Results for 'Hillel Aviezer'

887 found
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  1.  30
    Inherently Ambiguous: Facial Expressions of Emotions, in Context.Ran R. Hassin, Hillel Aviezer & Shlomo Bentin - 2013 - Emotion Review 5 (1):60-65.
    With a few yet increasing number of exceptions, the cognitive sciences enthusiastically endorsed the idea that there are basic facial expressions of emotions that are created by specific configurations of facial muscles. We review evidence that suggests an inherent role for context in emotion perception. Context does not merely change emotion perception at the edges; it leads to radical categorical changes. The reviewed findings suggest that configurations of facial muscles are inherently ambiguous, and they call for a different approach towards (...)
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  2.  22
    Contributions of facial expressions and body language to the rapid perception of dynamic emotions.Laura Martinez, Virginia B. Falvello, Hillel Aviezer & Alexander Todorov - 2016 - Cognition and Emotion 30 (5).
  3. An essay on rights.Hillel Steiner - 1994 - Oxford, UK ;: Blackwell.
    This book addresses the perennial question: What is justice?
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  4.  81
    Our Knowledge of the Past: A Philosophy of Historiography.Aviezer Tucker - 2004 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    How do historians, comparative linguists, biblical and textual critics and evolutionary biologists establish beliefs about the past? How do they know the past? This book presents a philosophical analysis of the disciplines that offer scientific knowledge of the past. Using the analytic tools of contemporary epistemology and philosophy of science the book covers such topics as evidence, theory, methodology, explanation, determination and underdetermination, coincidence, contingency and counterfactuals in historiography. Aviezer Tucker's central claim is that historiography as a scientific discipline (...)
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  5.  55
    Intuition in medicine: a philosophical defense of clinical reasoning.Hillel D. Braude - 2012 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    Intuition in medical and moral reasoning -- Moral intuitionism -- The place of Aristotelian phronesis in clinical reasoning -- Aristotle's practical syllogism: accounting for the individual through a theory of action and cognition -- Individual and statistical physiognomy: the art and science of making the invisible visible -- Clinical intuition versus statistical reasoning -- Contingency and correlation: the significance of modeling clinical reasoning on statistics -- Abduction: the intuitive support of clinical induction -- Conclusion: medical ethics beyond ontology.
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  6.  37
    The Ways of Paradox and Other Essays.Yehoshua Bar-Hillel - 1967 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 28 (4):596-600.
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  7.  67
    In Search of Home.Aviezer Tucker - 1994 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 11 (2):181-187.
    ABSTRACT This is a philosophical treatment of the phenomenon of home. A distinction is drawn between home and permanent residence and birthplace. Through discussion of the philosophy of Vaclav Havel, home is discovered to be a multi‐level structure that may contain several homes on different and identical levels. Exclusionist concepts of home such as nationalism and fundamentalist monotheism deny this. Home is conditions that allow personal self fulfilment. Our actual home is the result of our efforts to reach our ideal (...)
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  8.  27
    Confidence in judgment: Persistence of the illusion of validity.Hillel J. Einhorn & Robin M. Hogarth - 1978 - Psychological Review 85 (5):395-416.
  9. The Secrets of the Guide to the Perplexed: Between the Thirteenth and Twentieth Centuries.Aviezer Ravitzky - 1990 - In Isadore Twersky (ed.), Studies in Maimonides. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
     
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  10. Clinical intuition versus statistics: Different modes of tacit knowledge in clinical epidemiology and evidence-based medicine.Hillel D. Braude - 2009 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 30 (3):181-198.
    Despite its phenomenal success since its inception in the early nineteen-nineties, the evidence-based medicine movement has not succeeded in shaking off an epistemological critique derived from the experiential or tacit dimensions of clinical reasoning about particular individuals. This critique claims that the evidence-based medicine model does not take account of tacit knowing as developed by the philosopher Michael Polanyi. However, the epistemology of evidence-based medicine is premised on the elimination of the tacit dimension from clinical judgment. This is demonstrated through (...)
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  11.  60
    Affecting the Body and Transforming Desire: The Treatment of Suffering as the End of Medicine.Hillel D. Braude - 2012 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 19 (4):265-278.
    I will apply dietetic measures for the benefit of the sick according to my ability and judgment. I will keep them from harm and injustice. The Hippocratic Oath formulates the ethical principle of medical beneficence and its negative formulation non-maleficence. It relates medical ethics to the traditional end of medicine, that is, to heal, or to make whole. First and foremost, the duty of the physician is to heal, and if this is not possible at least not to harm. This (...)
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  12.  2
    Dat u-medinah: be-hagut ha-Yehudit ba-meʼah ha-ʻeśrim.Aviezer Ravitzky (ed.) - 2005 - Yerushalayim: ha-Makhon ha-Yiśreʼeli le-demoḳraṭyah.
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  13.  15
    Land, liberty and the early Herbert Spencer.Hillel Steiner - 2000 - In John Offer (ed.), Herbert Spencer: critical assessments. New York: Routledge. pp. 3--3.
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  14. The Need for Abstract Entities in Semantic Analysis.Yehoshua Bar-Hillel - 1951 - Proceedings of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 80 (1):100-112.
  15.  18
    Tacit clues and the science of clinical judgement [a commentary on Henry et al.].Hillel D. Braude - 2011 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 17 (5):940-943.
  16.  34
    Ambiguity and uncertainty in probabilistic inference.Hillel J. Einhorn & Robin M. Hogarth - 1985 - Psychological Review 92 (4):433-461.
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  17. Traditions and True Successors.David-Hillel Ruben - 2013 - Social Epistemology 27 (1):32 - 46.
    What constitutes numerically one and the same tradition diachronically, at different times? This question is the focus of often violent dispute in societies. Is it capable of a rational resolution? Many accounts attempt that resolution with a diagnosis of ambiguity of the disputed concept-Islam, Marxism, or democracy for example. The diagnosis offered is in terms of vagueness, namely the vague criteria for sameness or similarity of central beliefs and practices.
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  18.  4
    The Essence of Dissidence.Aviezer TuckerMarian KissSarka MokraOndrej StefekMartina VyrkovaVera Zatopkova - 2001 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 22 (2):59-78.
    This article offers a philosophic understanding of dissidence. We present a conceptual analysis of dissidence as connected to a net of other philosophic concepts such as ‘virtue’ and ‘truth’. ‘Dissidence’, like ‘right’ and ‘liberty’, is used both in precise philosophic discourse and with greater variations of meaning in ordinary language. Our discussion springs from a philosophic discourse of dissidence that flourished in Czechoslovakia in the seventies and eighties, during the ‘normalization’ period between the Soviet invasion of 1968 and the Velvet (...)
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  19.  13
    Induktive Logik und Wahrscheinlichkeit.Y. Bar-Hillel - 1962 - Philosophy of Science 29 (1):94-95.
  20.  14
    Linear regression and process-tracing models of judgment.Hillel J. Einhorn, Don N. Kleinmuntz & Benjamin Kleinmuntz - 1979 - Psychological Review 86 (5):465-485.
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  21.  35
    The target of the self and the arrows of volition and self-representation.Hillel Braude - 2009 - American Journal of Bioethics 9 (1):46 – 47.
  22.  21
    Unraveling the Knot of Suffering: Combining Neurobiological and Hermeneutic Approaches.Hillel D. Braude - 2012 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 19 (4):291-294.
    The title of my paper, “Affecting the Body and Transforming Desire,” (Braude 2012a) is inspired from Plato’s Symposium, where the physician Eryximachus presents a purely neurophysiological discourse on love. James Giordano’s and Gerrit Glas’s commentaries on my paper have the timbre of a contemporary symposium, in this instance to discern the nature of suffering. Thus, I take Giordano’s and Glas’s commentaries to be generally sympathetic to my offering, although providing further critical insights that deepen the multidimensional understanding of suffering and (...)
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  23.  38
    Conciliating cognition and consciousness: the perceptual foundations of clinical reasoning.Hillel D. Braude - 2012 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 18 (5):945-950.
  24. Logic, Methodology and Philosophy of Science Proceedings of the 1964 International Congress. Edited by Yehoshua Bar-Hillel.Yehoshua Bar-Hillel - 1965 - North-Holland Pub. Co.
  25.  25
    Miriam Solomon: Making medical knowledge: Oxford University Press, 2015, 261 pp, $60.00, ISBN: 978-0-19-873261-7.Hillel D. Braude - 2016 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 37 (5):433-436.
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  26.  38
    Normativity unbound: Liminality in palliative care ethics.Hillel Braude - 2012 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 33 (2):107-122.
    This article applies the anthropological concept of liminality to reconceptualize palliative care ethics. Liminality possesses both spatial and temporal dimensions. Both these aspects are analyzed to provide insight into the intersubjective relationship between patient and caregiver in the context of palliative care. Aristotelian practical wisdom, or phronesis, is considered to be the appropriate model for palliative care ethics, provided it is able to account for liminality. Moreover, this article argues for the importance of liminality for providing an ethical structure that (...)
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  27.  12
    Attending to the Gesture in Experimental Modernism; or, Reading with(out) Theory of Mind.Hillel Broder - 2014 - Philosophy and Literature 38 (1):230-247.
    In his study “Facial Expression Theory from Romanticism to the Present,” Alan Richardson reminds us that “successful social communication” would be greatly impoverished if “we did not have a reasonably reliable and speedy, and therefore largely unconscious, cognitive mechanism for gauging the emotions and intentions of others through reading their faces.”1 This innately sympathetic capacity for “mind-reading”—that is, for interpreting others’ facial expressions as indicative of internal states of mind—is historically termed “Theory of Mind” (ToM) by cognitive psychologists, philosophers, and (...)
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  28.  15
    Promethean Elites Encounter Precautionary Publics: The Case of GM Foods.Bernard Reber, Aviezer Tucker, Robert E. Goodin & John S. Dryzek - 2009 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 34 (3):263-288.
    Issues concerning technological risk have increasingly become the subject of deliberative exercises involving participation of ordinary citizens. The most popular topic for deliberation has been genetically modified foods. Despite the varied circumstances of their establishment, deliberative “minipublics” almost always produce recommendations that reflect a worldview more “precautionary” than the “Promethean” outlook more common among governing elites. There are good structural reasons for this difference. Its existence raises the question of why elites sponsor mini-publics and if policy is little affected by (...)
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  29.  32
    Lisa M. Hermsen, Manic Minds: Mania’s Mad History and Its Neuro-Future: New Brunswick, NJ, Rutgers University Press, 2011, 154 pp., Paper, $23.99. [REVIEW]Hillel Broder - 2013 - Journal of Medical Humanities 34 (1):81-84.
  30.  59
    Language and Information.Yehoshua Bar-Hillel - 1965 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 30 (3):382-385.
  31. Semantic information.Yehoshua Bar-Hillel & Rudolf Carnap - 1953 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 4 (14):147-157.
  32.  8
    Watching televised representations and self-identity of national minorities: Israeli Arab citizens’ perceptions of their media representations on Israeli television.Hillel Nossek & Nissim Katz - 2020 - Communications 45 (4):463-478.
    This study focuses on how Israeli Arab citizens perceive their media representations on Israeli television and why they consume television broadcasts even though they are marked mostly by negative representations. A new concept – “Communication Boundary Situation” – a development of Jaspers’ “Boundary Situation” theory, is the theoretical framework for the article. The empirical data was collected by conducting semi-structured in-depth interviews. The findings point to different attitudes among the interviewees towards their representation in various television genres, in particular, in (...)
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  33. Sefer Otsrot ha-Shas: asupot divre agadah, ḥokhmah u-musar mi-Shas Bavli ṿi-Yerushalmi..Hillel Copperman (ed.) - 1995 - Yerushalayim: Mekhon Shaʻare yosher.
    ḥeleḳ 1. A-Ṭ -- ḥeleḳ 2. Y-P -- ḥeleḳ 3. Ts-T.
     
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  34. Indexical expressions.Yehoshua Bar-Hillel - 1954 - Mind 63 (251):359-379.
  35.  20
    Truth and Denotation, a Study in Semantical Theory.Yehoshua Bar-Hillel - 1959 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 10 (38):157-159.
  36.  92
    The ethics of managing affective and emotional states to improve informed consent: Autonomy, comprehension, and voluntariness.Hillel Braude & Jonathan Kimmelman - 2010 - Bioethics 26 (3):149-156.
    Over the past several decades the ‘affective revolution’ in cognitive psychology has emphasized the critical role affect and emotion play in human decision-making. Drawing on this affective literature, various commentators have recently proposed strategies for managing therapeutic expectation that use contextual, symbolic, or emotive interventions in the consent process to convey information or enhance comprehension. In this paper, we examine whether affective consent interventions that target affect and emotion can be reconciled with widely accepted standards for autonomous action. More specifically, (...)
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  37. Multifunctional Artefacts and Collocation.David-Hillel Ruben - 2022 - Metaphysics 5 (1):66-77.
    There appear to be multifunctional artefacts of a type such that none of their functions can be attributed only to some proper part of the artefact. I use two examples of allegedly multifunctional artefacts of this kind in what follows, one due to Lynne Rudder Baker (aspirin) and another of my own (a spork). The two examples are meant to make the same point. I discuss her aspirin example, since its discussion has entered the literature, but without its being dealt (...)
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  38.  15
    The Need for Abstract Entities in Semantic Analysis.Yehoshua Bar-Hillel - 1952 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 17 (2):137-139.
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  39. The base-rate fallacy in probability judgments.Maya Bar-Hillel - 1980 - Acta Psychologica 44 (3):211-233.
     
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  40.  94
    Games, Timepieces, and Businesspeople.Hillel Schwartz - 1977 - Diogenes 25 (99):60-79.
    “Business,” wrote a professor of marketing in 1929, “is the work of the world, humanity's chiefest task.” On the doorstep of the Depression, Prof. George R. Collins was selling business, by which he meant the business economy, an economic order based on the systematic management of money. I do not intend to enter the volatile controversy between Collins and those like Aldous Huxley who accused business people of being venal and crass. Rather, I intend to trace one likely path by (...)
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  41.  26
    Sun and Salt, 1500-1700.Hillel Schwartz - 1982 - Diogenes 30 (117):26-41.
    During the Renaissance, the su was regarded primarily as a source of light which gave form to all things*; during the Enlightenment, paradoxically, the sun was regarded primarily as a source of heat. Paracelsian chemistry of the 1500s introduced salt as a third principle which embodied the other two, mercury and sulphur; salt was that universal mediating presence which represented earth. By the late 1700s salt was no longer a metaphysical principle but an acid-base compound, and volatile salts aroused most (...)
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  42.  14
    The New Media Consumers: Media Convergence and the Displacement Effect.Hillel Nossek & Hanna Adoni - 2001 - Communications 26 (1):59-84.
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  43.  29
    Eric J Cassell: The nature of clinical medicine: the return of the clinician: Oxford University Press, 2015, 329 pp, $39.95 , ISBN 978-0-19-997486-3.Hillel D. Braude - 2015 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 36 (4):291-293.
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  44.  17
    Evaluating Moral Intuitions in Neuroethics: A Neurophenomenological Perspective.Hillel D. Braude - 2011 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 2 (2):22-24.
    Neil Levy (2011) argues that neuroethics as a new discipline distinct from bioethics provides methodological tools to evaluate the validity of our moral intuitions. This naturalistic claim that mor...
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  45.  19
    New Light on the Liar.Y. Bar-Hillel - 1957 - Analysis 18:1.
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  46. Maimonides : Esotericism and educational philosophy.Aviezer Ravitzky - 2005 - In Kenneth Seeskin (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Maimonides. Cambridge University Press.
  47. Lashon, Mahashavah, Hevrah Kovets Mukdash le-Zikhro Shel Yehoshu a Bar-Hilel.Yehoshua Bar-Hillel & Yehuda Melzer - 1978 - Hotsa at Sefarim Al-Shem Y.L. Magnes, Ha-Universitah Ha- Ivrit ; T"a [I.E. Tel-Aviv] : Ha-Mekhirah Ha-Rashit, Yavneh.
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  48. Me-Romi li-Yerushalayim: sefer zikaron le-Yosef-Barukh Sermoneṭah.Giuseppe Sermoneta & Aviezer Ravitzky (eds.) - 1998 - Yerushalayim: ha-Merkaz le-ḥeḳer ha-Ḳabalah ʻa. sh. Gershom Shalom.
     
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  49.  8
    History and faith: studies in Jewish philosophy.Aviezer Ravitzky - 1996 - Amsterdam: J.C. Gieben.
    A collection of nine essays by one of the leading scholars in medieval Jewish Philosophy. The volume consists of two parts. Part I, entitled "Philosophy and History," includes essays on the study of medieval Jewish Philosophy, on the notion of Peace, on the political philosophy of Nissim of Gerona and Isaac Abrabanel, and on Maimonides' views on Messianism. In part II, "Philosophy and Faith," the subjects dealt with are: 'The God of the Philosophers and the God of the Kabbalists', the (...)
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  50.  21
    Logic, methodology and philosophy of science.Yehoshua Bar-Hillel (ed.) - 1965 - Amsterdam,: North-Holland Pub. Co..
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