Search results for 'Janet Dallett' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. Janet Dallett (1998). The Not-yet-Transformed God: Depth Psychology and the Individual Religious Experience. Distributed to the Trade by Samuel Weiser.score: 120.0
  2. P. Miceli Marcia, P. Near Janet & Terry Morehead Dworkin (2009). A Word to the Wise: How Managers and Policy-Makers Can Encourage Employees to Report Wrongdoing. Journal of Business Ethics 86 (3).score: 30.0
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  3. Mahesh Gopinath Anusorn Singhapakdi, K. Marta Janet & L. Carter Larry (2008). Antecedents and Consequences of Perceived Importance of Ethics in Marketing Situations: A Study of Thai Businesspeople. Journal of Business Ethics 81 (4).score: 30.0
    Building on an existing framework concerning ethical intention, this research explores how Thai business people perceive the importance of ethics in various scenarios. This study investigates the relative influences of personal characteristics and the organizational environment underlying the Thai business people’s ethical perception. Corporate ethical values and idealism are shown to positively influence a Thai manager’s perceptions about the importance of ethics. While their ability to perceive the existence of an ethical problem is negatively influenced by relativism, it is positively (...)
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  4. F. Janet (2006). Jesse Norman. After Euclid: Visual Reasoning and the Epistemology of Diagrams. Stanford: CSLI Publications, 2006. ISBN 1-57586-509-2 (Cloth); 1-57586-510-6 (Paper). Pp. Vii +176. [REVIEW] Philosophia Mathematica 15 (1):116-121.score: 30.0
  5. Pierre Janet (1937). Le Langage Inconsistant. Theoria 3 (1):57-71.score: 30.0
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  6. Stephanie Janet (1995). A Propos de “A New French Thought”. The Harvard Review of Philosophy 5 (1):67-71.score: 30.0
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  7. Beata Stawarska (2005). Defining Imagination: Sartre Between Husserl and Janet. Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 4 (2).score: 12.0
    The essay traces the double, phenomenological and psychological, background of Sartre’s theory of the imagination. Insofar as these two phenomenological and psychological currents are equally influential for Sartre’s theory of the imagination, his intellectual project is situated in an inter-disciplinary research area which combines the descriptive analyses of Edmund Husserl with the clinical reports and psychological theories of Pierre Janet. While Husserl provides the foundation for the prevailing theory of imagination as pictorial representation, Janet’s findings on obsessive behavior (...)
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  8. Philip J. Stewart (2010). Charles Janet: Unrecognized Genius of the Periodic System. Foundations of Chemistry 12 (1).score: 12.0
    Janet is known almost exclusively for his left-step periodic table (LSPT). A study of his writings shows him to have been a highly creative thinker and a brilliant draftsman. His approach was primarily arithmetic-geometric, but it led him to anticipate the discovery of deuterium, helium-3, transuranian elements, antimatter and energy from nuclear fusion. He recognized the (n + ℓ) rule well before Madelung and correctly placed the actinides. His controversial treatment of helium at the head of the alkaline earth (...)
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  9. Roland E. Kidwell Jr (2004). “Small” Lies, Big Trouble: The Unfortunate Consequences of Résumé Padding, From Janet Cooke to George O'Leary. Journal of Business Ethics 51 (2):175-184.score: 12.0
    Lying and dysfunctional impression management have been identified as two serious forms of deviant behavior in organizations. One manifestation of such behavior is distortion of one's résumé. In 1981, Janet Cooke lost American journalism's highest honor, the Pulitzer Prize, and her job when her work was exposed as a hoax. The revelation surfaced after it was discovered that she had lied on her résumé and her biographical record. Twenty years later, football coach George O'Leary resigned from one of the (...)
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  10. Roland E. Kidwell (2004). “Small” Lies, Big Trouble: The Unfortunate Consequences of Résumé Padding, From Janet Cooke to George O'Leary. Journal of Business Ethics 51 (2):175 - 184.score: 12.0
    Lying and dysfunctional impression management have been identified as two serious forms of deviant behavior in organizations. One manifestation of such behavior is distortion of one's résumé. In 1981, Janet Cooke lost American journalism's highest honor, the Pulitzer Prize, and her job when her work was exposed as a hoax. The revelation surfaced after it was discovered that she had lied on her résumé and her biographical record. Twenty years later, football coach George O'Leary resigned from one of (...)
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  11. Lex Newman, Rocking the Foundations of Cartesian Knowledge: Critical Notice of Janet Broughton.score: 12.0
    Janet Broughton’s Descartes’s Method of Doubt1 is a systematic study of the role of doubt in Descartes’s epistemology. The book has two parts. Part 1 focuses on the development of doubt in the First Meditation, exploring such topics as the motivation behind methodic doubt; the targeted audience; the method’s game-like character (on her view); its relations to ancient skepticism, its reasonableness; the method’s presuppositions relative to commonsense belief; Michael Williams’s recent criticisms of Descartes; and more. Part 2 focuses on (...)
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  12. Bernard W. Kobes (1997). Metacognition and Consciousness: Review Essay of Janet Metcalfe and Arthur P. Shimamura (Eds), Metacognition: Knowing About Knowing. Philosophical Psychology 10 (1):93-102.score: 9.0
    The field of metacognition, richly sampled in the book under review, is recognized as an important and growing branch of psychology. However, the field stands in need of a general theory that (1) provides a unified framework for understanding the variety of metacognitive processes, (2) articulates the relation between metacognition and consciousness, and (3) tells us something about the form of meta-level representations and their relations to object-level representations. It is argued that the higher-order thought theory of consciousness supplies us (...)
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  13. Lois McNay (2007). Foucault and the Iranian Revolution: Gender and the Seductions of Islamism - by Janet Afary and Kevin B. Anderson. Constellations 14 (2):295-297.score: 9.0
  14. Kenneth Knies (2006). Donohoe, Janet, Husserl on Ethics and Intersubjectivity: From Static to Genetic Phenomenology. Husserl Studies 22 (3).score: 9.0
  15. Thierry Meynard (2008). Jullien, François, a Treatise on Efficacy: Between Western and Chinese Thinking . Translated by Janet Lloyd Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2004, X + 202 Pages and du, Xiaozhen 杜小真, to Go Afar and to Return: Dialogue Between Greece and China 遠去與歸來:希臘與中國的對話 Beijing 北京: Zhongguo Renmin Daxue Chubanshe 中國人民大學出版社, 2004, 3 + 99 Pages. [REVIEW] Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 7 (2):215-219.score: 9.0
  16. Miriam Solomon (2008). Review of Martin Carrier, Don Howard, Janet Kourany (Eds.), The Challenge of the Social and the Pressure of Practice: Science and Values Revisited. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2008 (6).score: 9.0
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  17. Judith Felson Duchan (2000). Janet W. Astington, Paul L. Harris and David R. Olson, Eds., Developing Theories of Mind; Henry M. Wellman, the Child's Theory of Mind; Douglas Frye and Chris Moore, Eds., Children's Theories of Mind: Mental States and Social Understanding Judith Felson Duchan. [REVIEW] Minds and Machines 10 (2):277-288.score: 9.0
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  18. Lex Newman (2004). Rocking the Foundations of Cartesian Knowledge: Critical Notice of Janet Broughton, "Descartes's Method of Doubt". Philosophical Review 113 (1):101-125.score: 9.0
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  19. Judith Felson Duchan (2000). Janet W. Astington, Paul L. Harris and David R. Olson, Eds., Developing Theories of Mind; Henry M. Wellman, the Child's Theory of Mind; Douglas Frye and Chris Moore, Eds., Children's Theories of Mind: Mental States and Social Understanding Judith Felson Duchan. [REVIEW] Minds and Machines 10 (2):277-288.score: 9.0
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  20. Robert Nye (2011). The Taste for Civilization: Food, Politics, and Civil Society. By Janet A. Flammang. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2009. [REVIEW] Hypatia 27 (3):n/a-n/a.score: 9.0
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  21. Paul Schollmeier (1999). Aristotle, Virtue and the Mean Richard Bosley, Roger A. Shiner, and Janet D. Sisson, Editors Apeiron: A Journal for Ancient Philosophy and Science, 25, 4 (December 1995) Edmonton: Academic Printing and Publishing, 1996, Xxi + 217 Pp., $59.95, $21.95 Paper. [REVIEW] Dialogue 38 (03):610-.score: 9.0
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  22. Theresa Smith & Boucher (2011). In Memoriam: Janet Gnosspelius. Collingwood and British Idealism Studies 16 (1-2):167-176.score: 9.0
    Architect and Conservationist; born, July 29, 1926, died, July 18, 2010.
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  23. Karen Detlefsen (2006). Descartes's Method of Doubt Janet Broughton Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2002, Xv + 217 Pp., $16.95 Paper. [REVIEW] Dialogue 45 (02):404-.score: 9.0
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  24. John Dupré (2012). Comments onPhilosophy of Science After Feminism, by Janet Kourany. Perspectives on Science 20 (3):310-319.score: 9.0
  25. John Forge (2011). Review of Janet A. Kourany, Philosophy of Science After Feminism. [REVIEW] Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2011 (2).score: 9.0
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  26. Patrick Madigan (2011). Creation and the God of Abraham. Edited by David B. Burrell, Carlo Cogliati, Janet M. Soskice and William R. Stoeger. Heythrop Journal 52 (2):312-313.score: 9.0
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  27. Matthew Drabek (2012). Philosophy of Science After Feminism. By Janet Kourany. (Oxford UP, 2010. Pp. Ix. + 149. Price US$99.00.). Philosophical Quarterly 62 (248):631-633.score: 9.0
  28. H. F. Ellenberger (1973). Pierre Janet Philosophe. Dialogue 12 (02):254-287.score: 9.0
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  29. H. Crichton-Miller (1926). Psychological Healing. A Historical and Clinical Study by Pierre Janet. Translated by Eden and Cedar Paul. George Allen & Unwin, Ltd.2 Vols. Pp. I, 265. 42s. Per Set. [REVIEW] Philosophy 1 (02):257-.score: 9.0
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  30. Judge Stephen Tumim (1994). Janet Semple, Bentham's Prison: A Study of the Panopticon Penitentiary, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1993, Pp. 344. Utilitas 6 (01):135-.score: 9.0
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  31. Tony Hincks (1984). Aesthetics and the Sociology of Art: A Critical Commentary on the Writings of Janet Wolff. British Journal of Aesthetics 24 (4):341-354.score: 9.0
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  32. C. A. Erin (2003). Janet Radcliffe Richards on Our Modest Proposal. Journal of Medical Ethics 29 (3):141-141.score: 9.0
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  33. A. R. Ainsworth (1904). Book Review:A History of the Problems of Philosophy. Paul Janet, Gabriel Seailles. [REVIEW] Ethics 14 (2):259-.score: 9.0
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  34. Stephanie H. Bol (2003). Ethan Katsh and Janet Rifkin, Online Dispute Resolution, Resolving Conflicts in Cyberspace. Artificial Intelligence and Law 11 (1):69-75.score: 9.0
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  35. David M. Adams (2002). Book Review: Janet L. Dolgin. Families: Law, Gender and Difference and Defining the Family: Law, Technology, and Reproduction in an Uneasy Age. By New York: New York University Press, 1997. And David M. Estlund and Martha C. Nussbaum. Sex, Preference, and Family: Essays in Law and Nature. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997. [REVIEW] Hypatia 17 (3):254-256.score: 9.0
  36. Babak Elahi (2007). East-Struck: Janet Afary and Kevin Anderson's Foucault and the Iranian Revolution in Context. Human Studies 30 (2).score: 9.0
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  37. Lynne M. Broughton (1983). The Sceptical Feminist By Janet Radcliffe Richards London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1980, X+306 Pp., £12.00Equality and the Rights of Women By Elizabeth H. Wolgast New York and London:Cornell University Press, 1980, 176 Pp., £7.50. [REVIEW] Philosophy 58 (224):259-.score: 9.0
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  38. Malcolm A. R. Colledge (1977). Roman Sculpture From Cyrenaica Janet Huskinson: Roman Sculpture From Cyrenaica in the British Museum. (Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani, Great Britain, Ii, I.). Pp. Xiv + 86; 56 Plates, 2 Maps. London: British Museum Publications, 1975. Cloth, £20. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 27 (02):247-248.score: 9.0
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  39. George Yancy (1999). Book Review: Janet A. Kourany, Editor. Philosophy in a Feminist Voice: Critiques and Reconstructions. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1998. [REVIEW] Hypatia 14 (2):129-136.score: 9.0
  40. Gerald Friedman (2003). On Janet Iron's Testing the New Deal: The General Textile Strike of 1934 in the American South. Historical Materialism 11 (4):405-412.score: 9.0
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  41. S. J. Harrison (1987). Vergilian Varieties Richard A. Cardwell, Janet Hamilton (Edd.): Virgil in a Cultural Tradition. Essays to Celebrate the Bimillennium. (University of Nottingham Monographs in the Humanities, 4.) Pp. Iii+146. University of Nottingham, 1986. Paper. J. D. Bernard (Ed.): Virgil at 2000. Commemorative Essays on the Poet and His Influence. (A.M.S. Ars Poetica, 3.) Pp. Xiv + 342; 12 Plates. New York: A.M.S. Press, 1986. $30.50. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 37 (02):175-177.score: 9.0
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  42. Ian Robinson (1984). Art & Reality: John Anderson on Literature and Aesthetics, Ed. Janet Anderson, Graham Cullum and Kimon Lycos. Philosophical Investigations 7 (1):96-99.score: 9.0
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  43. William L. Kelly (1991). Psychology of the Unconscious: Mesmer, Janet, Freud, Jung, and Current Issues. Prometheus Books.score: 9.0
     
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  44. J. Radcliffe-Richards (forthcoming). Commentary by Janet Radcliffe-Richards on Simon Rippon's 'Imposing Options on People in Poverty: The Harm of a Live Donor Organ Market'. Journal of Medical Ethics.score: 9.0
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  45. Marleen Rozemond (2004). Critical Notice of Janet Broughton, Descartes's Method of Doubt. [REVIEW] Canadian Journal of Philosophy 34 (4):591-613.score: 9.0
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  46. D. A. Russell (1982). The Elder Seneca Janet Fairweather: Seneca the Elder. (Cambridge Classical Studies.) Pp. Xii + 418. Cambridge University Press, 1981. £20. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 32 (01):28-30.score: 9.0
  47. K. D. White (1971). Claude Mossé: The Ancient World at Work. Translated by Janet Lloyd. (Ancient Culture and Society.) Pp. 126. London: Chatto & Windus, 1970. Cloth, £1·05 (Stiff Paper, £0·50). [REVIEW] The Classical Review 21 (03):467-.score: 9.0
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  48. M. M. Gillies (1925). The Voyage of the Argonauts. By Janet Ruth Bacon. One Vol. Pp. Viii + 187, with Six Illustrations and Three Maps. London: Methuen and Co., 1925. 6s. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 39 (3-4):88-.score: 9.0
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  49. Maurice J. A. Glickman (1972). Biological Progress and Dominance: A Reply to Janet L. Travis. Philosophy of Science 39 (3):383-387.score: 9.0
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  50. L. Gurjeva (1998). A Social History of Wet Nursing in America: From Breast to Bottle - Janet Golden, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 215 Pp., ISBN 0-521-49544-X Hardback. [REVIEW] Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C 29 (1):189-199.score: 9.0
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  51. Ian R. Christie (1992). Roger Bartlett and Janet M. Hartley, Ed., Russia in the Age of the Enlightenment. Essays for Isabel de Madariaga, Basingstoke and London, Macmillan in Association with the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London, 1990, Pp. X + 253. [REVIEW] Utilitas 4 (01):165-.score: 9.0
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  52. E. J. Kenney (1976). Janet Lembke: Bronze and Iron: Old Latin Poetry From its Beginnings to 100 B.C. Pp. Xii + 185. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1973. Cloth, $10. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 26 (02):278-.score: 9.0
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  53. Robert J. Masek (1989). The Overlooked Problem of Consciousness in Psychoanalysis: Pierre Janet Revisited. Humanistic Psychologist 17:274-279.score: 9.0
     
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  54. David Meconi (2011). The World of Early Egyptian Christianity: Language, Literature, and Social Context. Edited by James E. Goehring and Janet A. Timbie. [REVIEW] Heythrop Journal 52 (3):460-461.score: 9.0
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  55. V. A. Rodgers (1993). In Search of the Sophists Edward Schiappa: Protagoras and Logos: A Study in Greek Philosophy and Rhetoric. (Studies in Rhetoric/Communication.) Pp. Xvii + 239. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press, 1991. $29.95. Jacqueline De Romilly: The Great Sophists in Periclean Athens. Translated by Janet Lloyd. Pp. Xv + 260. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1992 (Originally Published in French, 1988), £35. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 43 (01):77-80.score: 9.0
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  56. P. G. Walsh (1965). James and Janet Maclean Todd: Peoples of the Past. Pp. 352; 8 Plates, 3 Maps. London: Grey Arrow Books, 1963. Paper, 7s. 6d. [REVIEW] The Classical Review 15 (01):127-128.score: 9.0
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  57. Brandon Zimmerman (2012). Burrell, David B., Carlo Cogliati, Janet M. Soskice, and William R. Stoeger, Eds. Creation and the God of Abraham. The Review of Metaphysics 66 (2):360-362.score: 9.0
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  58. Janet Radcliffe Richards (2000). Human Nature After Darwin: A Philosophical Introduction. Routledge.score: 6.0
    Human Nature After Darwin is an original investigation of the implications of Darwinism for our understanding of ourselves and our situation. It casts new light on current Darwinian controversies, and in doing so provides an introduction to philosophical reasoning and a range of philosophical problems. Janet Radcliffe Richards claims that many current battles about Darwinism, in particular about evolutionary psychology and religion, are based on mistaken assumptions about the implications of the rival views. Her analysis of these implications provides (...)
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  59. Janet Afary (2005). Foucault and the Iranian Revolution: Gender and the Seductions of Islamism. University of Chicago Press.score: 6.0
    In 1978, as the protests against the Shah of Iran reached their zenith, philosopher Michel Foucault was working as a special correspondent for Corriere della Sera and le Nouvel Observateur . During his little-known stint as a journalist, Foucault traveled to Iran, met with leaders like Ayatollah Khomeini, and wrote a series of articles on the revolution. Foucault and the Iranian Revolution is the first book-length analysis of these essays on Iran, the majority of which have never before appeared in (...)
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  60. Janet Schmalfeldt (2011). In the Process of Becoming: Analytical and Philosophical Perspectives on Form in Early Nineteenth-Century Music. OUP USA.score: 6.0
    With their insistence that form is a dialectical process in the music of Beethoven, Theodor Adorno and Carl Dahlhaus emerge as the guardians of a long-standing critical tradition in which Hegelian concepts have been brought to bear on the question of musical form. Janet Schmalfeldt's ground-breaking account of the development of this Beethoven-Hegelian tradition restores to the term "form" some of its philosophical associations in the early nineteenth century, when profound cultural changes were yielding new relationships between composers and (...)
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  61. Matthew J. Brown (2013). The Source and Status of Values for Socially Responsible Science. Philosophical Studies 163 (1):67-76.score: 6.0
    Philosophy of Science After Feminism is an important contribution to philosophy of science, in that it argues for the central relevance of advances from previous work in feminist philosophy of science and articulates a new vision for philosophy of science going in to the future. Kourany’s vision of philosophy of science’s future as “socially engaged and socially responsible” and addressing questions of the social responsibility of science itself has much to recommend it. I focus the book articulation of an ethical-epistemic (...)
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  62. Janet Semple (1993). Bentham's Prison: A Study of the Panopticon Penitentiary. Clarendon Press.score: 6.0
    At the end of the eighteenth century, Jeremy Bentham devised a scheme for a prison that he called the panopticon. It soon became an obsession. For twenty years he tried to build it; in the end he failed, but the story of his attempt offers fascinating insights into both Bentham's complex character and the ideas of the period. -/- Basing her analysis on hitherto unexamined manuscripts, Janet Semple chronicles Bentham's dealings with the politicians as he tried to put his (...)
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  63. Janet Landman (1994). Regret: The Persistence of the Possible. OUP USA.score: 6.0
    "We are a people who do not want to keep much of the past in our heads," Lillian Hellman once wrote. "It is considered unhealthy in America to remember mistakes, neurotic to think about them, psychotic to dwell upon them". Yet who in their lifetime has never regretted a lost love, a missed opportunity, a path not taken? Indeed, regret is perhaps a universal experience, but while poets and novelists have long explored its complexities, very little has been written from (...)
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  64. Janet Sayers (2003). Divine Therapy: Love, Mysticism, and Psychoanalysis. Oxford University Press.score: 6.0
    There is mounting evidence that strong personal relationships and spiritual beliefs contribute to our well-being. In Divine Therapy, Janet Sayers employs a biographical approach to the lives and writings of a range of eminent psychotherapists and psychologists to illuminate the link between physical and mental well-being and the 'at-one-ness' provided by love, religious and mystical experiences.
     
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  65. Janet Borgerson & Jonathan Schroeder (2002). Ethical Issues of Global Marketing: Avoiding Bad Faith in Visual Representation. European Journal of Marketing 36 (5/6):570-594.score: 3.0
    This paper examines visual representation from a distinctive, interdisciplinary perspective that draws on ethics, visual studies and critical race theory. Suggests ways to clarify complex issues of representational ethics in marketing communications and marketing representations, suggesting an analysis that makes identity creation central to societal marketing concerns. Analyzes representations of the exotic Other in disparate marketing campaigns, drawing upon tourist promotions, advertisements, and mundane objects in material culture. Moreover, music is an important force in marketing communication: visual representations in music (...)
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  66. Janet Levin (2009). Experimental Philosophy. Analysis 69 (4):761-769.score: 3.0
    Levin argues that the results of the most methodologically sound and philosophically relevant studies discussed in this volume [Experimental Philosophy] could have been obtained from the armchair, and thus that experimental philosophy may not present a serious challenge to the traditional methods of analytic philosophy.
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  67. Janet Levin (1986). Could Love Be Like a Heatwave? Physicalism and the Subjective Character of Experience. Philosophical Studies 49 (March):245-61.score: 3.0
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  68. Janet Levin (2004). The Evidential Status of Philosophical Intuition. Philosophical Studies 121 (3):193-224.score: 3.0
    Philosophers have traditionally held that claims about necessities and possibilities are to be evaluated by consulting our philosophical intuitions; that is, those peculiarly compelling deliverances about possibilities that arise from a serious and reflective attempt to conceive of counterexamples to these claims. But many contemporary philosophers, particularly naturalists, argue that intuitions of this sort are unreliable, citing examples of once-intuitive, but now abandoned, philosophical theses, as well as recent psychological studies that seem to establish the general fallibility of intuition.In the (...)
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  69. Janet Dean Fodor & Ivan A. Sag (1982). Referential and Quantificational Indefinites. Linguistics and Philosophy 5 (3):355 - 398.score: 3.0
  70. Andrew Apter (1991). The Problem of Who: Multiple Personality, Personal Identity, and the Double Brain. Philosophical Psychology 4 (2):219-48.score: 3.0
    The received view of multiple personality disorder (MPD) presupposes a form of realism, according to which the 'secondary personality' is an independent conscious entity joined to the psyche of the host. The received view of MPD is endorsed by the majority of psychologists, as are the major diagnostic criteria for MPD. Realism of this type, gives rise to a certain problem concerning the personal identity of the secondary personality, namely, who this individual is. It is argued that three broad answers (...)
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  71. Sean Greenberg (2008). 'Naturalism' and 'Skepticism' in Hume's Treatise of Human Nature. Philosophy Compass 3 (4):721-733.score: 3.0
    Hume begins the Treatise of Human Nature by announcing the goal of developing a science of man; by the end of Book 1 of the Treatise, the science of man seems to founder in doubt. Underlying the tension between Hume's constructive ambition – his 'naturalism'– and his doubts about that ambition – his 'skepticism'– is the question of whether Hume is justified in continuing his philosophical project. In this paper, I explain how this question emerges in the final section of (...)
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  72. Janet Holt (2008). Nurses' Attitudes to Euthanasia: The Influence of Empirical Studies and Methodological Concerns on Nursing Practice. Nursing Philosophy 9 (4):257-272.score: 3.0
    Abstract This paper introduces the controversy surrounding active voluntary euthanasia and describes the legal position on euthanasia and assisted suicide in the UK. Findings from studies of the nurses' attitudes to euthanasia from the national and international literature are reviewed. There are acknowledged difficulties in carrying out research into attitudes to euthanasia and hence the review of findings from the published studies is followed by a methodological review. This methodological review examines the research design and data collection methods used in (...)
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  73. Janet L. Borgerson, Jonathan E. Schroeder, Martin Escudero Magnusson & Frank Magnusson (2009). Corporate Communication, Ethics, and Operational Identity: A Case Study of Benetton. Business Ethics 18 (3):209-223.score: 3.0
    This article investigates conceptual and strategic relationships between corporate identity, organizational identity and ethics, utilizing the Benetton Corporation as an illustrative case study. Although much attention has been given to visual aspects of Benetton's renowned ethical brand building efforts, few studies have looked at how Benetton's employees, retail environments and trade events express ethical aspects of their well-known corporate identity. A multi-method case study, including interviews at retail outlets and trade events, sheds light on several important yet under-studied components of (...)
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  74. Janet Borgerson (2007). On the Harmony of Feminist Ethics and Business Ethics. Business and Society Review 112 (4):477-509.score: 3.0
    If business requires ethical solutions that are viable in the liminal landscape between concepts and corporate office, then business ethics and corporate social responsibility should offer tools that can survive the trek, that flourish in this well-traveled, but often unarticulated, environment. Indeed, feminist ethics produces, accesses, and engages such tools. However, work in BE and CSR consistently conflates feminist ethics and feminine ethics and care ethics. I offer clarification and invoke the analytic power of three feminist ethicists 'in action' whose (...)
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  75. Janet Borgerson (2005). Judith Butler: On Organizing Subjectivities. Sociological Review 53:63-79.score: 3.0
    In this essay, I evoke and explore Butler's potential contribution, providing a broad framework for her work, and, at the same time, focusing on specific concepts from her writings - performativity, iteration, and foreclosure - that have profound implications for researchers. Furthermore, pointing out philosophers working in the phenomenological tradition in which Butler trained, including influential precursors, colleagues, and contemporaries, establishes how issues raised in various fields can be recognized and comprehended in relation to Butler's work more generally. Butler's work (...)
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  76. Janet Levin (2008). Molyneux's Question and the Individuation of Perceptual Concepts. Philosophical Studies 139 (1):1 - 28.score: 3.0
    Molyneux's Question, that is, “Suppose a man born blind, and now adult, and taught by his touch to distinguish between a cube and a sphere... and the blind man made to see: Quaere, whether by his sight, before he touched them, he could now distinguish, and tell, which is the globe, which the cube”, was discussed by many theorists in the 17th and 18th centuries, and has recently been addressed by contemporary philosophers interested in the nature, and identity conditions, of (...)
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  77. Janet Levin (2007). Can Modal Intuitions Be Evidence for Essentialist Claims? Inquiry 50 (3):253 – 269.score: 3.0
    In Naming and Necessity, Kripke argues that intuitions about what is possible play a limited, but important, role in challenging philosophical theses, counting as evidence against them only if they cannot be reconstrued as intuitions about something else, compatible with the thesis in question. But he doesn't provide clear guidelines for determining when such intuitions have been successfully reconstrued, leading some to question their status as evidence for modal claims. In this paper I focus on some worries, articulated by Michael (...)
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  78. Janet Folina (1994). Poincaré's Conception of the Objectivity of Mathematics. Philosophia Mathematica 2 (3):202-227.score: 3.0
    There is a basic division in the philosophy of mathematics between realist, ‘platonist’ theories and anti-realist ‘constructivist’ theories. Platonism explains how mathematical truth is strongly objective, but it does this at the cost of invoking mind-independent mathematical objects. In contrast, constructivism avoids mind-independent mathematical objects, but the cost tends to be a weakened conception of mathematical truth. Neither alternative seems ideal. The purpose of this paper is to show that in the philosophical writings of Henri Poincaré there is a coherent (...)
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  79. Herbert S. Terrace & Janet Metcalfe (eds.) (2005). The Missing Link in Cognition: Origins of Self-Reflective Consciousness. Oxford University Press.score: 3.0
  80. Janet Borgerson (2010). Witnessing and Organization: Existential Phenomenological Reflections on Intersubjectivity. Philosophy Today 54 (1):78-87.score: 3.0
    This article draws in particular on existential-phenomenological notions of “witnessing.” Witnessing, often conceived in the context of testimony, obviously involves epistemological concerns, such as how we come to know through the experiences and reports of others. I shall argue, however, that witnessing as a mode of intersubjectivity offers understandings that involve questions about how people come to be. More specifically, I want to consider the positive potential of “witnessing” to disrupt intersubjective completeness or closure, particularly as this relates to work (...)
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  81. Janet Levin (2008). Taking Type-B Materialism Seriously. Mind and Language 23 (4):402-425.score: 3.0
    Abstract: Type-B materialism is the thesis that though phenomenal states are necessarily identical with physical states, phenomenal concepts have no a priori connections to physical or functional concepts. Though type-B materialists have invoked this conceptual independence to counter a number of well-known arguments against physicalism (e.g. the conceivability of zombies, the ignorance of Mary, the existence of an 'explanatory gap'), anti-physicalists have raised objections to this strategy. My aim here is to defend type-B materialism against these objections, by arguing that (...)
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  82. Janet Folina (1995). Putnam, Realism and Truth. Synthese 103 (2):141--52.score: 3.0
    There are several distinct components of the realist anti-realist debate. Since each side in the debate has its disadvantages, it is tempting to try to combine realist theses with anti-realist theses in order to obtain a better, more moderate position. Putnam attempts to hold a realist concept of truth, yet he rejects realist metaphysics and realist semantics. He calls this view internal realism. Truth is realist on this picture for it is objective, rather than merely intersubjective, and eternal. Putnam introduces (...)
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  83. Janet Levin (2011). Reconstruing Modal Intuitions. Croatian Journal of Philosophy 11 (1):97-112.score: 3.0
    In Naming and Necessity, Kripke argues that clearly conceived (or imagined) scenarios that seem to be counterexamples to a posteriori identity theses can indeed count as evidence against them—but only if, after reflection on our understanding of their constituent terms and the relevant empirical facts, we find that they cannot be acceptably reconstrued as intuitions about something else. This makes trouble for phenomenalphysical identity statements such as ‘pain is C-fiber stimulation’, since most agree that such statements cannot be so reconstrued—and (...)
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  84. Janet Donohoe (2002). Dwelling with Monuments. Philosophy and Geography 5 (2):235 – 242.score: 3.0
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  85. Janet Levin (1991). Analytic Functionalism and the Reduction of Phenomenal States. Philosophical Studies 61 (March):211-38.score: 3.0
  86. Aaron Smuts (2009). What is Interactivity? Journal of Aesthetic Education 43 (4):pp. 53-73.score: 3.0
    I argue that the term "interactive" should be considered a general-purpose term that indicates something about whatever it is applied to, whether that is art, artifact, or nature. I base my definition in the notion of "interacting with" something. First, I look for essential features of this relation, and then using these features, I develop a notion of interactivity that can help distinguish the interactive from non-interactive arts. Although I am skeptical of the benefits interactivity affords, interactive artworks are significant (...)
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  87. Janet Levin (2002). Is Conceptual Analysis Needed for the Reduction of Qualitative States? Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 64 (3):571-591.score: 3.0
    In this paper I discuss the claim (advanced in various ways by Joseph Levine, Frank Jackson and David Chalmers) that the successful reduction of qualitative to physical states requires some sort of intelligible connection between our qualitative and physical concepts, which in turn requires a conceptual analysis of our qualitative concepts in causal-functional terms. While I defend this claim against some of its recent critics, I ultimately dispute it, and propose a different way to get the requisite intelligible connection between (...)
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  88. Walter Sinnott-Armstrong (ed.) (2004). Pyrrhonian Skepticism. Oxford University Press.score: 3.0
    Throughout the history of philosophy, skepticism has posed one of the central challenges of epistemology. Opponents of skepticism--including externalists, contextualists, foundationalists, and coherentists--have focussed largely on one particular variety of skepticism, often called Cartesian or Academic skepticism, which makes the radical claim that nobody can know anything. However, this version of skepticism is something of a straw man, since virtually no philosopher endorses this radical skeptical claim. The only skeptical view that has been truly held--by Sextus, Montaigne, Hume, Wittgenstein, and, (...)
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  89. Janet Levin (2008). Assertion, Practical Reason, and Pragmatic Theories of Knowledge. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 76 (2):359–384.score: 3.0
    Defenders of pragmatic theories of knowledge (such as contextualism and sensitive invariantism) argue that these theories, unlike those that invoke a single standard for knowledge, comport with the intuitively compelling thesis that knowledge is the norm of assertion and practical reason. In this paper, I dispute this thesis, and argue that, therefore, the prospects for both “high standard” approach, and contend that if one abandons the thesis that knowledge is the norm of assertion and practical reason, the most serious arguments (...)
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  90. J. R. Lucas, The Huxley-Wilberforce Debate Revisited.score: 3.0
    According to the legend, Bishop Wilberforce (``Soapy Sam'') at a meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science in Oxford on Saturday, June 30th, 1860, turned to Thomas Huxley, and asked him ``Is it on your grandfather's or your grandmother's side that you claim descent from a monkey''; whereupon Huxley delivered a devastating rebuke, thereby establishing the primacy of scientific truth over ecclesiastical obscurantism. Although the legend is historically untrue in almost every detail, its persistence suggests that (...)
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  91. Janet Broughton & Ruth Mattern (1978). Reinterpreting Descartes on the Notion of the Union of Mind and Body. Journal of the History of Philosophy 16 (1):23-32.score: 3.0
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  92. Janet A. Kourany (2003). A Philosophy of Science for the Twenty‐First Century. Philosophy of Science 70 (1):1-14.score: 3.0
    Two major reasons feminists are concerned with science relate to science's social effects: that science can be a powerful ally in the struggle for equality for women; and that all too frequently science has been a generator and perpetuator of inequality. This concern with the social effects of science leads feminists to a different mode of appraising science from the purely epistemic one prized by most contemporary philosophers of science. The upshot, I suggest, is a new program for philosophy of (...)
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  93. Janet Levin, Functionalism. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.score: 3.0
    Functionalism in the philosophy of mind is the doctrine that what makes something a mental state of a particular type does not depend on its internal constitution, but rather on the way it functions, or the role it plays, in the system of which it is a part. This doctrine is rooted in Aristotle's conception of the soul, and has antecedents in Hobbes's conception of the mind as a “calculating machine”, but it has become fully articulated (and popularly endorsed) only (...)
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  94. Janet McCracken, William Martin & Bill Shaw (1998). Virtue Ethics and the Parable of the Sadhu. Journal of Business Ethics 17 (1):25-38.score: 3.0
    This article examines the various pedagogic models suggested by widely used texts and finds them to be predominately rule-based or rule directed. These approaches to the subject matter of business ethics are quite valuable ones, but we find them to leave no room for the study of the virtues. We intend to articulate our reasons for supporting a central if not exclusive role for virtue ethics.
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  95. Janet Radcliffe Richards (1997). Equality of Opportunity. Ratio 10 (3):253–279.score: 3.0
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  96. Janet Borgerson, Jonathan Schroeder, Martin Escudero Magnusson & Frank Magnusson (2009). Corporate Communication, Ethics, and Identity. Business Ethics - A European Review 18 (3):209-223.score: 3.0
    This article investigates conceptual and strategic relationships between corporate identity, organizational identity and ethics, utilizing the Benetton Corporation as an illustrative case study. Although much attention has been given to visual aspects of Benetton's renowned ethical brand building efforts, few studies have looked at how Benetton's employees, retail environments, and trade events express ethical aspects of their well-known corporate identity. Operational identity emerged as a useful complement to models of corporate identity. A multi-method case study, including interviews at retail outlets (...)
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  97. Janet A. Kourany (2008). Philosophy of Science: A Subject with a Great Future. Philosophy of Science 75 (5):767-778.score: 3.0
    Among philosophers of science nearly a century ago the dominant attitude was that (in Rudolph Carnap’s words) philosophy of science was “like science itself, neutral with respect to practical aims, whether they are moral aims for the individual, or political aims for a society.” The dominant attitude today is not much different: our aim is still to articulate scientific rationality, and our understanding of that rationality still excludes the moral and political. I contrast this with the growing entanglements within the (...)
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  98. Ronald N. Giere (2003). A New Program for Philosophy of Science? Philosophy of Science 70 (1):15-21.score: 3.0
    I contend that Janet Kourany's "A Philosophy of Science for the Twenty-First Century" contains three levels of projects: (1) a naturalistic project, (2) a critical project, and (3) a political project. The naturalistic project is already well established. The critical project is less valued and less established within the profession, but seems a worthy and achievable goal. The political project, I argue, takes one outside the professional pursuit of the philosophy of science. The critical project encompasses both the evaluation (...)
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  99. Janet Levin (2012). Imaginability, Possibility, and the Puzzle of Imaginative Resistance. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 41 (3):391-421.score: 3.0
    It is standard practice in philosophical inquiry to test a general thesis (of the form 'F iff G' or 'F only if G') by attempting to construct a counterexample to it. If we can imagine or conceive of1an F that isn't a G, then we have evidence that there could be an F that isn't a G — and thus evidence against the thesis in question; if not, then the thesis is (at least temporarily) secure. Or so it is standardly (...)
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  100. Janet P. Near & Marcia P. Miceli (1985). Organizational Dissidence: The Case of Whistle-Blowing. Journal of Business Ethics 4 (1):1 - 16.score: 3.0
    Research on whistle-blowing has been hampered by a lack of a sound theoretical base. In this paper, we draw upon existing theories of motivation and power relationships to propose a model of the whistle-blowing process. This model focuses on decisions made by organization members who believe they have evidence of organizational wrongdoing, and the reactions of organization authorities. Based on a review of the sparse empirical literature, we suggest variables that may affect both the members' decisions and the organization's responses.
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