Results for 'Harriet Johnson'

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  1.  7
    Adorno and climate science denial: Lies that sound like truth.Harriet Johnson - 2020 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 47 (7):831-849.
    Climate science denial is serious. It facilitates political procrastination and brings us ever closer to a world beset by growing food insecurity, heatwaves, floods, storms, fires and extensive los...
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  2.  3
    The reification of nature: Reading Adorno in a warming world.Harriet Johnson - 2019 - Constellations 26 (2):318-329.
  3.  3
    The end of high culture and the Anthropocene.Harriet Johnson - 2020 - Thesis Eleven 160 (1):84-94.
    Theories of a new phase of earth history, the Anthropocene, position human world-making activity as a bio-geological force. Social interventions into earth systems have been extensive and malignant, altering the earth’s surface, atmosphere, oceans, and systems of nutrient cycling. To adapt and respond to emerging planetary dangers requires the collaboration of scholars from many different disciplines. In this paper, I argue that a coalition of the arts and sciences might draw upon György Márkus’s extensive studies of the topography of ‘high’ (...)
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  4.  7
    Undignified Thoughts After Nature: Adorno's Aesthetic Theory.Harriet Johnson - 2011 - Critical Horizons 12 (3):372-395.
    This paper seeks to redress the marginalization of Adorno in environmental philosophical discourse. Kate Soper describes two opposing ways of conceiving nature. There is the redemptive “nature-endorsing” paradigm that lays claim to the intrinsic value or “otherness” of nature. Conversely, the “nature-sceptical” approach denies that we can access originary, untouched nature. This paper argues that the significance of Adorno’s treatment of natural beauty lies in how he brings these approaches together. In writings that resonate with the dual connotations of Sebald’s (...)
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  5.  6
    Márkus, our contemporary.John Grumley & Harriet Johnson - 2020 - Thesis Eleven 160 (1):3-5.
    Theories of a new phase of earth history, the Anthropocene, position human world-making activity as a bio-geological force. Social interventions into earth systems have been extensive and malignant, altering the earth’s surface, atmosphere, oceans, and systems of nutrient cycling. To adapt and respond to emerging planetary dangers requires the collaboration of scholars from many different disciplines. In this paper, I argue that a coalition of the arts and sciences might draw upon György Márkus’s extensive studies of the topography of ‘high’ (...)
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  6.  6
    Impact of Language Experience on Attention to Faces in Infancy: Evidence From Unimodal and Bimodal Bilingual Infants.Evelyne Mercure, Isabel Quiroz, Laura Goldberg, Harriet Bowden-Howl, Kimberley Coulson, Teodora Gliga, Roberto Filippi, Peter Bright, Mark H. Johnson & Mairéad MacSweeney - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  7.  8
    Maintaining (environmental) capital intact.Nancy Cartwright Blackbourn, Alison Frank, Walter Johnson, Dale Jorgenson, Tony La, Harriet Ritvo Vopa, Charles Rosenberg, Amartya Sen, Aubrey Silberston & Sverker Sörlin - 2011 - Modern Intellectual History 8 (1):193-212.
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  8.  3
    Damned If You Do: Dilemmas of Action in Literature and Popular Culture.Paul Cantor, Joel Johnson, Susan McWilliams, Travis D. Smith, Charles Turner & A. Craig Waggaman (eds.) - 2010 - Lexington Books.
    These essays showcase the value of the narrative arts in investigating complex conflicts of value in moral and political life, and explore the philosophical problem of moral dilemmas as expressed in ancient drama, classic and contemporary novels, television, film, and popular fiction. From Aeschylus to Deadwood, from Harriet Beecher Stowe to Harry Potter, the authors show how the narrative arts provide some of our most valuable instruments for complex and sensitive moral inquiry.
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  9.  13
    ‘Terrible Purity’: Peter Singer, Harriet McBryde Johnson, and the Moral Significance of the Particular.Mark Hopwood - 2016 - Journal of the American Philosophical Association 2 (4):637-655.
    In her account of a debate held at Princeton University between herself and Peter Singer, the lawyer and disability rights activist Harriet McBryde Johnson criticizes the ‘terrible purity of Singer's vision’. Although she certainly disagrees with the substance of Singer's arguments concerning disability and infanticide, this remark is best understood as a critique of their form. In this paper, I attempt to make sense of this critique. I argue that Singer's characteristic mode of argument, with its appeal to (...)
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  10.  5
    A Habitable World: Harriet McBryde Johnson's “Case for My Life”.Rosemarie Garland-Thomson - 2015 - Hypatia 30 (1):300-306.
  11.  5
    Phenomenology of Black Spirit.Biko Mandela Gray - 2022 - Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. Edited by Ryan J. Johnson.
    Ryan Johnson and Biko Mandela Gray study the relationship between Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit and Black Thought from Frederick Douglass to Angela Davis. This staging of an elongated dialectical parallelism between Hegel's classic text and major 19th-20th-century Black thinkers explodes the western canon of philosophy. Johnson and Mandela Gray show that Hegel's abstract dialectic is transformed and critiqued when put into conversation with the lived dialectics of Black Thought: from Frederick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs through to Malcolm (...)
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  12.  11
    Marriage, morals, and progress: J.S. Mill and the early feminists.Janelle Pötzsch - 2022 - History of European Ideas 48 (6):795-810.
    ABSTRACT This paper explores the background to Mill’s feminist thought by relating his Subjection of Women to his early piece ‘On Marriage’ and three contemporary essays that were written among the radical Unitarian community of South Place Chapel by Harriet Taylor Mill, William Bridges Adams, and William Johnson Fox. It seeks to demonstrate that Mill’s Subjection of Women still has close ties with the earlier feminist thought of the South Place Chapel circle. Specifically, it will show that key (...)
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  13.  10
    Comment by James Turner Johnson.James Turner Johnson - 2000 - Journal of Religious Ethics 28 (2):331-335.
    Comments on: “Just War Theory in Comparative Perspective: AReview Essay” by Simeon O. Ilesanmi Journal of Religious Ethics 28.1 (Spring 2000).
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  14. CONSPEC and CONLERN: A two-process theory of infant face recognition.John Morton & Mark H. Johnson - 1991 - Psychological Review 98 (2):164-181.
  15.  11
    The difference that difference makes: Bioethics and the challenge of "disability".Tom Koch - 2004 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 29 (6):697 – 716.
    Two rival paradigms permeate bioethics. One generally favors eugenics, euthanasia, assisted suicide and other methods for those with severely restricting physical and cognitive attributes. The other typically opposes these and favors instead ample support for "persons of difference" and their caring families or loved ones. In an attempt to understand the relation between these two paradigms, this article analyzes a publicly reported debate between proponents of both paradigms, bioethicist Peter Singer and lawyer Harriet McBryde Johnson. At issue, the (...)
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  16.  5
    The Phenomenology of Rheumatology: Disability, Merleau‐Ponty, and the Fallacy of Maximal Grip.Gayle Salamon - 2012 - Hypatia 27 (2):243-260.
    This paper charts the concepts of grip and the bodily auxiliary in Maurice Merleau-Ponty to consider how they find expression in disability narratives. Arguing against the notion of “maximal grip” that some commentators have used to explicate intentionality in Merleau-Ponty, I argue that grip in his texts functions instead as a compensatory effort to stave off uncertainty, lack of mastery, and ambiguity. Nearly without exception in Phenomenology of Perception, the mobilization of “grip” is a signal of impending loss, and is (...)
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  17.  40
    Appreciating Bad Art.John Dyck & Matt Johnson - 2017 - Journal of Value Inquiry 51 (2):279-292.
    There are some artworks which we appreciate for their bad artistic qualities; these artworks are said to be “good because bad”. This is puzzling. How can art be good just because it is bad? In this essay, we attempt to demystify this phenomenon. We offer a two-part analysis: the artistic flaws in these works make them bizarre, and this bizarreness is aesthetically valuable. Our analysis has the consequence that some artistic flaws make for aesthetic virtues. Such works therefore present a (...)
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  18. A Morally Deep World: An Essay on Moral Significance and Environmental Ethics.Lawrence E. Johnson - 1993 - Cambridge University Press.
    Lawrence Johnson advocates a major change in our attitude toward the nonhuman world. He argues that nonhuman animals, and ecosystems themselves, are morally significant beings with interests and rights. The author considers recent work in environmental ethics in the introduction and then presents his case with the utmost precision and clarity. Written in an attractive, nontechnical style, the book will be of particular interest to philosophers, environmentalists and ecologists.
     
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  19.  7
    Human, all too human.Diana Fuss (ed.) - 1996 - New York: Routledge.
    The question of what it means to be human has never before been more difficult and more contested. The human, with a complicated social history that his rarely been examined, remains entrenched in traditional Enlightenment thinking. Human, All Too Human considers how we might radicalize our notion of the human. Can the human be thought outside humanism? Any rethinking of the human places us immediately inside an ever-widening field of contrasting labels: animate and inanimate, natural and artificial, living and dead, (...)
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  20.  5
    Reasoning about properties: A computational theory.Sangeet Khemlani & P. N. Johnson-Laird - 2022 - Psychological Review 129 (2):289-312.
  21.  5
    Listening in Paris: A Cultural History.Downing Thomas & James H. Johnson - 1996 - Substance 25 (2):143.
  22.  12
    Inference and Inductive Risk in Disorders of Consciousness.L. Syd M. Johnson - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 7 (1):35-43.
    Several types of inferences are employed in the diagnosis and prognosis of patients with brain injuries and disorders of consciousness. These inferences introduce unavoidable uncertainty, and can be evaluated in light of inductive risk: the epistemic and nonepistemic risks of being wrong. This article considers several ethically significant inductive risks generated by and interacting with inferences about patients with disorders of consciousness, and argues for prescriptive measures to manage and mitigate inductive risk in the context of disorders of consciousness.
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  23.  4
    Nietzsche and Epicurus.Vinod Acharya & Ryan J. Johnson (eds.) - 2020 - Bloomsbury.
    This volume explores Nietzsche's decisive encounter with the ancient philosopher, Epicurus. The collected essays examine many previously unexplored and underappreciated convergences, and investigate how essential Epicurus was to Nietzsche's philosophical project through two interrelated overarching themes: nature and ethics. Uncovering the nature of Nietzsche's reception of, relation to, and movement beyond Epicurus, contributors provide insights into the relationship between suffering, health and philosophy in both thinkers; Nietzsche's stylistic analysis of Epicurus; the ethics of self-cultivation in Nietzsche's Epicureanism; practices of eating (...)
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  24.  23
    Seeking Justice and Redress for Victim-Survivors of Image-Based Sexual Abuse.Erika Rackley, Clare McGlynn, Kelly Johnson, Nicola Henry, Nicola Gavey, Asher Flynn & Anastasia Powell - 2021 - Feminist Legal Studies 29 (3):293-322.
    Despite apparent political concern and action—often fuelled by high-profile cases and campaigns—legislative and institutional responses to image-based sexual abuse in the UK have been ad hoc, piecemeal and inconsistent. In practice, victim-survivors are being consistently failed: by the law, by the police and criminal justice system, by traditional and social media, website operators, and by their employers, universities and schools. Drawing on data from the first multi-jurisdictional study of the nature and harms of, and legal/policy responses to, image-based sexual abuse, (...)
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  25.  5
    To Help My Supervisor: Identification, Moral Identity, and Unethical Pro-supervisor Behavior.Hana Huang Johnson & Elizabeth E. Umphress - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 159 (2):519-534.
    Under some circumstances, individuals are willing to engage in unethical behaviors that benefit another entity. In this research we advance the unethical pro-organizational behavior construct by showing that individuals also have the potential to behave unethically to benefit their supervisors. Previous research has not examined if employees engage in unethical acts to benefit an entity that is separate from oneself and if they will conduct these acts to benefit a supervisor. Our research helps to address these gaps. We also demonstrate (...)
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  26.  15
    Saying ‘Criminality’, meaning ‘immigration’? Proxy discourses and public implicatures in the normalisation of the politics of exclusion.Hugo Ekström, Michał Krzyżanowski & David Johnson - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    This article explores political discourse in the context of an online-mediated 2021 rapprochement between Swedish ‘mainstream’ and far-right parties paving the way for their eventual 2022 electoral success and later joint government coalition. The article analyses specifically how the above political accord on the Swedish right – often seen as breaking the long-term cordon sanitaire around Sweden’s far right – would be legitimised via discourses that carried significant elaboration and deepening of the ‘criminality’ and ‘immigration’ connection later recontextualised into the (...)
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  27.  4
    Behavioral and Neural Plasticity of Ocular Motor Control: Changes in Performance and fMRI Activity Following Antisaccade Training.Sharna D. Jamadar, Beth P. Johnson, Meaghan Clough, Gary F. Egan & Joanne Fielding - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9:160690.
    The antisaccade task provides a model paradigm that sets the inhibition of a reflexively driven behaviour against the volitional control of a goal-directed behaviour. The stability and adaptability of antisaccade performance was investigated in 23 neurologically healthy individuals. Behaviour and brain function were measured using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) prior to and immediately following two weeks of daily antisaccade training. Participants performed antisaccade trials faster with no change in directional error rate following two weeks of training; however this increased (...)
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  28.  7
    The Effects of tDCS Across the Spatial Frequencies and Orientations that Comprise the Contrast Sensitivity Function.Bruno Richard, Aaron P. Johnson, Benjamin Thompson & Bruce C. Hansen - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  29.  9
    The Sources of Uncertainty in Disorders of Consciousness.L. Syd M. Johnson & Christos Lazaridis - 2018 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 9 (2):76-82.
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  30.  8
    The canonical topology on dp-minimal fields.Will Johnson - 2018 - Journal of Mathematical Logic 18 (2):1850007.
    We construct a nontrivial definable type V field topology on any dp-minimal field K that is not strongly minimal, and prove that definable subsets of Kn have small boundary. Using this topology and...
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  31.  13
    AI, agency and responsibility: the VW fraud case and beyond.Deborah G. Johnson & Mario Verdicchio - 2019 - AI and Society 34 (3):639-647.
    The concept of agency as applied to technological artifacts has become an object of heated debate in the context of AI research because some AI researchers ascribe to programs the type of agency traditionally associated with humans. Confusion about agency is at the root of misconceptions about the possibilities for future AI. We introduce the concept of a triadic agency that includes the causal agency of artifacts and the intentional agency of humans to better describe what happens in AI as (...)
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  32.  4
    Nietzsche's Anti-Darwinism.Dirk Robert Johnson - 2010 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Friedrich Nietzsche's complex connection to Charles Darwin has been much explored, and both scholarly and popular opinions have tended to assume a convergence in their thinking. In this study, Dirk Johnson challenges that assumption and takes seriously Nietzsche's own explicitly stated 'anti-Darwinism'. He argues for the importance of Darwin for the development of Nietzsche's philosophy, but he places emphasis on the antagonistic character of their relationship and suggests that Nietzsche's mature critique against Darwin represents the key to understanding his (...)
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  33. A History of Christianity.Paul Johnson - 1983 - Religious Studies 19 (4):554-555.
  34.  24
    Intellectual Humility.Hanna Gunn, Nathan Sheff, Casey Rebecca Johnson & Michael P. Lynch - 2017 - Oxford Bibliographies in Philosophy.
    Intellectual humility is a concept in progress—philosophers and psychologists are in the process of defining and coming to understand what intellectual humility is and what place it has in our theories. Most accounts of intellectual humility build from work in virtue epistemology, the study of knowledge as the state that results when agents are epistemically virtuous (or, perhaps, the view that the proper object of study for epistemology is the intellectually virtuous agent). [...].
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  35. Early Pyrrhonism as a Sect of Buddhism? A Case Study in the Methodology of Comparative Philosophy.Monte Ransome Johnson & Brett Shults - 2018 - Comparative Philosophy 9 (2):1-40.
    We offer a sceptical examination of a thesis recently advanced in a monograph published by Princeton University Press, entitled Greek Buddha: Pyrrho’s Encounter with Early Buddhism in Central Asia. In this dense and probing work, Christopher I. Beckwith, a professor of Central Eurasian studies at Indiana University, Bloomington, argues that Pyrrho of Elis adopted a form of early Buddhism during his years in Bactria and Gandhāra, and that early Pyrrhonism must be understood as a sect of early Buddhism. In making (...)
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  36.  10
    Measuring The Mnemonic Advantage of Counter-intuitive and Counter-schematic Concepts.Claire Johnson, Steve Kelly & Paul Bishop - 2010 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 10 (1-2):109-121.
    The debate on the value of Boyer's minimally counter-intuitive theory continues to generate considerable theoretical and empirical attention. Although the theory offers an explanation as to why certain cultural texts and narratives are particularly well conveyed and transmitted, amidst society and over time, conflicting evidence remains for any mnemonic advantage of minimally counter-intuitive concepts. In an effort to reconcile these conflicting results, Barrett has made a comprehensive attempt in presenting a formal system for quantifying counter – intuitiveness including a distinction (...)
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  37.  3
    Discovering Formal Logic.Kathleen Johnson Wu - 1994 - Guilford, CT, USA: McGraw-Hill/Dushkin.
  38.  4
    The Retrieval of the Beautiful: Thinking Through Merleau-Ponty's Aesthetics.Galen A. Johnson - 2009 - Northwestern University Press.
    In this elegant new study Galen Johnson retrieves the concept of the beautiful through the framework of Merleau-Ponty’s aesthetics. Although Merleau-Ponty seldom spoke directly of beauty, his philosophy is essentially about the beautiful. In Johnson’s formulation, the ontology of Flesh as element and the ontology of the Beautiful as elemental are folded together, for Desire, Love, and Beauty are part of the fabric of the world’s element, Flesh itself, the term at which Merleau-Ponty arrived to replace Substance, Matter, (...)
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  39.  16
    Aquinas and Luther on War and Peace: Sovereign Authority and the Use of Armed Force.James Turner Johnson - 2003 - Journal of Religious Ethics 31 (1):3-20.
    Recent just war thought has tended to prioritize just cause among the moral criteria to be satisfied for resort to armed force, reducing the requirement of sovereign authority to a secondary, supporting role: such authority is to act in response to the establishment of just cause. By contrast, Aquinas and Luther, two benchmark figures in the development of Christian thought on just war, unambiguously gave priority to the requirement of sovereign authority as instituted by God to carry out the responsibilities (...)
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  40. Changing Our Minds: Democritus on What is Up to Us.Monte Johnson - 2014 - In Pierre Destrée, R. Salles & Marco Antonio De Zingano (eds.), Up to Us: Studies on Causality and Responsibility in Ancient Philosophy. Academia Verlag. pp. 1-18.
    I develop a positive interpretation of Democritus' theory of agency and responsibility, building on previous studies that have already gone far in demonstrating his innovativeness and importance to the history and philosophy of these concepts. The interpretation will be defended by a synthesis of several familiar ethical fragments and maxims presented in the framework of an ancient problem that, unlike the problem of free will and determinism, Democritus almost certainly did confront: the problem of the causes of human goodness and (...)
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  41. Some Reflections on the Informal Logic Initiative.Ralph H. Johnson - 2009 - Studies in Logic, Grammar and Rhetoric 16 (29).
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  42. Aristotelian Mechanistic Explanation.Monte Johnson - 2017 - In Julius Rocca (ed.), Teleology in the Ancient World: Philosophical and Medical Approaches. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. pp. 125-150.
    In some influential histories of ancient philosophy, teleological explanation and mechanistic explanation are assumed to be directly opposed and mutually exclusive alternatives. I contend that this assumption is deeply flawed, and distorts our understanding both of teleological and mechanistic explanation, and of the history of mechanistic philosophy. To prove this point, I shall provide an overview of the first systematic treatise on mechanics, the short and neglected work Mechanical Problems, written either by Aristotle or by a very early member of (...)
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  43.  3
    Annotated Bibliography.Jane Drexler & Ryan J. Johnson - 2021 - American Association of Philosophy Teachers Studies in Pedagogy 6:221-234.
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  44.  3
    Acute Aerobic Exercise-Induced Motor Priming Improves Piano Performance and Alters Motor Cortex Activation.Terence Moriarty, Andrea Johnson, Molly Thomas, Colin Evers, Abi Auten, Kristina Cavey, Katie Dorman & Kelsey Bourbeau - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Acute aerobic exercise has been shown to improve fine motor skills and alter activation of the motor cortex. The intensity of exercise may influence M1 activation, and further impact whole-body motor skill performance. The aims of the current study were to compare a whole-body motor skill via a piano task following moderate-intensity training and high-intensity interval training, and to determine if M1 activation is linked to any such changes in performance. Nine subjects, aged 18 ± 1 years completed a control, (...)
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  45.  7
    Religious Experience: The Perspective of African Traditional Religion.Johnson Uchenna Ozioko - 2021 - International Journal of Philosophy 9 (4):186.
  46. Ideology, Reason, and the Limitation of War: Religious and Secular Concepts, 1200-1740.James Turner Johnson - 1982 - Religious Studies 18 (1):114-116.
     
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  47.  9
    Humanitarian Intervention after Iraq: Just War and International Law Perspectives.James Turner Johnson - 2006 - Journal of Military Ethics 5 (2):114-127.
  48. Narrating the Nation : Murals and Tapestry in the Indian and South African Parliaments.Shirin Rai & Rachel Johnson - 2016 - In Arundhati Virmani (ed.), Political aesthetics: culture, critique and the everyday. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
     
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  49.  8
    El sentimiento de ser.Matthew Ratcliffe & Juan Diego Bogotá Johnson - 2018 - Ideas Y Valores 67 (167):289-316.
    RESUMEN Una vez que el foco de la reflexión pasa de las teorías ideales a la aplicación de la justicia social, centrada en las instituciones de las sociedades democráticas, se requiere prestar especial atención a los estilos de vida. Estos tienen una alta incidencia en cómo la justicia es realizada y afectan tanto a la desigualdad económica como a la disponibilidad de los recursos naturales. En nuestras sociedades es posible establecer restricciones a los estilos de vida, especialmente en aquellos casos (...)
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  50.  8
    Using digital forensics in higher education to detect academic misconduct.Mike Reddy, Ross Davies & Clare Johnson - 2022 - International Journal for Educational Integrity 18 (1).
    Academic misconduct in all its various forms is a challenge for degree-granting institutions. Whilst text-based plagiarism can be detected using tools such as Turnitin™, Plagscan™ and Urkund™, contract cheating and collusion can be more difficult to detect, and even harder to prove, often falling to no more than a ‘balance of probabilities’ rather than fact. To further complicate the matter, some students will make deliberate attempts to obfuscate cheating behaviours by submitting work in Portable Document Format, in image form, or (...)
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