Results for 'Bernard Weiner'

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  1.  62
    An attributional theory of achievement motivation and emotion.Bernard Weiner - 1985 - Psychological Review 92 (4):548-573.
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  2. An Attributional Theory of Motivation and Emotion.Bernard Weiner - 1988 - Behaviorism 16 (2):167-173.
  3.  19
    The Attribution Approach to Emotion and Motivation: History, Hypotheses, Home Runs, Headaches/Heartaches.Bernard Weiner - 2014 - Emotion Review 6 (4):353-361.
    In this article the history of the attribution approach to emotion and motivation is reviewed. Early motivation theorists incorporated emotion within the pleasure/pain principle but they did not recognize specific emotions. This changed when Atkinson introduced his theory of achievement motivation, which argued that achievement strivings are determined by the anticipated emotions of pride and shame. Attribution theorists then suggested many other emotional reactions to success and failure that are determined by the perceived causes of achievement outcomes and the shared (...)
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  4.  21
    Effects of the instructional sets to remember and to forget on short-term retention: Studies of rehearsal control and retrieval inhibition (repression).Bernard Weiner & Henry Reed - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 79 (2p1):226.
  5.  9
    Responsibility for social transgressions: An attributional analysis.Bernard Weiner - 2001 - In Bertram Malle, L. J. Moses & Dare Baldwin (eds.), Intentions and Intentionality: Foundations of Social Cognition. MIT Press. pp. 331--344.
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  6.  13
    Effects of reinforcement history upon risk-taking behavior.Marshall G. Greenberg & Bernard Weiner - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 71 (4):587.
  7.  44
    Motivational factors in short-term retention.Bernard Weiner & Edward L. Walker - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 71 (2):190.
  8.  41
    Understanding the Motivational Role of Affect: Life-span Research from an Attributional Perspective.Bernard Weiner & Sandra Graham - 1989 - Cognition and Emotion 3 (4):401-419.
  9.  19
    A cognitive psychology for infrahumans.Bernard Weiner & Susan Landes - 1978 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 1 (4):606-607.
  10.  39
    A Naïve Psychologist Examines Bad Luck and the Concept of Responsibility.Bernard Weiner - 2003 - The Monist 86 (2):164-180.
    I related the following story to my large undergraduate class: “Johnny Jones was born with an impulsive temperament. On the way home one day he found a gun that had apparently been thrown away. He then went to rob a bank. The bank had just hired a security guard for protection. When Johnny attempted the robbery he was confronted by the guard and fatally shot him.” I then asked the students in the class to select one of the following.
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  11.  4
    Attribution Theory.Bernard Weiner - 2010 - In Timothy O'Connor & Constantine Sandis (eds.), A Companion to the Philosophy of Action. Oxford, UK: Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 366–373.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Phenomenal Causality From Classification to Dynamics Interpersonal Motivation References.
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  12.  69
    Motivation from an attribution perspective and the social psychology of perceived competence.Bernard Weiner - 2005 - In Andrew J. Elliot & Carol S. Dweck (eds.), Handbook of Competence and Motivation. The Guilford Press. pp. 73--84.
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  13.  5
    The Contributions of an Attribution Approach to Emotion and Motivation.Bernard Weiner - forthcoming - Polish Psychological Bulletin.
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  14.  29
    A meta‐analytic review of help giving and aggression from an attributional perspective: Contributions to a general theory of motivation.Udo Rudolph, Scott Roesch, Tobias Greitemeyer & Bernard Weiner - 2004 - Cognition and Emotion 18 (6):815-848.
  15.  21
    Learning a commonsense moral theory.Max Kleiman-Weiner, Rebecca Saxe & Joshua B. Tenenbaum - 2017 - Cognition 167 (C):107-123.
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  16. Die Philosophie Arthur Schopenhauers und ihre Rezeption.Thomas Weiner - 2000 - New York: G. Olms.
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  17.  30
    Understanding Frege's Project.Joan Weiner - 2012 - In Michael Potter, Joan Weiner, Warren Goldfarb, Peter Sullivan, Alex Oliver & Thomas Ricketts (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Frege. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 32-62.
    Frege begins Die Grundlagen der Arithmetik, the work that introduces the project which was to occupy him for most of his professional career, with the question, 'What is the number one?' It is a question to which even mathematicians, he says, have no satisfactory answer. And given this scandalous situation, he adds, there is small hope that we shall be able to say what number is. Frege intends to rectify the situation by providing definitions of the number one and the (...)
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  18. Practical reasoning and the concept of knowledge.Matthew Weiner - 2009 - In Adrian Haddock, Alan Millar & Duncan Pritchard (eds.), Epistemic Value. Oxford, GB: Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 163--182.
    Suppose we consider knowledge to be valuable because of the role known propositions play in practical reasoning. This, I argue, does not provide a reason to think that knowledge is valuable in itself. Rather, it provides a reason to think that true belief is valuable from one standpoint, and that justified belief is valuable from another standpoint, and similarly for other epistemic concepts. The value of the concept of knowledge is that it provides an economical way of talking about many (...)
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  19.  6
    From Descriptive Functions to Sets of Ordered Pairs.Bernard Linsky - 2009 - In Alexander Hieke & Hannes Leitgeb (eds.), Reduction, abstraction, analysis: proceedings of the 31th International Ludwig Wittgenstein-Symposium in Kirchberg, 2008. Frankfurt: de Gruyter. pp. 259-272.
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  20. The Grasshopper: Games, Life and Utopia.Bernard Suits & Thomas Hurka - 1978 - Peterborough, CA: Broadview Press.
    In the mid twentieth century the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein famously asserted that games are indefinable; there are no common threads that link them all. "Nonsense," says the sensible Bernard Suits: "playing a game is a voluntary attempt to overcome unnecessary obstacles." The short book Suits wrote demonstrating precisely that is as playful as it is insightful, as stimulating as it is delightful. Suits not only argues that games can be meaningfully defined; he also suggests that playing games is a (...)
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  21.  64
    Acting out.Bernard Stiegler - 2009 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. Edited by David Barison, Daniel Ross, Patrick Crogan & Bernard Stiegler.
    How I became a philosopher -- To love, to love me, to love us.
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  22. The Spectra of Epistemic Norms.Matt Weiner - 2013 - In Clayton Littlejohn & John Turri (eds.), Epistemic Norms: New Essays on Action, Belief, and Assertion. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. pp. 201-218.
    I argue that there is a wide variety of epistemic norms, distributed along two different spectra. One spectrum runs from the ideal to the practical and concerns the extent to which it is possible to follow the norm given our cognitive and epistemic limitations. The other spectrum runs from thin to thick and concerns the extent to which the norm concerns facts about our beliefs over and above the content of the belief. Many putative epistemic norms, such as truth and (...)
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  23. Ethics.Bernard Williams - 1995 - In A. C. Grayling (ed.), Philosophy: a guide through the subject. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  24. A Credibility-Backed Norm for Testimony.Matt Weiner - 2023 - Episteme 20 (1):73-85.
    I propose that testimony is subject to a norm that is backed by a credibility sanction: whenever the norm is violated, it is appropriate for the testifier to lose some credibility for their future testimony. This is one of a family of sanction-based norms, where violation of the norm makes it appropriate to lose some power; in this case, the power to induce belief through testimony. The applicability of the credibility norm to testimony follows from the epistemology of testimony, in (...)
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  25. Neuronal mechanisms of consciousness: A relational global workspace approach.Bernard J. Baars, J. B. Newman & John G. Taylor - 1998 - In Stuart R. Hameroff, Alfred W. Kaszniak & Alwyn Scott (eds.), Toward a Science of Consciousness II: The Second Tucson Discussions and Debates. MIT Press. pp. 269-278.
    This paper explores a remarkable convergence of ideas and evidence, previously presented in separate places by its authors. That convergence has now become so persuasive that we believe we are working within substantially the same broad framework. Taylor's mathematical papers on neuronal systems involved in consciousness dovetail well with work by Newman and Baars on the thalamocortical system, suggesting a brain mechanism much like the global workspace architecture developed by Baars (see references below). This architecture is relational, in the sense (...)
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  26. A Cognitive Theory of Consciousness.Bernard J. Baars - 1988 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Conscious experience is one of the most difficult and thorny problems in psychological science. Its study has been neglected for many years, either because it was thought to be too difficult, or because the relevant evidence was thought to be poor. Bernard Baars suggests a way to specify empirical constraints on a theory of consciousness by contrasting well-established conscious phenomena - such as stimulus representations known to be attended, perceptual, and informative - with closely comparable unconscious ones - such (...)
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  27.  46
    Bioethics: a return to fundamentals.Bernard Gert - 1997 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by Charles M. Culver & K. Danner Clouser.
    An updated and expanded successor to Culver and Gert's Philosophy in Medicine, this book integrates moral philosophy with clinical medicine to present a comprehensive summary of the theory, concepts, and lines of reasoning underlying the ...
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  28. Reframing success.Rachel Leventhal-Weiner - 2018 - In Joseph Fruscione & Kelly J. Baker (eds.), Succeeding outside the academy: career paths beyond the humanities, social sciences, and STEM. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas.
     
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  29.  14
    A Theory of Time and Space. [REVIEW]Norbert Weiner - 1916 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 13 (22):611-613.
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  30.  89
    The Cambridge Companion to Frege.Michael Potter, Joan Weiner, Warren Goldfarb, Peter Sullivan, Alex Oliver & Thomas Ricketts (eds.) - 2012 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Gottlob Frege (1848–1925) was unquestionably one of the most important philosophers of all time. He trained as a mathematician, and his work in philosophy started as an attempt to provide an explanation of the truths of arithmetic, but in the course of this attempt he not only founded modern logic but also had to address fundamental questions in the philosophy of language and philosophical logic. Frege is generally seen (along with Russell and Wittgenstein) as one of the fathers of the (...)
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  31.  42
    Gottlob Frege: Philosophical and Mathematical Correspondence. [REVIEW]Joan Weiner - 1983 - Philosophical Review 92 (4):591-593.
  32.  5
    Vers un développement de la philosophie dialectique.Bernard Gilson - 1995 - Paris: J. Vrin.
    I. Réviser pour développer. 1. Du modèle bergsonien à la révision bergsonienne -- 2. De la révision bergsonienne au développement rationnel -- II. La dialectique généralisée. 1. Réflexions sur les synthèses dialectiques fichtéennes -- 2. Réflexions sur Schelling au temps de l'idéalisme transcendantal -- 3. Réflexions sur les dialectiques hégéliennes -- III. Les dialectiques juridiques. 1. L'approbation du contrat social par Kant et Fichte -- 2. Le refus de contrat social par Hegel.
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  33.  26
    An Introduction to the Study of Experimental Medicine.Claude Bernard, Henry Copley Greene & Lawrence Joseph Henderson - 1957 - Courier Corporation.
    The basic principles of scientific research from the great French physiologist whose contributions in the 19th century included the discovery of vasomotor nerves; nature of curare and other poisons in human body; more.
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  34. The functions of consciousness.Bernard J. Baars - 1988 - In A Cognitive Theory of Consciousness. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  35.  3
    Révéler une autre domination acosmique: La critique arendtienne du libéralisme.Milan Bernard - 2024 - Symposium 28 (1):199-217.
    Hannah Arendt is famous for her influential and innovative analysis of totalitarianism. However, her thinking on political systems and ideologies is far from limited to this theorization. Arendt also criti-cizes modern liberalism and its ideological framework. Indeed, Arendt’s thought reveals many of the political consequences of world-lessness, the loss of the world in contemporary times, particularly in terms of a sense of disempowerment and the advent of a technical vision of politics. This article looks at the political effects of world-lessness, (...)
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  36.  27
    Études sur le XVIIIe siècle.Bernard, Monique Cottret, Hugues Neveux, William Shea, Claude Blanckaert, Nicolas Piqué, François Laplanche, Mai Lequan, Jean-Pierre Poirier, Jean-Marc Chatelain, Alain Cernuschi, Françoise Charles-Daubert, François Hincker, Alain Tallon & Annie Petit - 1997 - Revue de Synthèse 118 (1):129-172.
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  37.  4
    La raison moderne et le droit politique.Bernard Bourgeois - 2000 - Paris: Vrin.
    Si la raison moderne, declaree en son principe par Descartes comme libre affirmation personnelle de l'universel, generalise son application avec le projet rousseauiste d'une politique de la liberte, c'est dans l'ecartelement reconnu entre le volontarisme moral de celle-ci et le constat de son destin historique negatif. Depuis les deux revolutions marquees par l'heritage de Rousseau, celle, pratique, de 1789, et celle, theorique, de Kant, le developpement de la raison politique moderne est ordonne a la fondation et a la determination nouvelle (...)
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  38. Ethics, character, and authentic transformational leadership.Bernard M. Bass & Paul Steidlmeier - manuscript
     
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  39.  23
    Latent inhibition and schizophrenia.R. E. Lubow, I. Weiner, A. Schlossberg & I. Baruch - 1987 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 25 (6):464-467.
  40.  13
    A Soviet Philosopher's View of Peirce's Pragmatism.Philip P. Weiner - 1967 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 3 (1):3 - 12.
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  41.  11
    The thought of John Sallis: phenomenology, Plato, imagination.Bernard Freydberg - 2012 - Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
    Part I. Phenomenology -- Phenomenology and the return to beginnings -- Delimitations: phenomenology and the end of metaphysics -- Part II. Sallis's Plato interpretation -- Being and logos: reading the Platonic dialogues -- Chorology: on beginning in Plato's Timaeus -- Platonic legacies -- Part III. Art/Sallis -- Stone -- Shades-of painting at the limit -- Topographies -- Part IV. Sallis and other thinkers -- The gathering of reason -- Spacings-of reason and imagination in texts of Kant, Fichte, Hegel -- Echoes: (...)
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  42.  32
    Shame and Necessity.Bernard Williams - 1993 - Berkeley: University of California Press.
    We tend to suppose that the ancient Greeks had primitive ideas of the self, of responsibility, freedom, and shame, and that now humanity has advanced from these to a more refined moral consciousness. Bernard Williams's original and radical book questions this picture of Western history. While we are in many ways different from the Greeks, Williams claims that the differences are not to be traced to a shift in these basic conceptions of ethical life. We are more like the (...)
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  43.  31
    Frege in Perspective.Joan Weiner - 2018 - Cornell University Press.
    Not only can the influence of Gottlob Frege be found in contemporary work in logic, the philosophy of mathematics, and the philosophy of language, but his projects—and the very terminology he employed in pursuing those projects—are still current in contemporary philosophy. This is undoubtedly why it seems so reasonable to assume that we can read Frege' s writings as if he were one of us, speaking to our philosophical concerns in our language. In Joan Weiner's view, however, Frege's words (...)
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  44.  13
    Collected Works of Bernard Lonergan: The Halifax Lectures on Insight. Understanding and being.Bernard J. F. Lonergan, Frederick E. Crowe & Elizabeth A. Morelli - 1990
  45. Death and mortality in contemporary philosophy.Bernard N. Schumacher - 2010 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book contributes to current bioethical debates by providing a critical analysis of the philosophy of human death. Bernard N. Schumacher discusses contemporary philosophical perspectives on death, creating a dialogue between phenomenology, existentialism, and analytic philosophy. He also examines the ancient philosophies that have shaped our current ideas about death. His analysis focuses on three fundamental problems: (1) the definition of human death, (2) the knowledge of mortality and of human death as such, and (3) the question of whether (...)
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  46. The Analogy of City and Soul in Plato's Republic.Bernard Williams - 1999 - In Gail Fine (ed.), Plato, Volume 2: Ethics, Politics, Religious and the Soul. Oxford University Press. pp. 255-264.
     
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  47.  7
    Poétique du possible. [REVIEW]Bernard Cullen - 1985 - Irish Philosophical Journal 2 (1):69-69.
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  48. How conscious experience and working memory interact.Bernard J. Baars & Stan Franklin - 2003 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7 (4):166-172.
  49. Must we know what we say?Matthew Weiner - 2005 - Philosophical Review 114 (2):227-251.
    The knowledge account of assertion holds that it is improper to assert that p unless the speaker knows that p. This paper argues against the knowledge account of assertion; there is no general norm that the speaker must know what she asserts. I argue that there are cases in which it can be entirely proper to assert something that you do not know. In addition, it is possible to explain the cases that motivate the knowledge account by postulating a general (...)
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  50. Software support for students engaging in scientific activity and scientific controversy.Violetta Cavalli‐Sforza, Arlene W. Weiner & Alan M. Lesgold - 1994 - Science Education 78 (6):577-599.
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