Results for 'Maggie Anderson Buckingham'

996 found
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  1.  6
    Drops of gold.Maggie Anderson Buckingham - 1995 - Detroit, MI: Write To Teach Publishers. Edited by Jacquelyn S. Caffey & Gwendolyn Sweetner Watley.
  2.  60
    Assessing miserly information processing: An expansion of the Cognitive Reflection Test.Maggie E. Toplak, Richard F. West & Keith E. Stanovich - 2014 - Thinking and Reasoning 20 (2):147-168.
    The Cognitive Reflection Test (CRT; Frederick, 2005) is designed to measure the tendency to override a prepotent response alternative that is incorrect and to engage in further reflection that leads to the correct response. It is a prime measure of the miserly information processing posited by most dual process theories. The original three-item test may be becoming known to potential participants, however. We examined a four-item version that could serve as a substitute for the original. Our data show that it (...)
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  3.  15
    THE DISAVOWAL OF THE FEMALE “KNOWER”: reading literature in the light of pamela sue anderson’s project on vulnerability.Dorota Filipczak - 2020 - Angelaki 25 (1-2):156-164.
    Pamela Sue Anderson’s project about vulnerability and the silencing of the female speaker began with her realization of the female philosopher’s position within academia. Exposing the disavowal of the female “knower,” Anderson lays bare the mechanisms of excluding women from intellectual, artistic and religious discourse. Moving beyond the negative configuration of vulnerability associated with an openness to violence, Anderson refigures it as an openness to affection. The denial of thus refigured vulnerability has led to the literal and (...)
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  4.  14
    Using fMRI to Test Models of Complex Cognition.John R. Anderson, Cameron S. Carter, Jon M. Fincham, Yulin Qin, Susan M. Ravizza & Miriam Rosenberg-Lee - 2008 - Cognitive Science 32 (8):1323-1348.
    This article investigates the potential of fMRI to test assumptions about different components in models of complex cognitive tasks. If the components of a model can be associated with specific brain regions, one can make predictions for the temporal course of the BOLD response in these regions. An event‐locked procedure is described for dealing with temporal variability and bringing model runs and individual data trials into alignment. Statistical methods for testing the model are described that deal with the scan‐to‐scan correlations (...)
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  5.  20
    Levinas, storytelling and anti-storytelling.Will Buckingham - 2013 - New York: Bloomsbury Academic, An Imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.
    Levinas, Storytelling and Anti-Storytelling explores the troubling nature of storytelling through a reading of the work of Emmanuel Levinas. Levinas is a thinker who has a complex relationship with literature and with storytelling.
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  6. A Foucauldian discourse analysis of media reporting on the nurse‐as‐hero during COVID‐19.Maggie Boulton, Anna Garnett & Fiona Webster - forthcoming - Nursing Inquiry.
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  7. Hermeneutic Labor: The Gendered Burden of Interpretation in Intimate Relationships Between Women and Men.Ellie Anderson - 2023 - Hypatia 38 (1):177-197.
    In recent years, feminist scholarship on emotional labor has proliferated. I identify a related but distinct form of care labor, hermeneutic labor. Hermeneutic labor is the burdensome activity of: understanding and coherently expressing one’s own feelings, desires, intentions, and movitations; discerning those of others; and inventing solutions for relational issues arising from interpersonal tensions. I argue that hermeneutic labor disproportionately falls on women’s shoulders in heteropatriachal societies, especially in intimate relationships between women and men. I also suggest that some of (...)
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  8. Classification or wonder: Coding as an analytic practice in qualitative research.Maggie MacLure - 2013 - In Rebecca Coleman & Jessica Ringrose (eds.), Deleuze and research methodologies. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
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  9.  33
    Motherhood and Resilience among Rwandan Genocide‐Rape Survivors.Maggie Zraly, Sarah E. Rubin & Donatilla Mukamana - 2013 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 41 (4):411-439.
  10.  40
    Role Asymmetry and Code Transmission in Signaling Games: An Experimental and Computational Investigation.Maggie Moreno & Giosuè Baggio - 2015 - Cognitive Science 39 (5):918-943.
    In signaling games, a sender has private access to a state of affairs and uses a signal to inform a receiver about that state. If no common association of signals and states is initially available, sender and receiver must coordinate to develop one. How do players divide coordination labor? We show experimentally that, if players switch roles at each communication round, coordination labor is shared. However, in games with fixed roles, coordination labor is divided: Receivers adjust their mappings more frequently, (...)
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  11.  6
    On freedom: four songs of care and constraint.Maggie Nelson - 2021 - Minneapolis, Minnesota: Graywolf Press.
    So often deployed as a jingoistic, even menacing rallying cry, or limited by a focus on passing moments of liberation, the rhetoric of freedom both rouses and repels. Does it remain key to autonomy, justice, and well-being, or is freedom's long star turn coming to a close? Does a continued obsession with it enliven and emancipate, or reflect a deepening nihilism (or both)? On Freedom examines such questions by tracing the concept's complexities in four realms: art, sex, drugs, and climate. (...)
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  12.  13
    The slow professor: challenging the culture of speed in the academy.Maggie Berg - 2016 - Toronto: University of Toronto Press. Edited by Barbara Karolina Seeber.
    In The Slow Professor, Maggie Berg and Barbara K. Seeber discuss how adopting the principles of the Slow movement in academic life can counter the erosion of humanistic education.
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  13.  8
    ‘I’m Gonna Speak for Me’ I-Poems and the Situated Knowledges of Sex Workers.Maggie Buckridge, Jules Lowman & Chrysanthi S. Leon - 2022 - Ethics and Social Welfare 16 (2):214-218.
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  14. Hijacked: How Neoliberalism Turned the Work Ethic against Workers and How Workers Can Take It Back.Elizabeth Anderson - 2023 - Cambridge University Press.
    What is the work ethic? Does it justify policies that promote the wealth and power of the One Percent at workers' expense? Or does it advance policies that promote workers' dignity and standing? Hijacked explores how the history of political economy has been a contest between these two ideas about whom the work ethic is supposed to serve. Today's neoliberal ideology deploys the work ethic on behalf of the One Percent. However, workers and their advocates have long used the work (...)
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  15. A rational analysis of production system architecture.Anderson Jr & N. Kushmerick - 1990 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 28 (6):509-509.
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  16.  48
    Validation of a perceptions of care adjective checklist.Maggie Redshaw & Colin R. Martin - 2009 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 15 (2):281-288.
  17. Feminist Epistemology: An Interpretation and a Defense.Elizabeth Anderson - 1995 - Hypatia 10 (3):50 - 84.
    Feminist epistemology has often been understood as the study of feminine "ways of knowing." But feminist epistemology is better understood as the branch of naturalized, social epistemology that studies the various influences of norms and conceptions of gender and gendered interests and experiences on the production of knowledge. This understanding avoids dubious claims about feminine cognitive differences and enables feminist research in various disciplines to pose deep internal critiques of mainstream research.
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  18.  76
    Locke on the knowledge of material things.Robert Fendel Anderson - 1965 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 3 (2):205-215.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Locke on the Knowledge of Material Things ROBERT FENDEL ANDERSON IT IS nOT John Locke's intention, in his Essay Concerning Human Understanding, to deal with matter and material substance nor with how these are able to affect the mind. These are considerations for natural philosophy; Locke counts himself rather among the moral philosophers. He does not propose, therefore, to meddle with the physical aspects of the mind, nor (...)
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  19.  36
    Cognitive explanations and cognitive ethology.Rita E. Anderson - 1986 - In William Bechtel (ed.), Integrating Scientific Disciplines. University of Chicago Press. pp. 323--336.
  20. Autonomy, Vulnerability, Recognition, and Justice.Joel Anderson & Axel Honneth - 2005 - In John Christman & Joel Anderson (eds.), Autonomy and the Challenges to Liberalism: New Essays. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 127-149.
    One of liberalism’s core commitments is to safeguarding individuals’ autonomy. And a central aspect of liberal social justice is the commitment to protecting the vulnerable. Taken together, and combined with an understanding of autonomy as an acquired set of capacities to lead one’s own life, these commitments suggest that liberal societies should be especially concerned to address vulnerabilities of individuals regarding the development and maintenance of their autonomy. In this chapter, we develop an account of what it would mean for (...)
     
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  21.  22
    Violence and Care: Fanon and the Ethics of Care on Harm, Trauma, and Repair.Maggie FitzGerald - 2022 - Philosophies 7 (3):64.
    According to Frantz Fanon, the psychological and social-political are deeply intertwined in the colonial context. Psychologically, the colonizers perceive the colonized as inferior and the colonized internalize this in an inferiority complex. This psychological reality is co-constitutive of and by material relations of power—the imaginary of inferiority both creates and is created by colonial relations of power. It is also in this context that violence takes on significant political import: violence deployed by the colonized to rebel against these colonial relations (...)
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  22.  10
    Capital funding and the private finance initiative: panacea or poison chalice?Maggie Deacon - 1997 - Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education 1 (4):133-138.
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  23.  18
    SNAP, campus food insecurity, and the politics of deservingness.Maggie Dickinson - 2022 - Agriculture and Human Values 39 (2):605-616.
    Many low-income college students are barred from food assistance for no reason other than the fact that they are pursuing a college education. Based on 22 interviews that capture the experiences of food insecure college students as they attempt to navigate SNAP, this study shows how low enrollment in the program and food insecurity are the predictable outcomes of policy decisions intended to restrict access to both free public higher education and public assistance in the 1980’s and 1990’s and were (...)
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  24.  15
    The Role of the Face Itself in the Face Effect: Sensitivity, Expressiveness, and Anticipated Feedback in Individual Compliance.Maggie Wenjing Liu, Qichao Zhu & Yige Yuan - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  25.  2
    Manières de penser, manières d'agir en éducation et en formation.Bruno Maggi (ed.) - 2000 - Paris: Presses universitaires de France.
    Penser aux manières de penser : voici l'enjeu de cet ouvrage. En éducation et en formation, comme dans bien d'autres domaines concernant les sciences humaines et sociales, on admet qu'il existe différentes visions d'ensemble, différentes représentations du sujet d'étude. Le propos de cet ouvrage est d'amorcer un nouvel exercice, afin de s'interroger sur l'utilité de mettre en perspective les manières de penser et les manières d'agir. Des manières de penser sont sous-jacentes à toute forme d'éducation et de formation. Elles influencent (...)
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  26.  13
    Reimagining Government with the Ethics of Care: A Department of Care.Maggie FitzGerald - 2020 - Ethics and Social Welfare 14 (3):248-265.
    In her 2015 article, Helena Olofsdotter Stensöta notes that ‘the ethics of care is often used as a lens to dissect the current arrangement of care provision (or rather non-care provision) in polici...
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  27.  10
    Care and the pluriverse: rethinking global ethics.Maggie FitzGerald - 2022 - Bristol: Bristol University Press.
    A perennial debate in the field of global ethics revolves around the possibility of a universalist ethics as well as arguments over the nature, and significance, of difference for moral deliberation. Decolonial literature, in particular, increasingly signifies a pluriverse – one with radical ontological and epistemological differences. This book examines the concept of the pluriverse alongside global ethics and the ethics of care in order to contemplate new ethical horizons for engaging across difference. Offering a challenge to the current state (...)
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  28.  2
    Book Review: Beyond Mothering Earth: Ecological Citizenship and the Politics of Care. [REVIEW]Susan Buckingham - 2010 - Feminist Review 95 (1):e1-e3.
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  29.  23
    Anatomically detailed dolls do not facilitate preschoolers' reports of a pediatric examination involving genital touching.Maggie Bruck, Stephen J. Ceci, Emmett Francouer & Ashley Renick - 1995 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 1 (2):95.
  30.  43
    On Reading Ayer at 7.00 am.Maggie Adams - 2010 - Philosophy Now 78:45-45.
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  31. Potential cosmopolitan sensibilities in feminised and mediated remembrance.Maggie Andrews - 2015 - In Aybige Yilmaz (ed.), Media and cosmopolitanism. New York: Peter Lang.
     
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  32.  9
    Towns and markets in a regional administrative landscape: the development of the late Saxon urban network in East Anglia.Maggie Bailey - 1997 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 79 (3):221-250.
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  33. Index Thomisticus y la semántica lingüística.María Celestina Donadío Maggi de Gandolfi - 1993 - Analogía Filosófica 7 (1):199-204.
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  34. La nueva moral.Mc Donadio Maggi de Gandolfi - 1998 - Sapientia 53 (203):57-71.
     
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  35. Razón, voluntad y praxis.Maria Celestina Donadio Maggi de Gandolfi - 2000 - Sapientia 55 (208):503-515.
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  36.  20
    Gender and the Italian Stage: From the Renaissance to the Present Day.Maggie Günsberg - 1997 - Cambridge University Press.
    Maggie Günsberg explores the intersection between gender portrayal and other social categories of class, age and the family in the Italian theatre from the Renaissance to the present day. She examines the developing relationship between patriarchal strategies and the formal properties of the dramatic genre such as plot, comedy and realism. She also considers conventions specific to drama in performance, including images of both femininity and masculinity. An interdisciplinary approach, drawing on semiotics, psychoanalysis, philosophy, theories of spectatorship and dramatic (...)
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  37. Strengthening Indigenous Research Culture.Maggie Walter, John Maynard, Jill Milroy & Martin Nakata - 2008 - Nexus 20 (3):8.
     
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  38.  34
    Reading and Comprehension: a longitudinal study of ex‐Reading Recovery students.Maggie Moore & Barrie Wade - 1998 - Educational Studies 24 (2):195-203.
    Summary The paper reports the results of a longitudinal case study conducted in Australia and New Zealand. The study compares the reading and comprehension age of children in their fifth and sixth years in school. Reading and comprehension ages of 121 children who had Reading Recovery intervention at age 6 were compared with those of a Comparison group of 121 children, drawn from the same classes who, at age 6 years, had been better performers in literacy. Reading and comprehension assessment (...)
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  39.  17
    Ageing, technology and the home: A critical project.Maggie Mort, Celia Roberts & Christine Milligan - 2009 - Alter - European Journal of Disability Research / Revue Européenne de Recherche Sur le Handicap 3 (2):85-89.
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  40.  10
    Vieillissement, technologies et domicile : un projet critique.Maggie Mort, Celia Roberts & Christine Milligan - 2009 - Alter - European Journal of Disability Research / Revue Européenne de Recherche Sur le Handicap 3 (2):90-95.
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  41.  15
    What We Didn't Know.Maggie Rogers - 2017 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 7 (2):130-132.
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  42.  18
    A History of Silence: From the Renaissance to the Present Day by Alain Corbin.Maggie Ross - 2021 - Common Knowledge 27 (1):126-126.
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  43.  21
    The accuracy of mothers' memories of conversations with their preschool children.Maggie Bruck, Stephen J. Ceci & Emmett Francoeur - 1999 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 5 (1):89.
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  44.  16
    Care and Critique.Maggie Ann Labinski - 2018 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 23 (1):59-84.
    This paper explores the moments of overlap between Augustine’s pedagogical approach in De magistro and feminist theories of care. I argue that Augustine not only offers a useful model for those who wish to reclaim the centrality of students within education. He also encourages us to critique the narrative that women are more ‘naturally’ suited for caring relationships. I conclude by outlining the benefits of such critique. What do we gain when we allow a diversity of gendered experiences to inform (...)
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  45.  7
    Pedagogical Pleasures: Augustine in the Feminist Classroom.Maggie A. Labinski - 2017 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 51 (1):281-297.
    Many feminist philosophers of education have argued that the teacher's pleasure plays an important role in the classroom. However, accessing such pleasure is often easier said than done. Given our current academic climate, how might teachers develop pedagogical practices that cultivate these delights? This article investigates the (rather surprising) response to this question offered in Augustine's De catechizandis rudibus. Despite his reputation as a pleasure-hater, Augustine spends the majority of his text defending the delights of teaching. In particular, Augustine argues (...)
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  46.  14
    Body-based views of the world.Maggie Shiffrar - 2006 - In Günther Knoblich, Ian M. Thornton, Marc Grosjean & Maggie Shiffrar (eds.), Human Body Perception From the Inside Out. Oxford University Press. pp. 135--146.
  47.  43
    The visual perception of dynamic body language.Maggie Shiffrar - 2008 - In Ipke Wachsmuth, Manuela Lenzen & Günther Knoblich (eds.), Embodied Communication in Humans and Machines. Oxford University Press. pp. 95.
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  48.  33
    Space dust: Your tax dollars at work.Koerth-Baker Maggie - unknown
    Basic research is often weird, and it's often boring. It's the years spent mapping the neurons of zebra fish, so that future scientists can have a more detailed biological model to work with. It's the chemical analysis that has to happen, so that two decades from now somebody else can discover a new cancer-fighting drug. Basic research is about curiosity, and knowledge for knowledge's sake. By it's very nature, basic research relies on public funding. But by it's very nature, it's (...)
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  49. An epistemological-ethical approach to philosophy of religion: Learning to listen.Pamela Sue Anderson - 2004 - In Pamela Sue Anderson & Beverley Clack (eds.), Feminist philosophy of religion: critical readings. New York: Routledge.
  50. A penny in time [Book Review].Maggie Catterall - 2013 - Agora (History Teachers' Association of Victoria) 48 (2):73.
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