Results for 'Kathryn Brown'

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  1.  23
    Seeing is Reasoning.Kathryn Mann & James Robert Brown - 2007 - Metascience 16 (1):131-135.
  2.  48
    The Aesthetics of Presence: Looking at Degas's Bathers.Kathryn Brown - 2010 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 68 (4):331-341.
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  3. Integrating laptops into campus learning: Theoretical, administrative and instructional fields of play.Daniel Anderson, Robin Seaton Brown, Todd Taylor & Kathryn Wymer - 2002 - Kairos (Université de Toulouse-Le Mirail. Faculté de philosophie) 7 (1).
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  4.  8
    Berys Gaut , A Philosophy of Cinematic Art . Reviewed by.Kathryn Brown - 2012 - Philosophy in Review 32 (5):381-383.
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  5.  20
    Kendall L. Walton, Marvelous Images: On Values and the Arts Reviewed by.Kathryn Brown - 2010 - Philosophy in Review 30 (1):68-70.
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  6.  14
    Korsmeyer, Carolyn. Things: In Touch with the Past. Oxford University Press, 2019, 232 pp., $49.95 cloth. [REVIEW]Kathryn Brown - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (1):109-111.
    The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Volume 78, Issue 1, Page 109-111, Winter 2020.
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  7.  10
    Korsmeyer, Carolyn. Things: In Touch with the Past. Oxford University Press, 2019, 232 pp., $49.95 cloth. [REVIEW]Kathryn Brown - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (1):109-111.
    The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Volume 78, Issue 1, Page 109-111, Winter 2020.
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  8.  6
    Korsmeyer, Carolyn. Things: In Touch with the Past. Oxford University Press, 2019, 232 pp., $49.95 cloth. [REVIEW]Kathryn Brown - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (1):109-111.
    The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Volume 78, Issue 1, Page 109-111, Winter 2020.
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  9.  4
    Korsmeyer, Carolyn. Things: In Touch with the Past. Oxford University Press, 2019, 232 pp., $49.95 cloth. [REVIEW]Kathryn Brown - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (1):109-111.
    The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Volume 78, Issue 1, Page 109-111, Winter 2020.
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  10.  8
    Korsmeyer, Carolyn. Things: In Touch with the Past. Oxford University Press, 2019, 232 pp., $49.95 cloth. [REVIEW]Kathryn Brown - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (1):109-111.
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  11. Interdisciplinarity and insularity in the diffusion of knowledge: an analysis of disciplinary boundaries between philosophy of science and the sciences.John McLevey, Alexander V. Graham, Reid McIlroy-Young, Pierson Browne & Kathryn Plaisance - 2018 - Scientometrics 1 (117):331-349.
    Two fundamentally different perspectives on knowledge diffusion dominate debates about academic disciplines. On the one hand, critics of disciplinary research and education have argued that disciplines are isolated silos, within which specialists pursue inward-looking and increasingly narrow research agendas. On the other hand, critics of the silo argument have demonstrated that researchers constantly import and export ideas across disciplinary boundaries. These perspectives have different implications for how knowledge diffuses, how intellectuals gain and lose status within their disciplines, and how intellectual (...)
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  12.  43
    The IARC Monographs: Updated procedures for modern and transparent evidence synthesis in cancer hazard identification.Jonathan M. Samet, Weihsueh A. Chiu, Vincent Cogliano, Jennifer Jinot, David Kriebel, Ruth M. Lunn, Frederick A. Beland, Lisa Bero, Patience Browne, Lin Fritschi, Jun Kanno, Dirk W. Lachenmeier, Qing Lan, Gérard Lasfargues, Frank Le Curieux, Susan Peters, Pamela Shubat, Hideko Sone, Mary C. White, Jon Williamson, Marianna Yakubovskaya, Jack Siemiatycki, Paul A. White, Kathryn Z. Guyton, Mary K. Schubauer-Berigan, Amy L. Hall, Yann Grosse, Véronique Bouvard, Lamia Benbrahim-Tallaa, Fatiha El Ghissassi, Béatrice Lauby-Secretan, Bruce Armstrong, Rodolfo Saracci, Jiri Zavadil, Kurt Straif & Christopher P. Wild - unknown
    The Monographs produced by the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) apply rigorous procedures for the scientific review and evaluation of carcinogenic hazards by independent experts. The Preamble to the IARC Monographs, which outlines these procedures, was updated in 2019, following recommendations of a 2018 expert Advisory Group. This article presents the key features of the updated Preamble, a major milestone that will enable IARC to take advantage of recent scientific and procedural advances made during the 12 years since (...)
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  13.  34
    A recurrent 16p12.1 microdeletion supports a two-hit model for severe developmental delay.Santhosh Girirajan, Jill A. Rosenfeld, Gregory M. Cooper, Francesca Antonacci, Priscillia Siswara, Andy Itsara, Laura Vives, Tom Walsh, Shane E. McCarthy, Carl Baker, Heather C. Mefford, Jeffrey M. Kidd, Sharon R. Browning, Brian L. Browning, Diane E. Dickel, Deborah L. Levy, Blake C. Ballif, Kathryn Platky, Darren M. Farber, Gordon C. Gowans, Jessica J. Wetherbee, Alexander Asamoah, David D. Weaver, Paul R. Mark, Jennifer Dickerson, Bhuwan P. Garg, Sara A. Ellingwood, Rosemarie Smith, Valerie C. Banks, Wendy Smith, Marie T. McDonald, Joe J. Hoo, Beatrice N. French, Cindy Hudson, John P. Johnson, Jillian R. Ozmore, John B. Moeschler, Urvashi Surti, Luis F. Escobar, Dima El-Khechen, Jerome L. Gorski, Jennifer Kussmann, Bonnie Salbert, Yves Lacassie, Alisha Biser, Donna M. McDonald-McGinn, Elaine H. Zackai, Matthew A. Deardorff, Tamim H. Shaikh, Eric Haan, Kathryn L. Friend, Marco Fichera, Corrado Romano, Jozef Gécz, Lynn E. DeLisi, Jonathan Sebat, Mary-Claire King, Lisa G. Shaffer & Eic - unknown
    We report the identification of a recurrent, 520-kb 16p12.1 microdeletion associated with childhood developmental delay. The microdeletion was detected in 20 of 11,873 cases compared with 2 of 8,540 controls and replicated in a second series of 22 of 9,254 cases compared with 6 of 6,299 controls. Most deletions were inherited, with carrier parents likely to manifest neuropsychiatric phenotypes compared to non-carrier parents. Probands were more likely to carry an additional large copy-number variant when compared to matched controls. The clinical (...)
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  14.  18
    Reflections on Responsibility and the Prospect of a Long Life.Kathryn MacKay - 2019 - Public Health Ethics 12 (2):130-132.
    In this commentary on Brown and colleagues’ paper, entitled ‘Against Moral Responsibilisation of Health: Prudential Responsibility and Health Promotion’, I highlight the tension between individual responsibility—even when this is prudential and not moral—and systemic factors that impact people's health. Brown and colleagues and I agree that individuals are frequently held inappropriately responsible for health-related behaviours or diseases that have become associated with the so-called ‘lifestyle’ diseases. We further agree that health is an instrumental value to people, allowing them (...)
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  15.  27
    Recovering Our Sense of Humor: New Directions in Feminist Humor Studies.Kathryn Kein - 2015 - Feminist Studies 41 (3):671-681.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 41, no. 3. © 2015 by Kathryn Kein 671 Kathryn Kein Recovering Our Sense of Humor: New Directions in Feminist Humor Studies At the 2014 annual meeting of the American Studies Association (ASA), the Humor Studies Caucus held a panel titled “Female Comedians and the Critical Power of Laughter.” After listening to presentations on Gilda Radner, Lily Tomlin, and Black women comedians’ 1960s comedy albums, (...)
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  16.  37
    A Pregnant Pause: Pregnancy, Miscarriage, and Suspended Time.Victoria Browne - 2022 - Hypatia 37 (2):447-468.
    This article takes the rupturing of normative, linear, reproductive time that occurs in the event of miscarriage as a potentially generative philosophical moment—a catalyst to rethink pregnancy aside from the expectation of child-production. Pregnant time is usually imagined as a linear passage toward birth. Accordingly, the one who “miscarries” appears as suspended within an arrested journey that never arrived at its destination, or indeed, as ejected from pregnant time altogether. But here I propose to rethink both pregnancy and miscarriage through (...)
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  17.  11
    Laws of form.George Spencer-Brown - 1969 - New York,: Julian Press.
  18.  63
    Rigour and Proof.Oliver Tatton-Brown - 2023 - Review of Symbolic Logic 16 (2):480-508.
    This paper puts forward a new account of rigorous mathematical proof and its epistemology. One novel feature is a focus on how the skill of reading and writing valid proofs is learnt, as a way of understanding what validity itself amounts to. The account is used to address two current questions in the literature: that of how mathematicians are so good at resolving disputes about validity, and that of whether rigorous proofs are necessarily formalizable.
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  19. Justice, care, and gender: The Kohlberg-Gilligan debate revisited.Owen Flanagan & Kathryn Jackson - 1987 - Ethics 97 (3):622-637.
  20.  6
    God in a single vision: integrating philosophy and theology.David Brown - 2016 - New York: Routledge. Edited by Christopher R. Brewer.
    In the ancient conversation between Western philosophy and Christian theology, powerful contemporary voices are arguing for monologue rather than dialogue. Instead of these two disciplines learning from and mutually informing each other, both philosophers and theologians are increasingly disconnected from, and thus unable to hear, what the other is saying, especially in Anglo-American scholarship. Some Christian philosophers are now found claiming methodological authority over doctrine, while some Christian theologians even deny that philosophy has its own integrity as a separate discipline. (...)
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  21.  27
    Justifying Investigator/Clinician Consent When The Physician-Patient Relationship Can Support Better Research Decision-Making.Benjamin S. Wilfond & Kathryn M. Porter - 2019 - American Journal of Bioethics 19 (4):26-28.
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  22.  54
    The Case for Perfection.W. Miller Brown - 2009 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 36 (2):127-139.
  23.  7
    Other things.Bill Brown - 2015 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    From the pencil to the puppet to the drone—the humanities and the social sciences continue to ride a wave of interest in material culture and the world of things. How should we understand the force and figure of that wave as it shapes different disciplines? Other Things explores this question by considering a wide assortment of objects—from beach glass to cell phones, sneakers to skyscrapers—that have fascinated a range of writers and artists, including Virginia Woolf, Man Ray, Spike Lee, and (...)
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  24.  41
    Inalienable rights.Stuart M. Brown - 1955 - Philosophical Review 64 (2):192-211.
  25. Exclusion endures: How compatibilism allows dualists to bypass the causal closure argument.Christopher Devlin Brown - 2019 - Analysis 79 (4):587-594.
    Jaegwon Kim maintains that his ‘exclusion argument’ forces us to accept reductive physicalism, which identifies mental and other high-level properties of the world with lower-level properties, over nonreductive physicalism, which avoids such identifications. According to Kim, the exclusion argument shows that any nonreductive view leads to either epiphenomenalism or unacceptable overdetermination of physical effects by physical causes. However, a popular nonreductive physicalist approach called ‘compatibilism’ aims to show that physicalism need not collapse high-level properties into lower-level physical. Compatibilism attempts to (...)
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  26. Externalism and the Fregean tradition.Jessica Brown - 2003 - In Alex Barber (ed.), Epistemology of language. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 431--458.
  27.  13
    An intersubjective model of agency for game theory.Vivienne Brown - 2020 - Economics and Philosophy 36 (3):355-382.
    This paper proposes a new interpretation of non-cooperative games that shows why the unilateralism of best-reply reasoning fails to capture the mutuality of strategic interdependence. Drawing on an intersubjective approach to theorizing individual agency in shared context, including a non-individualistic model of common belief without infinite regress, the paper develops a general model of a 2 × 2 simultaneous one-shot non-cooperative game and applies it to games including Hi-Lo, Stag Hunt, Prisoners’ Dilemma, Chicken, BoS and Matching Pennies. Results include High (...)
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  28.  8
    Believing thinking, bounded theology: the theological methodology of Emil Brunner.Cynthia Bennett Brown - 2015 - Eugene, Oregon: Pickwick Publications.
    If theology at its best is knowing God and all things in the light of his reality, what is the nature of that knowledge? Of what can we be sure? Are there boundaries we must respect in pursuit of such understanding? To what extent can we know God, and what is the impact of that knowing? Little attention has been given in recent scholarship to the work of Emil Brunner (1889-1966), a Swiss pastor, professor, missionary, and theologian whose name is (...)
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  29. Paternalism, Drugs, and the Nature of Sports.W. M. Brown - 2007 - In William John Morgan (ed.), Ethics in Sport. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics.
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  30.  77
    Nomos XLVIII: Toleration and Its Limits.Melissa Williams & Jeremy Waldron (eds.) - 2008 - NYU Press.
    Toleration has a rich tradition in Western political philosophy. It is, after all, one of the defining topics of political philosophy—historically pivotal in the development of modern liberalism, prominent in the writings of such canonical figures as John Locke and John Stuart Mill, and central to our understanding of the idea of a society in which individuals have the right to live their own lives by their own values, left alone by the state so long as they respect the similar (...)
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  31. Civil disobedience.Stuart M. Brown - 1961 - Journal of Philosophy 58 (22):669-681.
  32. The Case for Perfection.W. Miller Brown - 2007 - In William John Morgan (ed.), Ethics in Sport. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics.
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  33.  10
    Doing arithmetic without diagrams.F. Malloy Brown - 1977 - Artificial Intelligence 8 (2):175-200.
  34.  17
    What States Can Do to Address Out-of-Network Air Ambulance Bills.Erin C. Fuse Brown, Alex McDonald & Ngan T. Nguyen - 2020 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 48 (3):462-473.
    Out-of-network air ambulance bills are a pernicious and financially devastating type of surprise medical bill. Courts have broadly interpreted the Airline Deregulation Act to preempt most state attempts to regulate air ambulance billing abuses, so a federal solution is ultimately needed. However, in the absence of a federal fix, states have experimented with a variety of approaches that may survive preemption and provide some protections for their citizens.
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  35. Max van Manen and Pedagogical Human Science Research.Robert K. Brown - 2016 - In William F. Pinar & William M. Reynolds (eds.), Understanding curriculum as phenomenological and deconstructed text. Kingston, NY: Educators International Press.
     
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  36.  8
    The Grotesque Cost of Militarism’s Syndemics.Tom H. Hastings - 2019 - The Acorn 19 (2):203-206.
    “Public health is directly shaped by war, conflict, and capitalism, yet exploring the connections between these processes remains neglected in scholarship and policymaking arenas.” This chapter five lede by social work professors Scott Harding and Kathryn Libal could serve as the epigraph to the entire volume. War and Health is edited by two prominent researchers from Brown University’s Watson Institute Costs of War Project, which seeks a meaningful aggregation of the actual cost of wars, especially those of the (...)
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  37.  8
    Constrained Adolescent Autonomy for Healthcare Should Include Participation in Survey Research.Amy E. Caruso Brown - 2020 - American Journal of Bioethics 20 (10):85-87.
    Volume 20, Issue 10, October 2020, Page 85-87.
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  38.  18
    Beyond Physics. By Sir Oliver Lodge. (London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd. 1930. Pp. 172. Price 5s. net.).C. B. Brown - 1930 - Philosophy 5 (20):624-.
  39. Francis Hutcheson in Dublin, 1719–1730: the Crucible of his Thought.Michael Brown - 2002
     
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  40.  19
    The ontological theorem.Charles D. Brown - 1978 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 19 (4):591-592.
  41.  61
    The tetrahedron as an archetype for the concept of change in the I Ching.Chappell Brown - 1982 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 9 (2):159-168.
  42.  17
    C. I. Lewis's esthetics.Stuart M. Brown - 1950 - Journal of Philosophy 47 (6):141-150.
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  43.  39
    Duty and the production of good.Stuart M. Brown - 1952 - Philosophical Review 61 (3):299-311.
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  44.  38
    The meeting of east and west.Stuart M. Brown - 1947 - Philosophical Review 56 (1):76-81.
  45.  9
    The Quest of the Good Life: An Essay towards a Philosophy of Religion.F. E. Brown - 1929 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 7 (3):177.
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  46. Inside is out : an epistemology of surfaces and substances.Paul Graves-Brown - 2013 - In Alfredo González Ruibal (ed.), Reclaiming archaeology: beyond the tropes of modernity. N.Y.: Routledge.
     
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  47.  20
    Quantum computation and the untenability of a “No fundamental mentality” constraint on physicalism.Christopher Devlin Brown - 2022 - Synthese 201 (1):1-18.
    Though there is yet no consensus on the right way to understand ‘physicalism’, most philosophers agree that, regardless of whatever else is required, physicalism cannot be true if there exists fundamental mentality. I will follow Jessica Wilson (Philosophical Studies 131:61–99, 2006) in calling this the 'No Fundamental Mentality' (NFM) constraint on physicalism. Unfortunately for those who wish to constrain physicalism in this way, NFM admits of a counterexample: an artificially intelligent quantum computer which employs quantum properties as part of its (...)
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  48.  12
    Toward a Universal Theology of Religion.Judith Simmer-Brown & Leonard Swidler - 1992 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 12:301.
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  49.  13
    Farming futures: Perspectives of Irish agricultural stakeholders on data sharing and data governance.Claire Brown, Áine Regan & Simone van der Burg - 2022 - Agriculture and Human Values 40 (2):565-580.
    The current research examines the emergent literature of Critical Data Studies, and particularly aligns with Michael and Lupton’s (2016) manifesto calling for researchers to study the Public Understanding of Big Data. The aim of this paper is to explore Irish stakeholders’ narratives on data sharing in agriculture, and the ways in which their attitudes towards different data sharing governance models reflect their understandings of data, the impact that data hold in their lives and in the farming sector, as well as (...)
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  50.  12
    Trusting the Government to Do the Right Thing: Data Ethics in Australia’s Pandemic Response.Sally Dalton-Brown - 2023 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 32 (2):222-230.
    After a brief overview of ethical issues in an Australian context catalyzed by the current pandemic, this article focuses on data protection in the light of recent debates about COVID-19 data tracking in Australia and globally. This article looks at the issue of trust as a fundamental principle of effective and ethical COVID-safe measures undertaken by the government. Key to ensuring such trust are Habermasian participatory dialogs, which assume trust as a condition of authentic illocution, and an emphasis on short-term (...)
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