Search results for 'Bruce H. Small' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Bruce H. Small & Mark W. Fisher (2005). Measuring Biotechnology Employees' Ethical Attitudes Towards a Controversial Transgenic Cattle Project: The Ethical Valence Matrix. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 18 (5).score: 290.0
    What is the relationship between biotechnology employees’ beliefs about the moral outcomes of a controversial transgenic research project and their attitudes of acceptance towards the project? To answer this question, employees (n=466) of a New Zealand company, AgResearch Ltd., were surveyed regarding a project to create transgenic cattle containing a synthetic copy of the human myelin basic protein gene (hMBP). Although diversity existed amongst employees’ attitudes of acceptance, they were generally: in favor of the project, believed that it should be (...)
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  2. Michael W. Small (2004). Norman E. Bowie and Patricia H. Werhane (2005). Management Ethics. Journal of Academic Ethics 2 (3).score: 120.0
  3. Julian C. Hughes (2009). The Long Life - by H. Small. Journal of Applied Philosophy 26 (1):112-114.score: 42.0
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  4. Barbara Spinoula (2000). D. J. Jakob: ' H Πoιητκη Τη[Final Small Sigma] Αρχαια[Final Small Sigma] εΛΛηνικη[Final Small Sigma] . Pp. 205. Athens: Moρφωτικo ' Tδρνμα ' Eθνικη[Final Small Sigma] TραΠ[Varepsilon]Ζη[Final Small Sigma] , 1998. Paper, 3,500 Drachmas. ISBN: 960-250-157-X. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 50 (01):270-.score: 36.0
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  5. R. C. Bosanquet (1922). Discovery in Greek Lands: A Sketch of the Principal Excavations and Discoveries of the Last Fifty Years. By F. H. Marshall, M.A. Thirty-Eight Half-Tone Photographs and a Map. 1 Vol. Small 8vo. Pp. Xi + 127. Cambridge University Press, 1920, 8s. 6d. Net. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 36 (3-4):91-92.score: 36.0
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  6. Robert Glen (1972). Some School Books 1. W. Michael Wilson: Latin Comprehensions. Pp. 123. London:Macmillan, 1969. Paper, 40p. 2. David G. Frater: Aere Perennius. Pp. Xi+119. London: Macmillan. 1968. Limp Cloth, 75P. 3. A. Mcdonald and S. J. Miller: Greek Unprepared Translation. (Modern School Classics.) Pp.191. London: Macmillan, 1969. Cloth, £1.25. 4. B. Halifax: Small Latin. A Reader for Beginners. Pp. 96; Maps, Plates, and Drawings. Slough: Centaur Books, 1969. Paper, 52p. 5. Carla. P. Ruck: Ancient Greek. ANew Approach. First Experimental Edition. Pp. Xv+599; Drawings. Cambridge, Mass.: M.I.T. Press, 1968. Paper, £6. 6. Sidney Morris: A Programmed Latin Course. Part Ii. Pp. 301; Ill. London: Methuen, 1968. Cloth, £1.50. 7. E. C. Kennedy: Caesar, De Bello Gallico Vi. (Palatine Classics.) Pp. Viii+162; 4 Plates, Maps and Plans. London: University Tutorial Press, 1969. Cloth, 57½p. 8. H. C. Fay: Plautus, Rudens. (Palatine Classics.) Pp. Viii+221; Ill. London: University Tutorial Press, 1969. Cloth, 75P. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 22 (01):96-99.score: 36.0
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  7. S. R. J. (1914). Life and Letters in Roman Africa. By E. S. Bouchier, M.A. Small 8vo. I Vol. Pp. 128. Oxford: R. H. Blackwell, 1913. 3s. 6d. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 28 (01):26-27.score: 36.0
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  8. Philip Ehrlich (2012). The Absolute Arithmetic Continuum and the Unification of All Numbers Great and Small. Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 18 (1):1-45.score: 21.0
    In his monograph On Numbers and Games, J. H. Conway introduced a real-closed field containing the reals and the ordinals as well as a great many less familiar numbers including -ω, ω/2, 1/ω, \sqrt{ω} and ω-π to name only a few. Indeed, this particular real-closed field, which Conway calls No, is so remarkably inclusive that, subject to the proviso that numbers—construed here as members of ordered fields—be individually definable in terms of sets of NBG (von Neumann—Bernays—Gödel set theory with global (...)
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  9. Sam S. Rakover (2002). Reconstruction of Past Events From Memory: An Alternative to the Hypothetico-Deductive (H-D) Method. Behavior and Philosophy 30:101 - 122.score: 21.0
    According to the demand of the Hypothetico-Deductive (H-D) method, a theory is confirmed when the prediction-observation (p-o) gap is small and disconfirmed when the gap is large. A major goal of this paper is to introduce a research domain for which this demand does not hold. In contrast to the H-D method's demand, this research, called the Catch model for reconstructing a face previously seen from memory, requires an increase, within limits, in the p-o gap. The Catch model research (...)
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  10. Michael H. Herzog & Michael Esfeld, Consciousness & the Small Network Argument.score: 15.0
    The last decade has experienced a vivid enthusiasm to unravel the mystery of consciousness believed to be one of the major puzzles of human kind. We share this enthusiasm. Still, we feel that current models are incomplete suffering from a problem that we call the “small network argument”.
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  11. George R. Young II, Kenneth H. Price & Cynthia Claybrook (2001). Small Group Predictions on an Uncertain Outcome: The Effect of Nondiagnostic Information. Theory and Decision 50 (2):149-167.score: 15.0
    Research has established that exposure to a combination of diagnostic (i.e., relevant) and nondiagnostic (i.e., irrelevant) information results in predictions that are more regressive than predictions based on diagnostic information (Hackenbrack, 1992; Hoffman and Patton, 1997). This phenomenon has been labeled the dilution effect (e.g., Tetlock and Boettger, 1989) and has been documented when individuals make predictions. This study tests for the dilution effect when small groups make predictions, and examines the effect of using a procedure designed to reduce (...)
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  12. Melissa Conroy (2010). Treating Transgendered Children: Clinical Methods and Religious Mythology. Zygon 45 (2):301-316.score: 12.0
    Bruce Lincoln suggests that myth is "that small class of stories that possess both credibility and authority" (1992, 24). When studying the history of mythology we find that myths often are understood as something other people have—as if the group in question possesses the truth while others live by falsehoods. In examining contemporary North American society, we can see how Judeo-Christian narratives structure popular and medical discourses regarding sex and gender. The idea that humans are born into male (...)
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  13. Andrew Corey Yerkes (2012). "Strange Fevers, Burning Within": The Neurology of Winesburg, Ohio. Philosophy and Literature 35 (2):199-215.score: 12.0
    Sherwood Anderson's Winesburg, Ohio, published in 1919, is an episodic collection of character sketches based mostly around the perspective of George Willard, a small-town journalist who listens to the stories of various characters, often described in grotesque terms, whose passionate inner lives contrast with their limited outwardly lived existences. The initial critical response to these stories was to regard Anderson as a sort of cheap Freudian who was making an obvious criticism of American Puritanism and conformity. One reviewer, Regis (...)
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  14. Bruce Seifert, Sara A. Morris & Barbara R. Bartkus (2003). Comparing Big Givers and Small Givers: Financial Correlates of Corporate Philanthropy. Journal of Business Ethics 45 (3):195 - 211.score: 12.0
    In a departure from the traditional studies of corporate philanthropy that focus on board composition, advertising, and social networks, the authors investigate the financial correlates of corporate philanthropy. The research design controls for firm size and industry while observing firms from a variety of industries. The sample contains matched pairs of generous and less generous corporate givers. The authors find, as hypothesized, a positive relationship between a firm''s cash resources available and cash donations, but no significant relationship between corporate philanthropy (...)
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  15. Nick Bostrom, The World in 2050.score: 12.0
    This essay explores some of the social, political, economic and technological issues that the world may have to face in the mid-21 st century. A central theme is the need to regulate molecular nanotechnology because of its immense abuse potential. Advanced nanotechnology can be used to build small self-replicating machines that can feed on organic matter - a bit like bacteria but much more versatile, and potentially more destructive than the H-bomb. The necessity to prevent irresponsible groups and individuals (...)
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  16. Nicolaas P. Landsman, Between Classical and Quantum.score: 12.0
    The relationship between classical and quantum theory is of central importance to the philosophy of physics, and any interpretation of quantum mechanics has to clarify it. Our discussion of this relationship is partly historical and conceptual, but mostly technical and mathematically rigorous, including over 500 references. For example, we sketch how certain intuitive ideas of the founders of quantum theory have fared in the light of current mathematical knowledge. One such idea that has certainly stood the test of time is (...)
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  17. Lewis S. Feuer (1993). Gertrude Himmelfarb: A Historian Considers Heroes and Their Historians. Philosophy of the Social Sciences 23 (1):5-25.score: 12.0
    This essay discusses the views of historian Gertrude Himmelfarb, who sets forth that democratic societies tend toward a determinist outlook; she fears that the weakened belief in free will and its heroes endangers a democratic society. She regards H. G. Wells as the founder in 1920 of the "new history," with its antiheroic bias. She welcomes therefore the television series The Civil War for having achieved "a history from above and history from below," with its heroes among common soldiers as (...)
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  18. Pierre Auger & Bruno Faivre (1995). A Spatial Model of Interspecific Competition and Selective Predation: The Case of the Two Hippolais. Acta Biotheoretica 43 (1-2).score: 12.0
    Mutual exclusion between congeneric species has been observed such as the case of the grey and red squirrels in Great Britain and the case of the twoHippolais warbler speciesHippolais icterina andH. polyglotta in Europe. This process can lead to the formation of an extinction wave which propagates. Two main assumptions are tested, competition and selective predation. The aim of this work is to present spatial models of these two processes. The animals of two species are assumed to move on a (...)
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  19. Tracy Bealer (2011). “The Innsmouth Look”. Journal of Philosophy: A Cross-Disciplinary Inquiry 6 (14):44-50.score: 12.0
    “The Innsmouth Look: H. P. Lovecraft’s Ambivalent Modernism” explores how horror writing responds to the anxieties and possibilities presented by historical modernity. Lovecraft, in his short story “The Shadow Over Innsmouth,” translated contemporary concerns about immigration, industrialization and racial difference into a plot about a young traveler encountering a terrifying alien population in a small New England town. The essay examines the ways that this story both demonstrates how the dehumanization of the racialized “other” operated during the modern period, (...)
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  20. E. H. Minns (1924). Paleografia Latina Diplomatica E Nozioni di Scienze Ausiliarie. Nicola Barone. 8¼″ × 5½″. One Vol., with Atlas, 13½″ × 9½″. Pp. 352. 40 Small Cuts in Text, 28 Plates in Atlas. Napoli: Rondinella E Loffredo, Biblioteca di ΜΟ ΣΕΙΟΝ, Vol. I., 1923. Lire 40. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 38 (1-2):44-.score: 12.0
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  21. W. H. Manning (1993). Excavations at Botromagno Alastair M. Small (Ed.): An Iron Age and Roman Republican Settlement on Botromagno, Gravina di Puglia. Excavations of 1965–1974. Vol. I. The Site. Vol. II. The Artifacts. (Archaeological Monographs of the British School at Rome No. 5.) Vol. I: Pp. Xviii + 259; 130 Figures. Vol. II: Pp. Xviii + 399; 120 Figures, 21 Plates. London: British School at Rome, 1992. £45.00. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 43 (02):392-393.score: 12.0
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  22. H. S. Jones (1918). Lost Mosaics and Frescoes of Rome of the Mediaeval Period. By C. R. Morey. One Vol. Small 4to, 10¼″ × 7½″. Pp. 70. Seven Full-Page Plates, Seventeen Figures in Text. Princeton University Press, Princeton; London: Humphrey Milford, 1915. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 32 (7-8):197-198.score: 12.0
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  23. H. Stuart Jones (1913). Thucydides. Book IV. Edited by A. W. Spratt, M.A., Fellow and Tutor of St. Catharine's College, Cambridge. 1 Vol. Small 8vo. Pp. Xx + 448. Cambridge : University Press, 1912. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 27 (05):173-174.score: 12.0
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  24. J. H. Lupton (1890). Thackeray's Translations From Prudentius Translations From, Prudentius: A Selection From, His Works, Rendered in English Verse, with an Introduction and Notes. By Francis St. John Thackeray, M.A., F.S.A., Vicar of Mapledurham, Formerly Fellow of Lincoln College, Oxford, and Assistant Master at Eton. London : G. Bell and Sons. 1890. Small 8vo. Pp. Lxxiii. 231. 7s. 6d. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 4 (10):470-472.score: 12.0
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  25. H. Simmons (1976). Large and Small Existentially Closed Structures. Journal of Symbolic Logic 41 (2):379-390.score: 12.0
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  26. John H. Conway, The Strong Free Will Theorem.score: 6.0
    The two theories that revolutionized physics in the twentieth century, relativity and quantum mechanics, are full of predictions that defy common sense. Recently, we used three such paradoxical ideas to prove “The Free Will Theorem” (strengthened here), which is the culmination of a series of theorems about quantum mechanics that began in the 1960s. It asserts, roughly, that if indeed we humans have free will, then elementary particles already have their own small share of this valuable commodity. More precisely, (...)
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  27. Barbara H. Fried (2012). Can Contractualism Save Us From Aggregation? Journal of Ethics 16 (1):39-66.score: 6.0
    This paper examines the efforts of contractualists to develop an alternative to aggregation to govern our duty not to harm (duty to rescue) others. I conclude that many of the moral principles articulated in the literature seem to reduce to aggregation by a different name. Those that do not are viable only as long as they are limited to a handful of oddball cases at the margins of social life. If extended to run-of-the-mill conduct that accounts for virtually all unintended (...)
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  28. Wayne H. Decker & Thomas J. Calo (2007). Observers' Impressions of Unethical Persons and Whistleblowers. Journal of Business Ethics 76 (3):309 - 318.score: 6.0
    Since there have been many recent occurrences of alleged wrongdoing by business persons and other professionals, it seems additional ethics research is needed to obtain knowledge that will impact real-world behavior. An empirical study assessed business students’ impressions of hypothetical wrongdoers and whistleblowers. To some extent, impressions of an unethical executive and a whistleblower were influenced by the same variables and in opposite directions. Female respondents judged the unethical executive less favorably and the whistleblower more favorably than did males. The (...)
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  29. Marcel J. H. Kenter (forthcoming). Regulating Human Participants Protection in Medical Research and the Accreditation of Medical Research Ethics Committees in the Netherlands. Journal of Academic Ethics.score: 6.0
    The review system on research with human participants in the Netherlands is characterised as a decentralised controlled and integrated peer review system. It consists of an independent governmental body, the Central Committee on Research Involving Human Subjects (or Central Committee), which regulates the review of research proposals by accredited Medical Research Ethics Committees (MRECs). The legal basis was founded in 1999 with the Medical Research Involving Human Subjects Act. The review system is a decentralised arrangement since most research proposal are (...)
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  30. Lisa H. Newton (1988). Charting Shark-Infested Waters: Ethical Dimensions of the Hostile Takeover. Journal of Business Ethics 7 (1-2):81 - 87.score: 6.0
    Except for a small clutch of academic shark-defenders, everyone seems to know that hostile takeovers are wrong, destructive of people and industries, and damaging to the long-term competitiveness of corporate America. But analysis of the takeover process, absent insider trading, fails to identify any injury that is not replicated elsewhere in the business system. Current suggestions for remedying the situation seem inadequate, ill-fitted to the problem, or hostile to the entire capitalist system. Could it be that it is that (...)
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  31. H. P. Sankappanavar (2011). Expansions of Semi-Heyting Algebras I: Discriminator Varieties. Studia Logica 98 (1-2):27-81.score: 6.0
    This paper is a contribution toward developing a theory of expansions of semi-Heyting algebras. It grew out of an attempt to settle a conjecture we had made in 1987. Firstly, we unify and extend strikingly similar results of [ 48 ] and [ 50 ] to the (new) equational class DHMSH of dually hemimorphic semi-Heyting algebras, or to its subvariety BDQDSH of blended dual quasi-De Morgan semi-Heyting algebras, thus settling the conjecture. Secondly, we give a criterion for a unary expansion (...)
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  32. Leslie H. Tharp (1991). Myth & Math, Part II (Preliminary Draft). Synthese 88 (2):179 - 199.score: 6.0
    It is argued that there can only be a small-finite number of mathematical objects; that these objects range from the very concrete to the very abstract; and that mathematics is essentially not concerned with objects but with concepts. This viewpoint is described as mentalist and is upheld over Platonism, intuitionism, and formalism.
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  33. D. P. Carey, H. Chris Dijkerman & A. David Milner (1998). Perception and Action in Depth. Consciousness and Cognition 7 (3):438-453.score: 6.0
    Little is known about distance processing in patients with posterior brain damage. Although many investigators have claimed that distance estimates are normal or abnormal in some of these patients, many of these observations were made informally and the examiners often asked for relative, and not absolute, distance estimates. The present investigation served two purposes. First, we wanted to contrast the use of distance information in peripersonal space for perceptual report as opposed to visuomotor control in our visual form agnosic patient, (...)
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  34. Irving H. Anellis (1992). Theology Against Logic: The Origins of Logic in Old Russia. History and Philosophy of Logic 13 (1):15-42.score: 6.0
    We consider the history of logic in pre-Petrine. Petrine. and immediate post-Pctrine Russia (from the 15th to the mid-18th centuries) and especially of the Petrine era from the late 17th to early 18th century. Throughout much of this time, the clergy evinced strong hostility towards logic. Nevertheless, a small number of academics and clerics such as Stefan Iavorskii and Fcofan Prokopovich kept Aristotelian logic alive during this period and provided the foundation for its development in the modern era.
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  35. Boris H. J. M. Brummans (2008). Preliminary Insights Into the Constitution of a Tibetan Buddhist Monastery Through Autoethnographic Reflections on the Dual/Nondual Mind Duality. Anthropology of Consciousness 19 (2):134-154.score: 6.0
    In this autoethnographic essay, I reflect on my brief personal experiences of conducting field research on ways in which way a small group of Tibetan Buddhist monks enact a monastic total institution in Ladakh, India. More specifically, I analyze my experiences in view of the relationship between dual and nondual mind, as discussed by Henry Vyner (2002) in Anthropology of Consciousness, and use this analysis to develop preliminary insights into the ways in which a Tibetan Buddhist monastery is constituted.
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  36. Louis H. Amato & Christie H. Amato (2007). The Effects of Firm Size and Industry on Corporate Giving. Journal of Business Ethics 72 (3):229 - 241.score: 6.0
    Recent downward trends in corporate giving have renewed interest in the factors that shape corporate philanthropy. This paper examines the relationships between charitable contributions, firm size and industry. Improvements over previous studies include an IRS data base that covers a much broader range of firm sizes and industries as compared to previous studies and estimation using an instrumental variable technique that explicitly addresses potential simultaneity between charitable contributions and profitability. Important findings provide evidence of a cubic relationship between charitable giving (...)
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  37. James H. Austin (2012). Meditating Selflessly at the Dawn of a New Millennium. Contemporary Buddhism 13 (1):61-81.score: 6.0
    Increasingly open to question are the efficacies and timing of some traditional, conventional and current meditative techniques. Recent brain research emphasizes that it is important to distinguish between the Self-centred (egocentric) and other-centred (allocentric) streams of processing. It also proves useful to view as complementary the assets of the concentrative and receptive styles of meditation, especially when one's practices cultivate an appropriate balance between their top-down and bottom-up systems of attentive processing. From this neural perspective, Part I ventures a (...) sample of empirical suggestions. Some of these could help practitioners engage in more open, effortless, choiceless, varieties of receptive meditation?indoors and outdoors. Part II discusses recent research that illuminates issues arising at the interface between Self and other. The evidence suggests how a balanced attentiveness might enable long-term meditators to enhance mindfulness of the present moment, while simultaneously becoming much less fearful and, ultimately, freer to openly express their most objective, innate instincts of selfless compassion. The art of Progress is to preserve order amid change and to preserve change amid order. (Alfred North Whitehead 1861?1947). (shrink)
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  38. H. J. Pratt (2012). Categories and Comparisons of Artworks. British Journal of Aesthetics 52 (1):45-59.score: 6.0
    The degree of justification for a judgment of artistic value is normally directly proportional to the size of the comparison class that is brought to bear in making that judgment. If that comparison class is very small or nonexistent, justified judgments are unlikely or impossible. So which artworks, if any, are comparable? The claim that evaluative comparisons can be made among artworks within a fine-grained category—abstract expressionist paintings, for example—is relatively uncontroversial. But is there any way that we can (...)
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  39. H. Lee-Gosselin & J. Grisé (1990). Are Women Owner-Managers Challenging Our Definitions of Entrepreneurship? An in-Depth Survey. Journal of Business Ethics 9 (4-5):423 - 433.score: 6.0
    In the Quebec city area, 400 women owner-managers of business in the three industrial sectors answered a detailed questionnaire, and 75 of these subsequently underwent in-depth interviews. The main dimensions explored were the characteristics of the entrepreneurs and their firms, the experience of starting a business, the success criteria used, and their vision for the future of their firms. The results suggest the importance, to these women, of a model of small and stable business. This is not a transitory (...)
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  40. Louis H. Amato & Christie H. Amato (2012). Retail Philanthropy: Firm Size, Industry, and Business Cycle. Journal of Business Ethics 107 (4):435-448.score: 6.0
    This article investigates the effects of firm size, profitability, industry affiliation, and the business cycle on retailer philanthropy. The importance of industry and firm effects on giving was analyzed with regression models using industry-fixed effects as well as firm strategy variables. The analysis included instrumental variables methodology to account for simultaneity in the charitable giving–profits relationship. Data were gathered from the IRS Corporate Statistics of Income Sourcebook, data that provide firm size class measures covering the entire firm size distribution ranging (...)
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  41. Wilton H. Bunch (2005). Changing Moral Judgement in Divinity Students. Journal of Moral Education 34 (3):363-370.score: 6.0
    Gains in moral judgement, as measured by the Defining Issues Test (DIT), correlate strongly with advancing education. Curricula that are strongly biblically based may not promote, and students with a strong fundamentalist orientation may not demonstrate, such moral growth. Students at an interdenominational, but very conservative seminary, completed the DIT before and after ethics courses conducted in three different formats. Those students who spent 30 hours in small?group discussions of ethical dilemmas improved their moral reasoning scores, while those who (...)
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  42. Ezra H. Heywood, The War Method of Peace (1863).score: 6.0
    At the request of our friend, Mr. Heywood, we give in full, on our last page, his address on “The War Method of Peace,” – a somewhat paradoxical title, – delivered before the Twenty-Eighth Congregational Society, at the Melodeon, on Sunday, June 14th. Of course, he alone is responsible for the views he presents; and, certainly, he is to be respected and commended for his conscientious fidelity to his convictions. But we cannot regard his treatment of the subject, in its (...)
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  43. John H. Beck (2005). Distributive Justice and the Rules of the Corporation. Business Ethics Quarterly 15 (3):355-362.score: 6.0
    Progressives have advocated reforms of rules governing corporations to achieve greater distributive justice, but Maitland (2001) hasargued that corporate rules are distributively neutral and that changing the rules will have no long run impact on distributive justice. These different conclusions stem from the use of two different methods of economic analysis, partial equilibrium and general equilibrium models. A change in the rules governing corporations in a “large” sector of the economy is appropriately analyzed using a general equilibrium analysis, supporting the (...)
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  44. Jeremy Hall, Stelvia Matos & Cooper H. Langford (2008). Social Exclusion and Transgenic Technology: The Case of Brazilian Agriculture. Journal of Business Ethics 77 (1):45 - 63.score: 6.0
    Many argue that transgenic technology will have wide-ranging implications for farmers in developing nations. A key concern is that competencies may be destroyed by predominantly foreign multinational transgenic technologies, exacerbating problems of social exclusion in the case of subsistence farmers. Conversely, those that fail to adopt the technology may become uncompetitive, particularly in commodity-based export markets. Drawing on interview data conducted in Brazil and supporting data collected in North America, Europe and China, we found that the impact of transgenic technology (...)
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  45. Michael H. Morris, Minet Schindehutte, John Walton & Jeffrey Allen (2002). The Ethical Context of Entrepreneurship: Proposing and Testing a Developmental Framework. Journal of Business Ethics 40 (4):331 - 361.score: 6.0
    The aim of this study is to increase our understanding of the ethical climate of entrepreneurial firms as they grow and develop. A developmental framework is introduced to describe the formal and informal ethical structures that emerge in entrepreneurial firms over time. Factors influencing where firms are within the developmental framework are posited, including the entrepreneur's psychological profile, lifecycle stage of the business, and descriptive characteristics of the venture. It is also proposed that the implementation of ethical structures will impact (...)
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  46. Peter H. Plesch (1999). On the Distinctness of Chemistry. Foundations of Chemistry 1 (1):6-15.score: 6.0
    Chemistry is concerned with all aspects of the changing of one kind of matter into another. It has many parts and all but one of these are so different from all the adjacent sciences that their distinctness is obvious; the exception is physical chemistry. The activities of its practitioners resemble prima facie those of physicists. These however deal with unchanging matter that retains its chemical identity, and virtually all their experimental information is numerical. The physical chemist's concerns are the nature, (...)
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  47. Bruce MacLennan, Field Computation in Motor Control.score: 6.0
    (brain area) to small (dendritic) scales. Further, it is often useful to describe motor control and sensorimotor coordination in terms of external elds such as force elds and sensory images. We survey the basic concepts of eld computation, including both feed-forward eld operations and eld dynamics resulting from recurrent connections. Adaptive and learning mechanisms are discussed brie y. The application of eld computation to motor control is illustrated by several examples: external force elds associated with spinal neurons (...)
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  48. Robert H. Fletcher & Suzanne W. Fletcher (1997). Evidence for the Effectiveness of Peer Review. Science and Engineering Ethics 3 (1).score: 6.0
    Scientific editors’ policies, including peer review, are based mainly on tradition and belief. Do they actually achieve their desired effects, the selection of the best manuscripts and improvement of those published? Editorial decisions have important consequences—to investigators, the scientific community, and all who might benefit from correct information or be harmed by misleading research results. These decisions should be judged not just by intentions of reviewers and editors but also by the actual consequences of their actions. A small but (...)
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  49. Bruce J. MacLennan, Mixing Memory and Desire: Want and Will in Neural Modeling.score: 6.0
    Values are critical for intelligent behavior, since values determine interests, and interests determine relevance. Therefore we address relevance and its role in intelligent behavior in animals and machines. Animals avoid exhaustive enumeration of possibilities by focusing on relevant aspects of the environment, which emerge into the (cognitive) foreground, while suppressing irrelevant aspects, which submerge into the background. Nevertheless, the background is not invisible, and aspects of it can pop into the foreground if background processing deems them potentially relevant. Essential to (...)
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  50. Michael Benedikt & H. Jerome Keisler (2003). Definability with a Predicate for a Semi-Linear Set. Journal of Symbolic Logic 68 (1):319-351.score: 6.0
    We settle a number of questions concerning definability in first order logic with an extra predicate symbol ranging over semi-linear sets. We give new results both on the positive and negative side: we show that in first-order logic one cannot query a semi-linear set as to whether or not it contains a line, or whether or not it contains the line segment between two given points. However, we show that some of these queries become definable if one makes small (...)
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  51. James H. Bissland & Terry Lynn Rentner (1989). Education's Role in Professionalizing Public Relations: A Progress Report. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 4 (1):92 – 105.score: 6.0
    Public relations (PR) is trying to gain professional status by stressing specialized education for the field. Results are mixed, at best. Most practitioners have had educations in some aspects of communication, but so far only a small (though growing) number acknowledge it as being in public relations per se. Furthermore, when certain key attributes of professionalism are measured, practitioners with formal educations in public relations differ little from those without such educations.
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  52. William H. Calvin, Pumping Up Intelligence.score: 6.0
    The title is not a metaphor, though past tense might be better as this chapter is about how each of the many hundred abrupt coolings of the last several million years could have served as a pump stroke, each elevating intelligence a small increment - even though what natural selection was operating on was not intelligence per se.
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  53. Michael H. Moffet & Gregory Unruh (2009). Deck's Romanian Joint Venture. Journal of Business Ethics Education 6:169-182.score: 6.0
    The Deck Romania case is intended for MBA and Executive Education programs and focuses on the ‘gritty’ aspects of business in emerging market countries. It is particularly powerful in combining traditional managerial concerns like emerging market strategy and global supplier relationships with the larger challenges of cross-cultural and country differences in the conduct of business. Deck is a U.S.-based automotive supplier and part of a joint venture in Romania. In October 2006 the JV needed to expand to meet the needs (...)
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  54. Sidney H. Morse, Liberty and Wealth.score: 6.0
    This is the corner into which I beheld a capitalist driven. I say capitalist. But the man was only a day-laborer, and had found it difficult to keep a small family in ordinary comfort. “Nobody is to blame but myself that I am not rich,” he said, “I have neglected to pursue the proper course. But that course was open to me, as it is to everybody in this country. The way is before every man’s eyes; it needs but (...)
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  55. R. Bruce Paton & Jason Harris-Boundy (2007). When We Teach About “Base of the Pyramid” Business, Are We Teaching a Different Theory of Business in Society? Proceedings of the International Association for Business and Society 18:534-535.score: 6.0
    Business schools are slowly waking up to the reality that most of the products and services discussed in management curricula serve a small portion of humanity. A small number of business schools has begun to address businesses designed to meet the needs of the poor (the so called “base of the pyramid”) in business in society courses or in dedicated elective courses. As the world heads into an era defined by pervasive uncertainty, perhaps a business mindset focusing on (...)
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  56. D. H. Spaargaren (1983). Some Aspects of Element Turnover in Living Organisms. Acta Biotheoretica 32 (1).score: 6.0
    The net uptake and loss of any element by a living organism can be described as the quotient of the total amount of the element, present in the organism, and its residence time in the organism. Theoretically it can be derived that the residence time i , equals V i 1–b /k, in which b, the morphometric coefficient, is related to size and shape of the organism (volume V i ); k, the turnover coefficient, is related to its metabolic activity. (...)
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  57. Kristian Høyer Toft (forthcoming). Are Land Deals Unethical? The Ethics of Large-Scale Land Acquisitions in Developing Countries. Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics:1-18.score: 6.0
    Proponents of large-scale land acquisitions (LaSLA) argue that poor countries could benefit from foreign direct investment in land (World Bank 2011), while opponents argue that LaSLA is nothing more than neo-colonial theft of poor peasants’ livelihoods, i.e., land grabbing (Borras and Franco in Yale Hum Rights Dev L J, 13: 507–523, 2010a). To ensure responsible agricultural investments (RAI), a voluntary “code of conduct” for land acquisitions has been proposed by the World Bank (2011) and the FAO (2012). A critical reaction (...)
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  58. S. H. Vollmer & N. S. Hall, Guide and Case Studies.score: 6.0
    The goal of this small book and accompanying DVD is to help you to have a better experience in your laboratory by getting you to step back and take a global look at what is involved in making progress in the laboratory.
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