Results for 'Vernon Quinsey'

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  1.  34
    Improving decision accuracy where base rates matter: The prediction of violent recidivism.Vernon L. Quinsey - 1996 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 19 (1):37-38.
    Base rates are vital in predicting violent criminal recidivism. However, both lay people given simulated prediction tasks and professionals milking real life predictions appear insensitive to variations in the base rate of violent recidivism. Although there are techniques to help decision makers attend to base rates, increased decision accuracy is better sought in improved actuarial models as opposed to improved clinicians.
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  2.  19
    Individual differences in the propensity to rape.Vernon L. Quinsey - 1992 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 15 (2):400-400.
  3.  8
    Modification of preference in a concurrent schedule by aversive conditioning: An analog study.Vernon L. Quinsey & George W. Varney - 1976 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 7 (2):211-213.
  4.  41
    Perceived crime severity and biological kinship.Vernon L. Quinsey, Martin L. Lalumière, Matthew Querée & Jennifer K. McNaughton - 1999 - Human Nature 10 (4):399-414.
    Two predictions concerning the perceived severity of crimes can be derived from evolutionary theory. The first, arising from the theory of inclusive fitness, is that crimes in general should be viewed as more serious to the degree that the victim is genetically related to the perpetrator. The second, arising from the deleterious effects of inbreeding depression, is that heterosexual sexual coercion should be perceived as more serious the closer the genetic relationship of victim and perpetrator, particularly when the victim is (...)
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  5.  52
    Psychopathy is a nonarbitrary class.Vernon L. Quinsey & Martin L. Lalumière - 1995 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (3):571-571.
    Recent evidence that psychopathy is a nonarbitrary population, such that the trait may be categorical rather than continuous, is consistent with Mealey's distinction between primary and secondary psychopaths. Thus, there are likely to be at least two routes to criminality, and psychopathic and nonpsychopathic criminals are likely to respond differently to interventions.
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  6.  26
    Why children from the same family are so different from one another.Martin L. Lalumière, Vernon L. Quinsey & Wendy M. Craig - 1996 - Human Nature 7 (3):281-290.
    The well-established finding that siblings growing up in the same family turn out to be very different from one another has puzzled psychologists and behavior geneticists alike. In this theoretical note we describe the possible ontogeny and phylogeny of a sibling differentiation mechanism. We suggest that sibling competition for parental investment results in sibling differentiation on a number of characteristics, producing different developmental trajectories within families. Variations in developmental trajectories within families may have had fitness advantages in ancestral environments because(a) (...)
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  7.  30
    Good genes, mating effort, and delinquency.Martin L. Lalumière & Vernon L. Quinsey - 2000 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (4):608-609.
    High mating effort and antisocial and delinquent behaviors are closely linked. Some delinquent behaviors may honestly signal genetic quality. Men who exhibit high mating effort and who have high genetic quality would be expected to engage in more sexual coercion than other men because its costs to them are lowered by female preferences for them as sexual partners.
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  8.  67
    The influence of infant facial cues on adoption preferences.Anthony Volk & Vernon L. Quinsey - 2002 - Human Nature 13 (4):437-455.
    Trivers’s theory of parental investment suggests that adults should decide whether or not to invest in a given infant using a cost-benefit analysis. To make the best investment decision, adults should seek as much relevant information as possible. Infant facial cues may serve to provide information and evoke feelings of parental care in adults. Four specific infant facial cues were investigated: resemblance (as a proxy for kinship), health, happiness, and cuteness. It was predicted that these cues would influence feelings of (...)
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  9.  15
    The influence of infant facial clues on adoption preferences.Anthony Volk & Vernon L. Quinsey - 2003 - Human Nature 14 (1):89-89.
  10.  6
    The effect of infant fetal alcohol syndrome facial features on adoption preference.Katherine L. Waller, Anthony Volk & Vernon L. Quinsey - 2004 - Human Nature 15 (1):101-117.
    Infant facial characteristics may affect discriminative parental solicitude because they convey information about the health of the offspring. We examined the effect of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) infant facial characteristics on hypothetical adoption preferences, ratings of attractiveness, and ratings of health. As expected, potential parents were more likely to adopt “normal” infants, and they rated the FAS infants as less attractive and less healthy. Cuteness/attractiveness was the best predictor of adoption likelihood.
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  11.  45
    The effect of infant fetal alcohol syndrome facial features on adoption preference.Katherine L. Waller, Anthony Volk & Vernon L. Quinsey - 2004 - Human Nature 15 (1):101-117.
    Infant facial characteristics may affect discriminative parental solicitude because they convey information about the health of the offspring. We examined the effect of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS) infant facial characteristics on hypothetical adoption preferences, ratings of attractiveness, and ratings of health. As expected, potential parents were more likely to adopt “normal” infants, and they rated the FAS infants as less attractive and less healthy. Cuteness/attractiveness was the best predictor of adoption likelihood.
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  12.  71
    Rationality in economics: constructivist and ecological forms.Vernon L. Smith - 2008 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    The principal findings of experimental economics are that impersonal exchange in markets converges in repeated interaction to the equilibrium states implied by economic theory, under information conditions far weaker than specified in the theory. In personal, social, and economic exchange, as studied in two-person games, cooperation exceeds the prediction of traditional game theory. This book relates these two findings to field studies and applications and integrates them with the main themes of the Scottish Enlightenment and with the thoughts of F. (...)
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  13.  18
    Cosmopolitan regard: political membership and global justice.Richard Vernon - 2010 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Cosmopolitan theory suggests that we should shift our moral attention from the local to the global. Richard Vernon argues, however, that if we adopt cosmopolitan beliefs about justice we must re-examine our beliefs about political obligation. Far from undermining the demands of citizenship, cosmopolitanism implies more demanding political obligations than theories of the state have traditionally recognized. Using examples including humanitarian intervention, international criminal law, and international political economy, Vernon suggests we have a responsibility not to enhance risks (...)
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  14.  21
    "Am'rous Charity": Eros to Agape in Eloisa to Abelard.K. Quinsey - 1987 - Renascence 39 (3):407-420.
  15. Pragmatism as a way of inquiring with special reference to a theory of communication and the general form of pragmatic social theory.Vernon E. Cronen & John Chetro-Szivos - 2001 - In David K. Perry (ed.), American pragmatism and communication research. Mahwah, N.J.: L. Erlbaum. pp. 27--65.
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  16.  34
    Political morality: a theory of liberal democracy.Richard Vernon - 2001 - New York: Continuum.
    The book also points to some of the ways in which polities currently termed 'liberal democracies' fall clearly short of the values that might legitimize them.
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  17.  12
    Ordered completion for first-order logic programs on finite structures.Vernon Asuncion, Fangzhen Lin, Yan Zhang & Yi Zhou - 2012 - Artificial Intelligence 177-179 (C):1-24.
  18.  14
    Obedience responsibility.Richard Vernon - 2024 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 27 (4):609-615.
    Avia Pasternak’s Responsible Citizens, Irresponsible States makes a case for concluding that ‘intentional citizens’ of states should be held liable, in the sense of being chargeable for remedial costs, when their state has caused wrongful damage to another state. In making this case, the book steers a course between purely ascriptive views that assign liability on the basis of membership alone, and intentionalist views that require a stronger connection with the fault. The exemptions from liability that the book acknowledges, however, (...)
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  19.  18
    The philosophy of friendship.Mark Vernon - 2005 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    Mark Vernon links the resources of the philosophical tradition with numerous illustrations from modern culture to ask what friendship is and how it relates to sex, work, politics and spirituality. Unusually, he argues that Plato and Nietzsche, as much as Aristotle and Aelred, should be put center stage. Their penetrating and occasionally tough insights are invaluable if friendship is to be a full, not merely sentimental, way of life for today.
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  20.  17
    Star in the east: Krishnamurti, the invention of a Messiah.Roland Vernon - 2001 - New York: PALGRAVE for St. Martin's Press.
    The extraordinary story of Krishnamurti, hailed early in life as the messiah for the 20th century, is told here in the light of a century of changing spiritual attitudes. It is a tale of mysticism, sexual scandals, religious fervor and chicanery, out of which emerged one of the most influential thinkers of modern times. Krishnamurti was "discovered" as a young boy on a beach in India by members of the Theosophical Society, convinced that they had found the new world leader, (...)
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  21.  16
    Ordered completion for logic programs with aggregates.Vernon Asuncion, Yin Chen, Yan Zhang & Yi Zhou - 2015 - Artificial Intelligence 224 (C):72-102.
  22.  12
    No Master of Himself: Pope and the Response of Wonder.Katherine Playfair Quinsey - 2020 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 39:181-211.
    Although he is the exemplar of poetic balance, control, and precision, Pope’s classical aesthetics and ecological vision are ultimately authorized not by restraint but by excess, by a response of wonder: emotive not rational, imaginative not formulaic, and fundamentally religious in nature. Pope’s lifelong and profound engagement with wonder—in both personal expression and formal poetics—embodies the tensions of his time: between myth and parody, enthusiasm and restraint, hyperbolic parody and interrupted awe, self-realization and self-loss, emotive expression and formalistic control. His (...)
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  23.  5
    No Master of Himself: Pope and the Response of Wonder.Katherine Playfair Quinsey - 2020 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 39:181-211.
    Although he is the exemplar of poetic balance, control, and precision, Pope’s classical aesthetics and ecological vision are ultimately authorized not by restraint but by excess, by a response of wonder: emotive not rational, imaginative not formulaic, and fundamentally religious in nature. Pope’s lifelong and profound engagement with wonder—in both personal expression and formal poetics—embodies the tensions of his time: between myth and parody, enthusiasm and restraint, hyperbolic parody and interrupted awe, self-realization and self-loss, emotive expression and formalistic control. His (...)
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  24.  29
    Introduction: Why Biopower? Why Now?Vernon W. Cisney & Nicolae Morar - 2015 - In Vernon W. Cisney & Nicolae Morar (eds.), Biopower: Foucault and Beyond. London: University of Chicago Press. pp. 1-26.
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  25.  5
    Hydrogen over helium: A philosophical position.René Vernon - forthcoming - Foundations of Chemistry:1-22.
    Hydrogen is troublesome in any periodic table classification. This being so it may as well be placed in a position that confers desirable attributes to the arrangement of the elements, while notionally recognising its lineage to the group 1 alkali metals and the group 17 halogens. Since the noble gases bridge the halogens and the alkali metals, and hydrogen encompasses the transition from the alkali metals to the halogens, there is more to the idea of hydrogen over helium. (Meyer 1870, (...)
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  26.  9
    The Social context of conduct: psychological writings of Theodore Sarbin.Vernon L. Allen & Karl E. Scheibe (eds.) - 1982 - New York, N.Y.: Praeger.
  27.  1
    The Realm of Abstraction: The Role of Grammar in Hegel’s Linguistic System.Jim Vernon - 2006 - In Jere O'Neill Surber (ed.), Hegel and Language. State University of New York Press. pp. 165-177.
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  28.  11
    Deleuze and Derrida: Difference and the Power of the Negative.Vernon W. Cisney - 2018 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    Examines independent documentary film production in India within a political context.
  29. Models and metaphysics: the nature of explanation revisited.Vernon G. Dobson & David Rose - 1985 - In David Rose & Vernon Dobson (eds.), Models of the Visual Cortex. New York: Wiley. pp. 22--36.
  30. The Man in Leather BreechesiThe Life and Times of George Fox.Vernon Noble - 1953
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  31.  43
    Biopower: Foucault and Beyond.Vernon W. Cisney & Nicolae Morar (eds.) - 2015 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    Michel Foucault’s notion of “biopower” has been a highly fertile concept in recent theory, influencing thinkers worldwide across a variety of disciplines and concerns. In The History of Sexuality: An Introduction, Foucault famously employed the term to describe “a power bent on generating forces, making them grow, and ordering them, rather than one dedicated to impeding them, making them submit, or destroying them.” With this volume, Vernon W. Cisney and Nicolae Morar bring together leading contemporary scholars to explore the (...)
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  32.  51
    Darwinism to-Day: A Discussion of Present-Day Scientific Criticism of the Darwinian Selection Theories, together with a Brief Account of the Principal Other Proposed Auxiliary and Alternative Theories of Species- Forming.Vernon L. Kellogg - 1909 - Philosophical Review 18 (1):85-88.
  33.  2
    Leaves of Mourning: Holderlin's Late Work - with an Essay on Keats and Melancholy.Vernon Chadwick (ed.) - 1996 - State University of New York Press.
    Examines allegory in H lderlin's later work, exploring subjects such as Freud and Derrida's views of mourning, and offering original readings of works including Impossible Ode, Mnemosyne, and The Churchyard. Originally published in German as Laub voll Trauer: H lderlins spSte Allegorie in 1991 by Wilhelm Fink Verlag. Annotation c. by Book News.
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  34. Duration And Immanence: The Question Of A Life In Deleuze.Vernon Cisney - 2008 - Studia Philosophica 1.
    The questions that my paper shall pursue are: 1) What path leads from Deleuze’s early writings to his latter-day conception of a life, and 2) What can such a conception of life mean? Our path will trace a reversal and a return, respectively, through phenomenology to Bergson. For Deleuze, a genuine concept of a life is thinkable, only when the phenomenological subject, which Deleuze considers an illusion, has been jettisoned, reabsorbed into the flux of immanence. This implies a return to (...)
     
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  35.  10
    Derrida's Voice and Phenomenon: an Edinburgh philosophical guide.Vernon W. Cisney - 2014 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
    Published in 1967, Voice and Phenomenon marked a crucial turning point in Derrida's thinking: the culmination of a 15-year-long engagement with the phenomenological tradition. It also introduced the concepts and themes that would become deconstruction. Voice and Phenomenon is a short book, but it can be an overwhelming text, particularly for inexperienced readers of Derrida's work. This is the first guide to clearly explain the structure of his argument, step by step.
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  36.  12
    Jacques Derrida and the Future.Vernon W. Cisney - 2013 - In Lester Embree & Thomas Nenon (eds.), Husserl’s Ideen. Springer. pp. 433--449.
  37.  13
    Butterfly wings: Colour patterns and now gene expression patterns.Vernon French & Antonia Monteiro - 1994 - Bioessays 16 (11):789-791.
    The particular fascination of butterfly wings for developmental biologists (and others) lies in their spectacular array of colour patterns. The evolutionary and developmental relationships between these patterns have been analysed and we know something of the cell interactions involved in their formation(1). Now butterfly homologues of Drosophila wing‐patterning genes have been identified, and their expression patterns offer the first clues to the molecular mechanisms which specify wing colour patterns(2).
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  38.  7
    Segmentation (and eve) in very odd insect embryos.Vernon French - 1996 - Bioessays 18 (6):435-438.
    The formation of segments in the Drosophila early embryo is understood in greater detail than any other complex developmental process. Now, by studying other types of insect embryo, we can hope to deduce something of the ancestral mechanism of segmentation and the ways in which it has been modified in evolution. The parasitic wasp, Copidosoma floridanum, is spectacularly atypical of insects in that the small egg cell divides extensively, with no initial syncytial phase, and forms eventually some 2000 embryos(1). This (...)
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  39.  22
    Monetary Rewards and Decision Cost in Experi-mental Economics.Vernon L. Smith & James M. Walker - 1993 - Economic Inquiry 31 (2).
  40.  25
    The philosophy of the social sciences.Vernon Pratt - 1978 - London: Methuen.
  41.  18
    To Have Done With the Death of Philosophy.Vernon W. Cisney & Ryder Hobbs - 2023 - Symposium 27 (1):33-54.
    In this essay, we read Derrida’s Theory and Practice seminar against the backdrop of the theme of the “death of philosophy,” prominent in 1960s French philosophy. This theme takes two forms—one Nietzschean-Heideggerian and the other Hegelian-Marxian. We summarize both before turning to Derrida’s treatment of Althusser’s views on the Hegelian-Marxian form of this death. Althusser posits a distinction between theory in the general sense and Theory as a designation for Marxist dialectical materialism. Derrida gives two specific criticisms of Althusser that (...)
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  42.  9
    Humanomics: Moral Sentiments and the Wealth of Nations for the Twenty-First Century.Vernon L. Smith & Bart J. Wilson - 2018 - Cambridge University Press.
    While neo-classical analysis works well for studying impersonal exchange in markets, it fails to explain why people conduct themselves the way they do in their personal relationships with family, neighbors, and friends. In Humanomics, Nobel Prize-winning economist Vernon L. Smith and his long-time co-author Bart J. Wilson bring their study of economics full circle by returning to the founder of modern economics, Adam Smith. Sometime in the last 250 years, economists lost sight of the full range of human feeling, (...)
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  43.  11
    Becoming-Other: Foucault, Deleuze, and the Political Nature of Thought.Vernon W. Cisney - 2014 - Foucault Studies 17:36-59.
    In this paper I employ the notion of the ‘thought of the outside’ as developed by Michel Foucault, in order to defend the philosophy of Gilles Deleuze against the criticisms of ‘elitism,’ ‘aristocratism,’ and ‘political indifference’—famously leveled by Alain Badiou and Peter Hallward. First, I argue that their charges of a theophanic conception of Being, which ground the broader political claims, derive from a misunderstanding of Deleuze’s notion of univocity, as well as a failure to recognize the significance of the (...)
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  44.  7
    Vital lies.Vernon Lee - 1912 - New York,: J. Lane.
    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 was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work. This work is in the public domain (...)
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  45.  10
    Film as ArtThe Liveliest Art. A Panoramic History of the Movies.Vernon Young, Rudolf Arnheim & Arthur Knight - 1958 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 17 (2):260.
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  46.  12
    Metaphor, Metamorphosis and Meaning: ‘All the Possibilities of Language’ in Difference and Repetition.Vernon W. Cisney - 2020 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 14 (1):71-86.
    In this paper I explore two distinct but related emphases in Deleuze's later philosophy, both on his own and in collaboration with Félix Guattari, having to do with literature. The first is the emphasis on the work of literature as an assemblage whereby the author constructs lines of flight in the pursuit of self-experimentation and self-transformation. The second is the rejection of metaphor across Deleuze's work. I use Difference and Repetition to chart the origins of these emphases, by unpacking the (...)
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  47.  25
    Inversion's histories/history's inversions: Novelizing fin-de-siècle homosexuality.Vernon A. Rosario - 1997 - In Science and Homosexualities. Routledge. pp. 89--107.
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  48.  8
    Sharing the World.Vernon Carter - 2010 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 18 (5):687-690.
  49.  7
    The Madness of God.Vernon Cisney - 2014 - Film and Philosophy 18:124-145.
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  50.  7
    The Writer is a Sorcerer: Literature and the Becomings of A Thousand Plateaus.Vernon W. Cisney - 2020 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 14 (3):457-480.
    In this paper, I trace the concept of ‘becomings’, most thoroughly articulated in the tenth plateau of A Thousand Plateaus, as it relates to the notion of the writer as sorcerer. More precisely, my aim is to articulate how it is that Deleuze and Guattari conceptualise the writer as really effecting what they understand as ‘becomings’. My thesis is that if the writer is a sorcerer, capable of enabling real becomings, it is because language itself, for Deleuze and Guattari, is (...)
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