Search results for 'L. Wei' (try it on Scholar)

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  1. J. Sugarman, A. Corneli, D. Donnell, T. Y. Liu, S. Rose, D. Celentano, B. Jackson, A. Aramrattana, L. Wei, Y. Shao, F. Liping, R. Baoling, B. Dye & D. Metzger (2011). Are There Adverse Consequences of Quizzing During Informed Consent for HIV Research? Journal of Medical Ethics 37 (11):693-697.score: 120.0
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  2. Sirkka Knuuttila (2008). L'Effet de Réel Revisited. Sign Systems Studies 36 (1):113-135.score: 12.0
    This article addresses Barthess development from a structuralist semiotician towards an affectively responding reader in terms ofpostrationalsubjectivity. In light of his whole oeuvre, Barthes (...)anticipates the understanding of emotion as an integral part of cognition presented in contemporary social neuroscience. To illustrate Barthess growing awareness of the importance of this epistemological move, the article starts from his textualreality effectas a critical vehicle of realist representation. It then shifts to his attempt at conceptualising an affective reading which resists the universalising idea of one ideologically determined signified. Barthess progress towards embracing the actual readers embodied self-feeling is prompted by two conceptual milestones: the obtuse meaning found incinematic stills, and the experience of punctum felt in photos. In light of his lectures in the Collège de France, Barthes substitutes the Husserlian disembodied method of introspection with the Chinese wu-wei as a reading practice. As a result, his Zen-Buddhist concentration on bodily feelings elicited by visual/verbal images becomes a method capable of creating a fruitful link between language and wordless cognition. Finally, the article proposes an idea of theembodied reality effectby reading affectively two similar scenes interpreted by the early and late Barthes himself. (shrink)
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  3. F. Y. Cheung Millissa, Allan Wei-Ping Wu, May K. K. Chan & M. L. Wong (forthcoming). SupervisorSubordinate Guanxi and Employee Work Outcomes: The Mediating Role of Job Satisfaction. Journal of Business Ethics.score: 12.0
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  4. Millissa F. Y. Cheung, Wei-Ping Wu, Allan K. K. Chan & May M. L. Wong (forthcoming). SupervisorSubordinate Guanxi and Employee Work Outcomes: The Mediating Role of Job Satisfaction. Journal of Business Ethics.score: 12.0
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  5. James D. Sellmann (1999). The Origin and Role of the State According to the Li Shi Chunqiu. Asian Philosophy 9 (3):193 – 218.score: 12.0
    To study the L shi chunqiu (or L -shih ch'un-ch'iu. Master L 's Spring and Autumn Annals is to enter into the tumultuous but progressive (...)
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  6. Daniel Wei L. Wang & Octavio Luiz Motta Ferraz (2012). Pharmaceutical Companies Vs. the State: Who Is Responsible for Post-Trial Provision of Drugs in Brazil? Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (2):188-196.score: 12.0
    This paper discusses the post-trial access to drugs for patients who participated in clinical trials in Brazil. The ethical guidance for clinical trials in Brazil is (...)arguably one of the clearest in the world in attributing to research sponsors the responsibility for providing post-trial drugs to patients who participated in their experiments. The Federal Constitution recognizes health as a fundamental right to be fulfilled by the State. Based on the Brazilian constitution and on the National Health Council resolutions, courts have been accepting patients' claims and ordering the State and the pharmaceutical companies to provide these patients with the tested treatment in the quantity and duration they need it. This generous interpretation of the duties of the pharmaceutical companies and the State makes the Brazilian model for post-trial access unique when compared to the experience of other countries and thus should be followed with attention by future research in order to assess its consequences for patients, research sponsors, and the public health system. (shrink)
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  7. Howard L. Parsons (1975). Remarks on Charles Wei-Hsun Fu, 'Confucianism, Marxism-Leninism and Mao: A Critical Study'. Journal of Chinese Philosophy 2 (4):429-445.score: 12.0