let us begin with a fundamental realization: No amount of thinking and no amount of public policy have brought us any closer to understanding and solving the problem of crime. The more we have reacted to crime, the farther we have removed ourselves from any understanding and any reduction of the problem. In recent years, we have floundered desperately in reformulating the law, punishing the offender, and quantifying our knowledge. Yet this country remains one of the most crime‐ridden nations. In (...)
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  16.  25
    Sense-making with a little help from my friends.Tom Froese - 2012 - Avant: Trends in Interdisciplinary Studies 3 (2):143-146.
    The work of Ezequiel Di Paolo and Hanne De Jaegher has helped to transform the enactive approach from relative obscurity into a hotly debated contender for the future science of social cognition and cognitive science more generally. In this short introduction I situate their contributions in what I see as important aspects of the bigger picture that is motivating and inspiring them as well as the rest of this young community. In particular, I sketch some of the social issues that (...)
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  17.  42
    Another Caricature of Chesterton.Tom Slate - 1993 - The Chesterton Review 19 (3):442-442.
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  18.  92
    A Farewell Editorial.Tom Christiano, Jon Riley & Andrew Williams - 2023 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics 22 (4):377-378.
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  19. Engelhardt's Foundations.Tom Beauchamp - 1997 - Reason Papers 22:96-100.
     
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  20.  25
    Hidden Paths in Zygmunt Bauman’s Sociology: Editorial Introduction.Tom Campbell, Mark Davis & Jack Palmer - 2018 - Theory, Culture and Society 35 (7-8):351-374.
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  21.  12
    Ruminant Relations.Tom G. Hoogervorst & Jiří Jákl - 2024 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 144 (2):231-258.
    Java offers exciting opportunities to trace human–cattle relations in a Southeast Asian context. By foregrounding inscriptions, court poems (kakavin), and other textual and iconographic sources, we aim to unearth some historical and cultural aspects of pre-Islamic cattle management and milk consumption, paying special attention to the words used for different breeds, dairy products, and other bovine terminology. Contacts with the Indian subcontinent heralded the introduction of larger cows and eventually milk-based economies, despite the conventional wisdom that the early Javanese avoided (...)
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  22.  40
    ‘Natural Inclinations’ in Aquinas and his Modern Interpreters.Tom Angier - 2023 - Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 79 (1-2):261-284.
    In this paper, I tackle Aquinas’s notion of ‘natural inclinations’, specifically as it occurs in his seminal elaboration of the natural law in Summa Theologiae I-II. Question 94. Article 2. Maintaining that it constitutes a departure from Aristotle’s terminology, and is hence puzzling, I go on to investigate a raft of modern, mainly Anglophone, interpretations of the concept. Beginning with Jacques Maritain, I move through the broadly chronological sequence of John Finnis, Jean Porter, Steven Jensen, Justin Matchulat and Stephen Brock. (...)
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  23.  31
    The Pragmatics, Embodiment, and Efficacy of Lived Experience Assessing the Core Tenets of Varela's Neurophenomenology.Tom Froese & John J. Sykes - 2023 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 30 (11):190-213.
    Varela's enactive approach to cognitive science has been elaborated into a theoretical framework of agency, sense-making, and sociality, while his key methodological innovation — neurophenomenology (NP) — continues to inspire empirical work. We argue that the enactive approach was originally expressed in NP as three core tenets: (1) phenomenological pragmatics, (2) embodied cognition, and (3) conscious efficacy. However, most efforts in NP have focused on applying tenet 1, while tenet 2 has received notably less attention, and there is even explicit (...)
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  24.  11
    Life Decoded: State Science and Nomad Science in Greg Bear’s Darwin’s Radio.Tom Idema - 2016 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 36 (1):38-48.
    In Greg Bear’s critically acclaimed science fiction novel Darwin’s Radio, the activation of an endogenous retrovirus (SHEVA), ironically located in a “noncoding region” of the human genome, causes extreme symptoms in women worldwide, including miscarriages. In the United States, a task force is assembled to control the pandemic crisis and to find out how SHEVA operates at the genomic level. However, as the story unfolds, it becomes manifest that SHEVA is too complex to decode in this way and, moreover, that (...)
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  25.  9
    Author's response to reviews of Machine Learning.Tom Mitchell - 2001 - Artificial Intelligence 131 (1-2):223-225.
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  26.  18
    Reflective interventionist conversation analysis.Tom Muskett, Jessica Nina Lester, Nikki Kiyimba & Michelle O’Reilly - 2020 - Discourse and Communication 14 (6):619-634.
    A distinction has been drawn between basic conversation analysis and applied CA. Applied CA has become especially beneficial for informing areas of practice such as health, social care and education, and is an accepted form of research evidence in the scientific rhetoric. There are different ways of undertaking applied CA, with different foci and goals. In this article, we articulate one way of conducting applied CA, that is especially pertinent for practitioners working in different fields. We conceptualise this as Reflective (...)
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  27.  73
    The Limits of Principlism and Recourse to Theory: The Example of Telecare.Tom Sorell - 2011 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 14 (4):369-382.
    Principlism is the approach promoted by Beauchamp and Childress for addressing the ethics of medical practice. Instead of evaluating clinical decisions by means of full-scale theories from moral philosophy, Beauchamp and Childress refer people to four principles—of autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence, and justice. Now it is one thing for principlism to be invoked in an academic literature dwelling on a stock topic of medical ethical writing: end-of-life decisions, for example. It is another when the topic lies further from the mainstream. In (...)
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  28.  22
    Sixty-three years of thinking sociologically: Compiling the bibliography of Zygmunt Bauman.Tom Campbell, Dariusz Brzeziński & Jack Palmer - 2020 - Thesis Eleven 156 (1):118-133.
    The article has two aims: firstly, it provides a holistic account of Zygmunt Bauman’s oeuvre, and secondly, it presents an extensive up-to-date and multilingual bibliography of his published writings. The authors discuss Bauman’s prolificacy, as well as the stylistic, formal and substantive heterogeneity of his work. Taking this into account, they reflect on the curious reception of his oeuvre in the wider disciplinary field of sociology. The bibliography attached to the paper provides the most complete account of Bauman’s writings. Building (...)
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  29.  62
    Hegel and Husserl: Two Phenomenological Reactions to Kant.Tom Rockmore - 2017 - Hegel Bulletin 38 (1):67-84.
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  30.  8
    Commentary: The Ambiguities of 'Deferred Consent'.Tom L. Beauchamp & Robert J. Levine - 1980 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 2 (7):6.
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  31.  10
    Dialogue and evangelization.Tom Gourlay - unknown
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  32.  15
    The Many-Headed Muse: Tradition and Innovation in Late Classical Greek Lyric Poetry by Pauline A. LeVen (review).Tom Phillips - 2015 - American Journal of Philology 136 (2):357-361.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Many-Headed Muse: Tradition and Innovation in Late Classical Greek Lyric Poetry by Pauline A. LeVenTom PhillipsPauline A. LeVen. The Many-Headed Muse: Tradition and Innovation in Late Classical Greek Lyric Poetry. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014. x + 377 pp. Cloth, $99.The “New Music” of the late fifth and early fourth centuries b.c.e. has been subject to a revival of interest in recent years. Most scholarship, however, has (...)
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  33.  11
    1. Idealism, British Idealism, and Analytic Philosophy.Tom Rockmore - 2004 - In Hegel, Idealism, and Analytic Philosophy. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 11-63.
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  34.  35
    4. Idealism, Constructivism, and Knowledge.Tom Rockmore - 2007 - In Kant and Idealism. Yale University Press. pp. 201-236.
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  35.  4
    Notes.Tom Rockmore - 2007 - In Kant and Idealism. Yale University Press. pp. 237-270.
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  36.  20
    2. Pragmatism, Analytic Neopragmatism, and Hegel.Tom Rockmore - 2004 - In Hegel, Idealism, and Analytic Philosophy. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 64-164.
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  37.  17
    Grotian Moments, Vol. 2: Introduction.Tom Sparks & Mark Somos - 2022 - Grotiana 43 (1):1-2.
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  38.  55
    "How Do Mādhyamikas Think?" Revisited.Tom J. F. Tillemans - 2013 - Philosophy East and West 63 (3):417-425.
    In an article published in 2009 titled "How Do Mādhyamikas Think?" I tried to go some distance with Yasuo Deguchi, Jay Garfield, and Graham Priest (henceforth "DGP") in reading certain Buddhist texts as dialetheist.1 The dialetheism that I saw as plausible for the Prajñāpāramitā-sūtras and Nāgārjuna was not the full-blown robust variety of DGP (i.e., acceptance of the truth of some statement of the form p & ¬p) but a non-adjunctive variety, acceptance of p and acceptance of ¬p. In short, (...)
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  39.  29
    Memories of fos.Tom Curran & James I. Morgan - 1987 - Bioessays 7 (6):255-258.
    Induction of c‐fos expression occurs following treatment of diverse cell types with agents that trigger mitogenesis, differentiation or membrane depolarization. We suggest that c‐fos may be regarded as a marker for a set of rapidly induced genes (termed cellular immediate‐early genes) whose function is to couple extracellular stimulation to long‐term responses. In the brain, these genes may contribute to the adaptive alterations involved in neuronal plasticity.
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  40. Can You Stand Forgiveness?Tom Cutting - 1990
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  41.  22
    A Peculiar Sociology of Punishment.Tom Daems - 2011 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 31 (4):805-823.
    In Peculiar Institution David Garland offers a sociological explanation for America’s retention of the death penalty in an age of abolition. But the book does much more than that. Peculiar Institution appeared exactly two decades after the publication of Garland’s second major study Punishment and Modern Society. In that book he laid the foundations for a multidimensional sociology of punishment. However, Garland’s manifesto for a new pluralist sociology of punishment fell to a large extent on deaf ears. It is against (...)
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  42. Seven Theories of Human Society.Tom Campbell - 1983 - Studies in Soviet Thought 25 (2):141-143.
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  43. Cautious but comprehensive.Tom Flynn - 2003 - Free Inquiry 23 (2).
  44.  36
    Kesarcodi-Watson on atma-Vidya and "ego".Tom F. Digby - 1981 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 42 (1):123-124.
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  45.  75
    Learning from Ethicists.Tom Cooper - 2009 - Teaching Ethics 10 (1):11-42.
  46.  20
    Norms, Forms and Beds: Spatializing Sleep in Victorian Britain.Tom Crook - 2008 - Body and Society 14 (4):15-35.
    This article examines the spatialization of sleep in Victorian Britain across a range of institutions, including homes and dormitories. It situates the emergence of modern sleeping space at the intersection of two key narratives regarding the history of the body: Elias's `civilising process' and Foucault's account of the realization of a `disciplinary society'. Beginning in the early modern period, sleeping bodies were gradually accorded their own space set apart from others, and by the end of the 19th century the individual (...)
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  47.  22
    A Bayesian decision-making framework for replication.Tom E. Hardwicke, Michael Henry Tessler, Benjamin N. Peloquin & Michael C. Frank - 2018 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 41.
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  48.  9
    Introduction.Tom Simpson, Stephen Stich, Peter Carruthers & Stephen Laurence - 2005 - In Peter Carruthers, Stephen Laurence & Stephen P. Stich (eds.), The Innate Mind: Structure and Contents. New York, US: Oxford University Press on Demand.
    This introductory chapter reviews some of the debates in philosophy, psychology, anthropology, evolutionary theory, and other cognitive sciences that provide a background for the topics with which this volume is concerned. Topics covered include the history of nativism, the poverty of the stimulus argument, the uniform and structure pattern followed by human cognitive development, evolution biology, and cognitive modularity. An overview of the subsequent chapters is presented.
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  49.  13
    Readability Revisited.Tom M. Grundner - 1982 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 4 (8):10.
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  50.  13
    The Grotesque Cost of Militarism’s Syndemics.Tom H. Hastings - 2019 - The Acorn 19 (2):203-206.
    “Public health is directly shaped by war, conflict, and capitalism, yet exploring the connections between these processes remains neglected in scholarship and policymaking arenas.” This chapter five lede by social work professors Scott Harding and Kathryn Libal could serve as the epigraph to the entire volume. War and Health is edited by two prominent researchers from Brown University’s Watson Institute Costs of War Project, which seeks a meaningful aggregation of the actual cost of wars, especially those of the new millennium. (...)
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