Results for 'Sister Helen Sullivan'

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  1.  11
    The Philosophy of Mathematics.Sister Helen Sullivan - 1951 - New Scholasticism 25 (2):234-237.
  2.  26
    Review of H. Weyl, Philosophy of Mathematics and Natural Science[REVIEW]Sister Helen Sullivan - 1950 - New Scholasticism 24 (3):342-344.
  3.  26
    Review of E. A. Maziarz, The Philosophy of Mathematics[REVIEW]Sister Helen Sullivan - 1951 - New Scholasticism 25 (2):234-237.
  4.  8
    Nicolai Hartmann’s Study of Human Personality.Sister Helen James - 1960 - New Scholasticism 34 (2):204-233.
  5.  45
    Participation Revisited.Sister Helen James John - 1962 - Modern Schoolman 39 (2):154-165.
  6.  15
    Certitude et volonté. [REVIEW]Sister Helen James John - 1964 - New Scholasticism 38 (2):257-259.
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  7.  18
    Edmund Husserl’s Theory of Meaning. [REVIEW]Sister Helen James John - 1966 - New Scholasticism 40 (2):242-243.
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  8. Right to Health Care: Dvd.Ken Knisely, Helen John & Patrick Sullivan - 2001 - Milk Bottle Productions.
    To what extent can individuals make a claim on their community to provide for upkeep and healing of their bodies? Can the philosophy of natural rights that animates the American political tradition be applied usefully to the health care debate? With Michael Boylan, Helen John, and Patrick Sullivan.
     
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  9.  23
    Art and Belief.Ema Sullivan-Bissett, Helen Bradley & Paul Noordhof (eds.) - 2017 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Art and Belief presents new work at the intersection of philosophy of mind and philosophy of art. Topics include the cognitive contributions artworks can make, the phenomenon of fictional persuasion, and the nature of aesthetic testimony, and the relation between belief and truth in our experience of art.
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  10.  9
    An introduction to the philosophy of natural and mathematical sciences.Helen Sullivan - 1952 - New York,: Vantage Press.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work is in the public domain in the United States of America, and possibly other nations. Within the United States, you may freely copy and distribute this work, as no entity has a copyright on the body of the work. Scholars believe, and we concur, that this work is important enough to be preserved, reproduced, and (...)
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  11.  54
    Book Reviews Section 1.John E. Merryman, Sister Mary Olga Mckenna, George I. Brown, Robert O. Hahn, George Male, Donald P. Sanders, John W. Holland, John Buttrick, Erma F. Muckenhirn, Richard E. Schultz, Richard Elardo, Donald R. Warren, Alfred H. Moore, John Follman, Helen I. Snyder & Chester S. Williams - 1972 - Educational Studies 3 (3):145-155.
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  12.  9
    Ethical or Amoral? Is an Unqualified Right to Silence at Trial Defensible from an Ethical Perspective.Deborah Kellie & Helen O'Sullivan - 2003 - Legal Ethics 6 (1):73-84.
  13.  13
    Assessing Beliefs Underlying Rumination About Pain: Development and Validation of the Pain Metacognitions Questionnaire.Robert Schütze, Clare Rees, Anne Smith, Helen Slater, Mark Catley & Peter O’Sullivan - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  14. The God of Israel, The God of Christians, The Great Themes of Scripture.J. Giblet, M. E. Boismard, A. Lefevre, A. Descamps, J. Guillet, X. Leon-Dufour, C. Spicq, A. Leboisset, A. Gelin, Sister Jeanne D'Arc, J. Pierron & Kathryn Sullivan - 1961
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  15.  32
    Sensitive biomarkers of alcoholism's effect on brain macrostructure: similarities and differences between France and the United States.Anne-Pascale Le Berre, Anne-Lise Pitel, Sandra Chanraud, Hélène Beaunieux, Francis Eustache, Jean-Luc Martinot, Michel Reynaud, Catherine Martelli, Torsten Rohlfing, Adolf Pfefferbaum & Edith V. Sullivan - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  16.  44
    Unravelling Law’s Kinning Practices: Feminism, Fictive Families and the Albert Kennedy Trust.Helen Carr & C. Hunter - 2012 - Feminist Legal Studies 20 (2):105-120.
    In 1989 Smart problematised law as a masculinist knowledge which disqualified other forms of knowledge, particularly feminism. Twenty-one years later Smart characterises the relationship between law and feminism quite differently. In this account law responds to feminism and outcomes are progressive. Smart suggests that rather than continuing to focus on law’s disciplinary and normalising role, it is more productive to conceptualise contemporary family law as a creative kinning practice. We argue, however, that we must also bring into this account the (...)
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  17.  28
    A Call to Heal Medicine.Helen Bequaert Holmes - 1989 - Hypatia 4 (2):1 - 8.
    Authors in this special Hypatia issue seem called to heal ethics, medicine, and the new field - medical ethics. After explaining why feminists should feel this calling, I group authors' contributions as responses to questions: 1. Why hasn't medical ethics already healed medicine? 2. What role should 'caring' play? 3. Must we first heal science? 4. Are we calling health a virtue? 5. Why haven't the many medical ethics books helped? 6. How do our sisters in sociology support us?
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  18.  3
    Hemlock.Hélène Cixous - 2011 - Polity.
    A compelling work of autobiographical fiction, Hélène Cixous's Hemlock weaves tragedy and comedy, narrative and meditation in its exploration of various human attachments: between an elderly but still truculent mother and her writer-daughter, between the mother and her sister, and between the writer and her vanished but nonetheless intensely present friend, Jacques Derrida, whose death is movingly evoked. "I have in mind two lovely faces, old women in bloom," writes the author with a backwards nod to Proust's ‘jeunes filles.' (...)
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  19. Father Francis Murphy in Bradford and Liverpool.Helen Harrison - 2013 - The Australasian Catholic Record 90 (3):283.
    Harrison, Helen Adelaide's first bishop, Francis Murphy, was baptised in Navan, County Meath, Ireland, on 24 May 1795. His parents were Arthur Murphy and Bridget nee Flood. Baptismal records suggest his siblings included John Joseph, Arthur, Catherine, John Joseph Michael and Christopher. It is unlikely that all of these survived for long because by the time Francis Murphy was Bishop of Adelaide, he was writing to 'my sister' and 'my brother'.
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  20.  5
    What a Difference a Decade Makes: Coming to Power and the Second Coming.Sue O'Sullivan - 1999 - Feminist Review 61 (1):97-126.
    A critical look at two books, Coming to Power – Writings and Graphics on Lesbian S/m, published in 1981, and its ‘long awaited sequel’, The Second Coming – A Leatherdyke Reader, published in 1996, yields many differences and similarities. Both books have been judged negatively or positively on the basis of their sadomasochistic content and in line with knee-jerk positions around the lesbian ‘sex wars’ of the 1980s. The feminist politics represented in each book and the connections to more general (...)
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  21.  7
    Ema Sullivan-Bisset, Helen Bradley & Paul Noordhof . Art and Belief. Reviewed by.David Carr - 2018 - Philosophy in Review 38 (4):170-172.
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  22. Ema Sullivan-Bissett, Helen Bradley, and Paul Noordhof, eds., Art and Belief (Oxford, UL: Oxford University Press, 2017). [REVIEW]Iskra Fileva - 2020 - Journal of Value Inquiry 54 (4):653-661.
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  23.  21
    Preaching justice: Volume II. contributions of Dominican sisters to social ethics in the twentieth century edited by Helen Alford op and Francesco compagnoni op, Dominican publications, dublin, 2016, pp.573, € 40.00, pbk. [REVIEW]Albert Robertson - 2018 - New Blackfriars 99 (1079):120-122.
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  24. The Dignity of Human Life: Sketching Out an 'Equal Worth' Approach.Helen Watt - 2020 - Ethics and Medicine 36 (1):7-17.
    The term “value of life” can refer to life’s intrinsic dignity: something nonincremental and time-unaffected in contrast to the fluctuating, incremental “value” of our lives, as they are longer or shorter and more or less flourishing. Human beings are equal in their basic moral importance: the moral indignities we condemn in the treatment of e.g. those with dementia reflect the ongoing human dignity that is being violated. Indignities licensed by the person in advance remain indignities, as when people might volunteer (...)
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  25.  16
    Mix & stir: new outlooks on contemporary art from global perspectives.Helen Westgeest, Kitty Zijlmans & Thomas J. Berghuis (eds.) - 2021 - Amsterdam: Valiz.
    Mix & Stir', this book's aim is an endeavour to understand art as being a panhuman phenomenon of all times and cultures; to steer away from the persistent Eurocentric/Western-centric viewpoint towards a transcultural and transnational interconnected model of exchange and processes of interculturalization. Mix & Stir wants to expand this landscape by bringing to the fore new, recalcitrant, queer, idiosyncratic practices and discourses, theories and topics, methods and concerns that open up ways to approach art from a global perspective. Analogous (...)
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  26. Ethics, Technology and Medicine.Helen Zealley - 1989 - Journal of Medical Ethics 15 (4):220-221.
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  27.  20
    Mistaken Compassion: Tibetan Buddhist Perspectives on Neuroethics.Laura Specker Sullivan - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 13 (4):245-256.
    For more than 20 years, Western science education has been incorporated into Tibetan Buddhist monastics’ training. In this time, there have been a number of fruitful collaborations between Buddhist monastics and neuroscientists, neurologists, and psychologists. These collaborations are unsurprising given the emphasis on phenomenological exploration of first-person conscious experience in Buddhist contemplative practice and the focus on the mind and consciousness in Buddhist theory. As such, Tibetan monastics may have underappreciated intuitions on the intersection of science, medicine, and ethics. Yet (...)
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  28. A Metaphysics for Freedom.Helen Steward - 2012 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Helen Steward argues that determinism is incompatible with agency itself--not only the special human variety of agency, but also powers which can be accorded to animal agents. She offers a distinctive, non-dualistic version of libertarianism, rooted in a conception of what biological forms of organisation might make possible in the way of freedom.
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  29. More than consent for ethical open-label placebo research.Laura Specker Sullivan - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (12):e7-e7.
    Recent studies have explored the effectiveness of open-label placebos for a variety of conditions, including chronic pain, cancer-related fatigue and irritable bowel syndrome. OLPs are thought to sidestep traditional ethical worries about placebos because they do not involve deception: with an OLP, patients or subjects are told outright that they are not given an active substance. As deception is framed as the primary hurdle to ethical placebo use, the door is ostensibly opened to ethical studies of OLPs. In this article, (...)
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  30. Medical maternalism: beyond paternalism and antipaternalism.Laura Specker Sullivan - 2016 - Journal of Medical Ethics 42 (7):439-444.
    This paper argues that the concept of paternalism is currently overextended to include a variety of actions that, while resembling paternalistic actions, are importantly different. I use the example of Japanese physicians’ non-disclosures of cancer diagnoses directly to patients, arguing that the concept of maternalism better captures these actions. To act paternalistically is to substitute one's own judgement for that of another person and decide in place of that person for his/her best interest. By contrast, to act maternalistically is to (...)
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  31.  79
    Domination and Dialogue in Merleau‐Ponty's Phenomenology of Perception.Shannon Sullivan - 1997 - Hypatia 12 (1):1-19.
    Merleau-Ponty's claim in Phenomenology of Perception (1962) that the anonymous body guarantees an intersubjective world is problematic because it omits the particularities of bodies. This omission produces an account of "dialogue" with another in which I solipsistically hear only myself and dominate others with my intentionality. This essay develops an alternative to projective intentionality called "hypothetical construction," in which meaning is socially constructed through an appreciation of the differences of others.
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  32.  29
    Pure Experience and Disorders of Consciousness.Laura Specker Sullivan - 2018 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 9 (2):107-114.
    The presence or absence of consciousness is the linchpin of taxonomy for disorders of consciousness (DOCs), as well as a focal point for end-of-life decision making for patients with DOCs. Focus on consciousness in this latter context has been criticized for a number of reasons, including the uncertainty of the diagnostic criteria for consciousness, the irrelevance of some forms of consciousness for determining a patient’s interests, and the ambiguous distinction between consciousness and unconsciousness. As a result, there have been recent (...)
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  33.  11
    The Realm of Spirit: Book Fourth of Realms of Being.Celestine J. Sullivan - 1941 - Philosophy 16 (62):218-220.
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  34.  78
    Jacques Lacan and the Philosophy of Psychoanalysis.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan - 1986 - Urbana : University of Illinois Press.
    Offers an analysis of Jacques Lacan's thought for the English-speaking world. Using empirical data as well as Lacan's texts, this title demonstrates how Lacan's teachings constitute a new epistemology that goes far beyond conventional thinking in psychoanalysis, psychology, philosophy, and linguistics.
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  35.  11
    The sexual metaphor.Helen Weinreich-Haste - 1994 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    Explores the avant-garde history of twentieth-century Europe through the lifestyle and music of the Sex Pistols.
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  36. Metaphysics.Peter Van Inwagen, Meghan Sullivan & Sara Bernstein - 2023 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  37.  38
    Truth-telling and patient diagnoses.R. J. Sullivan - 2001 - Journal of Medical Ethics 27 (3):192-197.
    How do physicians handle informing patients of their diagnoses and how much information do patients really want? How do registered nurses view both sides of this question? Three questionnaires were constructed and administered in a mid-size hospital in New York state. Physicians and nurses underestimate the number of patients who want detailed information. Patients who earn more than average, have a college education, and who are under age 60 are more likely to want information, and state that their physician should (...)
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  38. The Ontology of Mind: Events, Processes, and States.Helen Steward - 1997 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Helen Steward puts forward a radical critique of the foundations of contemporary philosophy of mind, arguing that it relies too heavily on insecure assumptions about the sorts of things there are in the mind--events, processes, and states. She offers a fresh investigation of these three categories, clarifying the distinctions between them, and argues that the category of state has been very widely and seriously misunderstood.
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  39.  42
    Eidos/idea in Isocrates.Robert G. Sullivan - 2001 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 34 (1):79 - 92.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Eidos/idea in IsocratesRobert G. SullivanFor modern readers, the career and literary output of the Attic rhetorician Isocrates is uncomfortably situated at the boundary between what we conceive as technical rhetoric and professional philosophy. Much of this confusion may be due to Isocrates' famous description of his program as being a philosophia (Panegyricus 10, 47; Evagoras 8, 81; Panathenaicus 9; Against the Sophists 1, 11-18, 21; Antidosis 30, 42-50, 162, (...)
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  40. Pragmatist Feminism as Ecological Ontology: Reflections on Living Across and Through Skins.Shannon Sullivan - 2002 - Hypatia 17 (4):201-217.
    In my response to the comments of Vincent Colapietro, Charlene Seigfried, and Gail Weiss on Living Across and Through Skins , I explain pragmatist feminism as an ecological ontology that understands bodies and environments as dynamically co-constitutive. I then discuss the relationship of pragmatist feminism to phenomenology, psychoanalysis, Nietzschean genealogy, and Darwinian evolutionary theory. Some of the specific concepts I examine include the anonymous body, the bodying organism, truth as transactional flourishing, and the preservation of racial and ethnic categories.
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  41.  18
    Affine geometry having a solid as primitive.Theodore F. Sullivan - 1971 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 12 (1):1-61.
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  42.  4
    Revisiting R. W. Chambers : A Note.Sister Francis Agnes - 1997 - Moreana 34 (Number 131-34 (3-4):37-38.
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  43.  65
    Dōgen and Wittgenstein: Transcending Language through Ethical Practice.Laura Specker Sullivan - 2013 - Asian Philosophy 23 (3):221-235.
    While there have been numerous claims of a resemblance between the philosophy of Ludwig Wittgenstein and Zen Buddhism, few studies of the philosophy of Wittgenstein in detailed comparison with specific Zen thinkers have emerged. This paper attempts to fill this gap by considering Wittgenstein’s philosophy in relation to that of Eihei Dōgen, founder of the Sōtō school of Zen. Points of particular confluence are found in both thinkers’ approaches to language, experience, and practice. Through an elucidation of these points, this (...)
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  44.  13
    Appropriate Supervisor--Graduate Student Relationships.Lynne E. Sullivan - 1998 - Ethics and Behavior 8 (3):229-248.
    Given that university faculty members and supervisors practicing in the community have been involved in at least one research supervisor-graduate student relationship, it is surprising that so little attention has been paid to the ethical issues involved in such relationships. Indeed, as a student and her or his graduate research supervisor may be involved in a close working relationship for many years, it is understandable that several opportunities can arise that could be considered dual or multiple relationships. Examples of such (...)
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  45.  14
    The name solid as primitive in projective geometry.Theodore F. Sullivan - 1972 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 13 (1):95-97.
  46.  14
    Do Implanted Brain Devices Threaten Autonomy or the “Sense” of Autonomy?Laura Specker Sullivan - 2015 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 6 (4):24-26.
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  47.  77
    Essence and existence in George Santayana.Celestine J. Sullivan - 1952 - Journal of Philosophy 49 (7):220-226.
  48.  85
    Singular Propositions and Singular Thoughts.Arthur Sullivan - 1998 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 39 (1):114-127.
  49. What is Squiggle? Ramsey on Wittgenstein's Theory of Judgement.Peter M. Sullivan - 2005 - In Hallvard Lillehammer & D. H. Mellor (eds.), Ramsey's Legacy. Oxford University Press.
    At the age of 20, and fresh from his undergraduate studies in mathematics, Ramsey set about writing what would be his first substantial publication, his 1923 Critical Notice of Wittgenstein’s Tractatus. It is hard for modern students of that book, who negotiate its obscurities with generations of previous commentary to serve as guides, to appreciate the task Ramsey confronted; and, to the extent that one can appreciate it, it is hard not to feel intimidated by the brilliance of his success. (...)
     
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  50.  42
    The concepts of the public, the private and the political in contemporary Western political theory.Noël O'Sullivan - 2009 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 12 (2):145-165.
    The concept of the public realm is the most fundamental of all political concepts because it is only the shared relationship it constitutes between rulers and ruled that makes government more than mere domination. It is therefore not surprising that the question of how the public realm is to be defined has been a central concern of political thinkers from Plato to more recent philosophers like Hannah Arendt. Although the answers they have given have of course varied greatly, what is (...)
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