Results for 'Trans Lanes'

977 found
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  1. Experiment in co-operation that failed; Cotton mill thrives v/ithout regrets, Manchester Guardian, 4th Feb. 1958. Socialiem on Sunday New Statesman & N. 7th May 1955. [REVIEW]Trans Lanes & Ches Antiq Soc Lxviii - unknown - Annals of Science 1840:44.
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  2. Trans as Bodily Becoming: Rethinking the Biological as Diversity, Not Dichotomy.Riki Lane - 2008 - Hypatia 24 (3):136 - 157.
    Feminist and trans theory challenges "the" binary sex/gender system, but can create a new binary opposition of subversive transgender versus conservative transsexual. This paper aims to shift debate concerning bodies as authentic/real versus constructed/mutable, arguing that such debate establishes a false dichotomy that may be overcome by reappraising scientific understandings of sex/gender. Much recent biology and neurology stresses nonlinearity, contingency, self-organization, and open-endedness. Engaging with this research offers ways around apparently interminable theoretical impasses.
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  3.  33
    The Testament of the other: Abraham and Torok's failed expiation of ghosts.Christopher Lane - 1997 - Diacritics 27 (4):3-29.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Testament of the Other: Abraham and Torok’s Failed Expiation of GhostsChristopher Lane (bio)Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok. The Shell and the Kernel. Vol. 1. Ed., trans., and intro. Nicholas T. Rand. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1994.Nicholas Rand and Maria Torok. Questions à Freud: Du Devenir de la Psychanalyse. Paris: Belles Lettres-Archimbaud, 1995.Nicholas Rand and Maria Torok. “Questions to Freudian Psychoanalysis: Dream Interpretation, Reality, Fantasy.” Trans. (...)
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  4.  32
    Robert Coogan, trans., Babylon on the Rhone: A Translation of the Letters by Dante, Petrarch, and Catherine of Siena on the Avignon Papacy. Madrid: José Porrúa Turanzas, 1983. Pp. 134. Distributed in U.S.A. by Studia Humanitatis, 1383 Kersey Lane, Potomac, MD 20854. [REVIEW]Benjamin G. Kohl - 1985 - Speculum 60 (2):476.
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  5.  12
    Else Roesdahl, The Vikings. Trans. Susan M. Margeson and Kirsten Williams. London: Allen Lane and Penguin Press, 1991. Pp. xxiii, 323; 28 black-and-white plates, 47 black-and-white figures and maps. $24.95. First published in 1987 as Vikingernes Verden by Gyldendal, Copenhagen. [REVIEW]Ruth Karras - 1993 - Speculum 68 (1):249-251.
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  6.  18
    A Renaissance Exercise.Roy Glassberg - 2023 - Philosophy and Literature 46 (2):490-491.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:A Renaissance ExerciseRoy GlassbergDescribing the influence of Aristotle's Poetics on education in Renaissance Italy, Lane Cooper writes, "Before 15431 it was a regular academic exercise to compare a Greek tragedy with a Senecan, with the demands of the Poetics as a standard."2An interesting prompt for an article, one that I shall here pursue. In what follows, I compare Sophocles's Oedipus Tyrannus with Seneca's Trojan Women in terms of their (...)
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  7.  20
    Plato.Lane Cooper - 1939 - Philosophical Review 48 (6):650-651.
  8.  26
    Jonathan Tran’s Response to John Bowlin.Jonathan Tran - 2021 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 41 (2):249-250.
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  9.  70
    Life's Dominion.Melissa Lane & Ronald Dworkin - 1994 - Philosophical Quarterly 44 (176):413.
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  10.  51
    Is alexithymia the emotional equivalent of blindsight?Richard D. R. Lane, G. L. Ahern, Gary E. Schwartz & Alfred W. Kaszniak - 1997 - Biological Psychiatry 42:834-44.
  11. RJW Evans and TV Thomas, eds, Crown Church and Estates: Central European Politics in the 16th and 17th Centuries (New York: St Martin's Press, 1991), Studies in. [REVIEW]Klaus Berger, James M. Blythe, Albert Boime, Sandi E. Cooper, John A. Davies, Paul Ginsberg, Aleksa Djilas, Didier Eribon & Trans Betsy Wing - 1992 - South African Journal of Philosophy 11:24.
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  12. The Life of Proclus, or Concerning Happiness.Marinus of Samaria & Kenneth S. Guthrie trans. John Michell - 1986
     
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  13. Exploring predictors of donation willingness for urban public parks in Vietnam: Socio-demographic factors, motivations, and visitation frequency.Thi Mai Anh Tran, Ni Putu Wulan Purnama Sari, Manh Tan Le, Minh-Hoang Nguyen & Quan-Hoang Vuong - manuscript
    Rapid urbanization in Vietnam significantly impacts the environment and human well-being. Public parks are crucial for enhancing social and environmental sustainability in urban areas, yet their establishment and expansion require substantial funding. This study investigates the factors influencing Vietnamese urban residents’ willingness to donate to planting projects in public parks, utilizing the Bayesian Mindsponge Framework (BMF), which combines Mindsponge Theory’s informational entropy-based notion of value with Bayesian analysis. Analyzing data from 535 residents in major Vietnamese cities, we found that while (...)
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  14. Structure in mathematics.Saunders Lane - 1996 - Philosophia Mathematica 4 (2):174-183.
    The article considers structuralism as a philosophy of mathematics, as based on the commonly accepted explicit mathematical concept of a structure. Such a structure consists of a set with specified functions and relations satisfying specified axioms, which describe the type of the structure. Examples of such structures such as groups and spaces, are described. The viewpoint is now dominant in organizing much of mathematics, but does not cover all mathematics, in particular most applications. It does not explain why certain structures (...)
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  15. Persons, signs, animals: A Peircean account of personhood.Robert Lane - 2009 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 45 (1):pp. 1-26.
    In this essay I describe two of the accounts that Peirce provides of personhood: the semiotic account, on which a person is a sequence of thought-signs, and the naturalistic account, on which a person is an animal. I then argue that these disparate accounts can be reconciled into a plausible view on which persons are numerically distinct entities that are nevertheless continuous with each other in an important way. This view would be agreeable to Peirce in some respects, as it (...)
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  16.  82
    How did LUCA make a living? Chemiosmosis in the origin of life.Nick Lane, John F. Allen & William Martin - 2010 - Bioessays 32 (4):271-280.
    Despite thermodynamic, bioenergetic and phylogenetic failings, the 81‐year‐old concept of primordial soup remains central to mainstream thinking on the origin of life. But soup is homogeneous in pH and redox potential, and so has no capacity for energy coupling by chemiosmosis. Thermodynamic constraints make chemiosmosis strictly necessary for carbon and energy metabolism in all free‐living chemotrophs, and presumably the first free‐living cells too. Proton gradients form naturally at alkaline hydrothermal vents and are viewed as central to the origin of life. (...)
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  17.  81
    Toward a propensity interpretation of stochastic mechanism for the life sciences.Lane DesAutels - 2015 - Synthese 192 (9):2921-2953.
    In what follows, I suggest that it makes good sense to think of the truth of the probabilistic generalizations made in the life sciences as metaphysically grounded in stochastic mechanisms in the world. To further understand these stochastic mechanisms, I take the general characterization of mechanism offered by MDC :1–25, 2000) and explore how it fits with several of the going philosophical accounts of chance: subjectivism, frequentism, Lewisian best-systems, and propensity. I argue that neither subjectivism, frequentism, nor a best-system-style interpretation (...)
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  18.  28
    The phenomenon of Teilhard: prophet for a new age.David H. Lane - 1996 - Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
    This is one of the most significant and serious treatments of the modern roots of the New Age in print.
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  19.  87
    Toward a radically embodied neuroscience of attachment and relationships.Lane Beckes, Hans IJzerman & Mattie Tops - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9:97879.
    Attachment theory ( Bowlby, 1969/1982 ) posits the existence of internal working models as a foundational feature of human bonds. Radical embodied approaches instead suggest that cognition requires no computation or representation, favoring a cognition situated in a body in an environmental context with affordances for action ( Chemero, 2009 ; Barrett, 2011 ; Wilson and Golonka, 2013 ; Casasanto and Lupyan, 2015 ). We explore whether embodied approaches to social soothing, interpersonal warmth, separation distress, and support seeking could replace (...)
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  20.  47
    Mitonuclear match: Optimizing fitness and fertility over generations drives ageing within generations.Nick Lane - 2011 - Bioessays 33 (11):860-869.
    Many conserved eukaryotic traits, including apoptosis, two sexes, speciation and ageing, can be causally linked to a bioenergetic requirement for mitochondrial genes. Mitochondrial genes encode proteins involved in cell respiration, which interact closely with proteins encoded by nuclear genes. Functional respiration requires the coadaptation of mitochondrial and nuclear genes, despite divergent tempi and modes of evolution. Free‐radical signals emerge directly from the biophysics of mosaic respiratory chains encoded by two genomes prone to mismatch, with apoptosis being the default penalty for (...)
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  21. Cognitive Neuroscience of Emotion. Series in Affective Science.Richard D. R. Lane, L. Nadel & G. L. Ahern (eds.) - 2000 - Oxford University Press.
  22.  53
    Prospects for pure procedural moral progress.Benedict Lane - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
    Issues of methodology are central to the philosophy of moral progress. However, the idea that effective moral methodology, as well as being instrumental to progress, might also constitute progress has not been adequately explored. This paper will critically assess the merits of this idea – what I call ‘pure proceduralism about moral progress’ – taking Philip Kitcher's recent theory of ‘democratic contractualism’ (2021) as a test case. An epistemology of pure procedural moral progress will be sketched: namely, a naturalised epistemology (...)
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  23.  1
    (1 other version)Jean Baudrillard.Richard J. Lane - 2000 - New York: Routledge.
    Jean Baudrillard is one of the most famous and controversial of writers on postmodernism. But what are his key ideas? Where did they come from and why are they important? This book offers a beginner's guide to Baudrillard's thought, including his views on technology, primitivism, reworking Marxism, simulation and the hyperreal, and America and postmodernism. Richard Lane places Baudrillard's ideas in the contexts of the French and postmodern thought and examines the ongoing impact of his work. Concluding with an extensively (...)
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  24.  15
    Democracy: Public Contracting in Open Societies.Jan-Erik Lane - 2019 - Philosophy Study 9 (11).
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  25.  8
    Prologue to Chapter 4: Post-Platonic Perspectives on the Republic.Melissa Lane - 2011 - In Melissa S. Lane (ed.), Eco-Republic: What the Ancients Can Teach Us About Ethics, Virtue, and Sustainable Living. Princeton University Press. pp. 79-82.
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  26.  42
    Textual notes on Sophocles, Philoctetes 1-675.Nicholas Lane - 2004 - Classical Quarterly 54 (2):441-450.
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  27.  16
    Sir Gowther.Lane Zatta - 1998 - Mediaevalia 22 (1):175-198.
  28. The Final Incapacity: Peirce on Intuition and the Continuity of Mind and Matter, Part I.Robert Lane - 2011 - Cognitio 12 (1).
    This is the first of two papers that examine Charles Peirce’s denial that human beings have a faculty of intuition. The semiotic and epistemo-logical aspects of that denial are well-known. My focus is on its neglected metaphysical aspect, which I argue amounts to the doctrine that there is no determinate boundary between the internal world of the cognizing subject and the external world that the subject cognizes. In the second paper, I will argue that the “objective idealism” of Peirce’s 1890s (...)
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  29.  52
    Natural selection and mechanistic regularity.Lane DesAutels - 2016 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 57:13-23.
  30.  23
    Constitutions and political theory.Jan-Erik Lane - 2011 - New York: Manchester University Press.
    Since constitutional arrangements are what make politics work, they are a central concern of political theory._This book, now completely updated, is the first comprehensive exploration of the political theory of constitutions. Jan-Erik Lane begins by examining the origins and history of constitutionalism and answers key questions such as: What is a constitution? Why are there constitutions? From where does constitutionalism originate? How is the constitutional state related to democracy and justice? Constitutions play a major role in domestic and international politics (...)
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  31.  30
    Politics as Architectonic Expertise? Against Taking the So-called ‘Architect’ (ἀρχιτέκτων) in Plato’s Statesman to Prefigure this Aristotelian View.Melissa Lane - 2020 - Polis 37 (3):449-467.
    This article rejects the claim made by other scholars that Plato in the Statesman, by employing the so-called ‘architect’ (ὁ ἀρχιτέκτων) in one of the early divisions leading to the definition of political expertise, prefigured and anticipated the architectonic conception of political expertise advanced by Aristotle. It argues for an alternative reading in which Plato in the Statesman, and in the only other of his works (Gorgias) in which the word appears, closely tracks the existing social role of the architektōn, (...)
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  32. Ravished by Beauty: The Surprising Legacy of Reformed Spirituality.Belden C. Lane - 2011
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  33.  4
    Augustine: conversions and confessions.Robin Lane Fox - 2015 - [London]: Allen Lane, an imprint of Penguin Books.
    Augustine is the person from the ancient world about whom we know most. He is the author of an intimate masterpiece, the Confessions, which continues to delight its many admirers. In it he writes about his infancy and his schooling in the classics in late Roman North Africa, his remarkable mother, his sexual sins ('Give me chastity, but not yet,' he famously prayed), his time in an outlawed heretical sect, his worldly career and friendships and his gradual return to God. (...)
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  34.  30
    Of Rule and Office: Plato's Ideas of the Political.Melissa Lane - 2023 - Princeton: Princeton University Press.
    A new reading of Plato’s political thought Plato famously defends the rule of knowledge. Knowledge, for him, is of the good. But what is rule? In this study, Melissa Lane reveals how political office and rule were woven together in Greek vocabulary and practices that both connected and distinguished between rule in general and office as a constitutionally limited kind of rule in particular. In doing so, Lane shows Plato to have been deeply concerned with the roles and relationships between (...)
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  35.  42
    Bourdieu's politics: problems and possibilities.Jeremy F. Lane - 2006 - New York: Routledge. Edited by Ann Brooks.
    Bourdieu's academic work and his political interventions have always proved controversial, with reactions varying from passionate advocacy to savage critique. In the last decade of his career, the French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu became involved in a series of high-profile political interventions, defending the cause of striking students and workers, speaking out in the name of illegal immigrants, the homeless, and the unemployed, challenging the incursion of the market into the field of artistic and intellectual production. This new study presents the (...)
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  36.  86
    How shyness became an illness a brief history of social phobia.Christopher Lane - 2006 - Common Knowledge 12 (3):388-409.
  37.  14
    Triadic Logic.Robert Lane - 2001 - The Commens Encyclopedia: The Digital Encyclopedia of Peirce Studies.
    Peirce was the first logician to define three-valued logical connectives. In 1909, he defined four one-place three-valued connectives and six two-place three-valued connectives, all of which were rediscovered by later logicians. Peirce’s motivation was to accommodate within formal logic a specific, narrow range of propositions he took to be neither true nor false, viz. propositions that predicate of a breach in mathematical or temporal continuity one of the properties that is a boundary-property relative to that breach.
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  38. States of nature, epistemic and political.Melissa Lane - 1999 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 99 (2):211–224.
    The paper asks what is living in political state-of-nature approaches, and answers by way of considering recent epistemic uses of state-of-nature arguments. Using Edward Craig's idea that a concept of knowledge can be explicated from the need for good informants, I argue that a concept of authority can be explicated from a parallel need for good practical informants. But this need not justify rule of a Platonic elite. Practically relevant epistemic advantages are more likely to be secured by the political (...)
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  39. Consciousness and Universal Axiology.William C. Lane - manuscript
     
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  40.  12
    CHAPTER 8. Sovereignty.Melissa Lane - 2014 - In The Birth of Politics: Eight Greek and Roman Political Ideas and Why They Matter. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 285-312.
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  41.  15
    Evolution and Human Activity.Jan-Erik Lane - 2021 - Philosophy Study 11 (2).
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  42.  44
    Sophocles, Sisterhood, and Individuality.Melissa Lane - 2015 - Political Theory 43 (1):118-127.
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  43.  22
    The Continuing and Changing Role of Government in Promoting and Supporting Third Sector Organisations.Joanna Gwenllian Lane - 2011 - Polis (Misc) 5:1.
  44.  46
    (1 other version)Moral blame and causal explanation.Robert E. Lane - 2000 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 17 (1):45–58.
    People are excused from moral blame for the harm they are said to have caused if they could not have done otherwise. Such excuses rely on causal explanations deriving mostly from social and biological sciences whose paradigms are probabilistic, disjunctive, and combine dispositional and circumstantial factors according to the variance accounted for by each type of factor. The more complete the explanation, the less choice the harm-doer seems to have and therefore the less moral blame is warranted. Thus, the biological (...)
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  45.  59
    Developing Concepts of the Mind, Body, and Afterlife: Exploring the Roles of Narrative Context and Culture.Jonathan D. Lane, Liqi Zhu, E. Margaret Evans & Henry M. Wellman - 2016 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 16 (1-2):50-82.
    Children and adults from theus and China heard about people who died in two types of narrative contexts – medical and religious – and judged whether their psychological and biological capacities cease or persist after death. Most 5- to 6-year-olds reported that all capacities would cease. In theus, but not China, there was an increase in persistence judgments at 7–8 years, which decreased thereafter.uschildren’s persistence judgments were influenced by narrative context – occurring more often for religious narratives – and such (...)
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  46.  57
    God or orienteering? A critical study of Taylor's sources of the self.Melissa Lane - 1992 - Ratio 5 (1):46-56.
  47.  98
    Peirce’s Triadic Logic Revisited.Robert Lane - 1999 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 35 (2):284 - 311.
    This is a discussion of a three-valued logic in Peirce's writings.
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  48.  31
    Antianarchia: interpreting political thought in Plato.Melisssa Lane - 2016 - Plato Journal 16:59-74.
    This paper outlines a defense of the project of seeking to interpret Plato’s political thought as a valid method of interpreting Plato. It does so in two stages: in the first part, by rebutting denials of the possibility of interpreting Plato’s thought at all; in the second part, by identifying one set of ideas arguably central to Plato’s political thought, namely, his profound rejection of political anarchy, understood in terms of the absence of the authority of officeholders and posited both (...)
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  49.  30
    Deep disagreement across moral revolutions.Benedict Lane - 2024 - Synthese 204 (2):1-27.
    Moral revolutions are rightly coming to be recognised as a philosophically interesting and historically important mode of moral change. What is less often acknowledged is that the very characteristics that make a moral change revolutionary pose a fundamental challenge to the possibility of moral progress. This is because moral revolutions are characterised by a diachronic form of deep moral disagreement: moral agents on either side of a moral revolution adopt different standards for assessing the merits of a moral argument, and (...)
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  50. Memory reconsolidation, emotional arousal, and the process of change in psychotherapy: New insights from brain science.Richard D. Lane, Lee Ryan, Lynn Nadel & Leslie Greenberg - 2015 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 38:e1.
    Since Freud, clinicians have understood that disturbing memories contribute to psychopathology and that new emotional experiences contribute to therapeutic change. Yet, controversy remains about what is truly essential to bring about psychotherapeutic change. Mounting evidence from empirical studies suggests that emotional arousal is a key ingredient in therapeutic change in many modalities. In addition, memory seems to play an important role but there is a lack of consensus on the role of understanding what happened in the past in bringing about (...)
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