Results for 'Ellie Ragland-Sullivan'

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  1.  80
    Jacques Lacan and the Philosophy of Psychoanalysis.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan - 1986 - Urbana : University of Illinois Press.
    Offers an analysis of Jacques Lacan's thought for the English-speaking world. Using empirical data as well as Lacan's texts, this title demonstrates how Lacan's teachings constitute a new epistemology that goes far beyond conventional thinking in psychoanalysis, psychology, philosophy, and linguistics.
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  2.  7
    Lacan and the Subject of Language.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan & Mark Bracher (eds.) - 2015 - Routledge.
    Originally published in 1991, this volume tackles the diverse teachings of the great psychoanalyst and theoretician. Written by some of the leading American and European Lacanian scholars and practitioners, the essays attempt to come to terms with his complex relation to the culture of contemporary psychoanalysis. The volume presents useful insights into Lacan’s innovative theories on the nature of language and the subject. Many of the essays probe the importance of psychoanalysis for problems of signifier and referent in the philosophy (...)
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  3. Seeking the third term: Desire, the phallus, and the materiality of language.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan - 1989 - In Richard Feldstein & Judith Roof (eds.), Feminism and psychoanalysis. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. pp. 40--64.
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  4.  80
    Jacques Lacan: Feminism and the Problem of Gender Identity.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan - 1982 - Substance 11 (3):6.
  5.  19
    Jacques Lacan: The Death of an Intellectual Hero.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan & Stuart Schneiderman - 1985 - Substance 14 (1):102.
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  6.  34
    Returning to Freud: Clinical Psychoanalysis in the School of Lacan.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan & Stuart Schneiderman - 1984 - Substance 13 (1):110.
  7. Dora and the Name-of-the-father: The Structure of Hysteria.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan - 1989 - Analysis (Australian Centre for Psychoanalysis) 1:117.
     
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  8. Hysteria.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan - 1992 - In Elizabeth Wright (ed.), Feminism and Psychoanalysis: A Critical Dictionary. Blackwell. pp. 163--66.
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  9. The imaginary.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan - 1992 - In Elizabeth Wright (ed.), Feminism and Psychoanalysis: A Critical Dictionary. Blackwell. pp. 173--76.
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  10. The Real.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan - 1992 - In Elizabeth Wright (ed.), Feminism and Psychoanalysis: A Critical Dictionary. Blackwell. pp. 374--377.
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  11. The Symbolic.Ellie Ragland-Sullivan - 1992 - In Elizabeth Wright (ed.), Feminism and Psychoanalysis: A Critical Dictionary. Blackwell. pp. 420--23.
     
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  12.  24
    Jacques Lacan and the Philosophy of Psychoanalysis.Richard Feldstein & Ellie Ragland-Sullivan - 1987 - Substance 16 (3):88.
  13. The Paternal Metaphor: A Lacanian Theory of Language.E. Ragland-Sullivan - 1992 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 46 (180):49-92.
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  14.  4
    Lacan & the Human Sciences.Alexandre Leupin - 1991 - U of Nebraska Press.
    The psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan (1901–81) left a legacy of thought that increasingly commands the attention of American scholars and critics. His provocative essays and wide-ranging seminars and lectures attempted, with remarkable success, to bridge the supposedly unbridgeable gap between the humanities and modern science. For some time his influence has shadowed the theoretical work being done in philosophy, psychology, anthropology, women’s studies, and literature. In Lacan and the Human Sciences eight eminent scholars examine how ideas entered these fields, how well (...)
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  15.  5
    Psychoanalysis And--.Richard Feldstein & Henry Sussman (eds.) - 1990 - Routledge.
    Originally published in 1990, _Psychoanalysis and…_ brings together essays by critics whose work demonstrates the lively interpenetration of psychoanalysis and other disciplines. Andrew Ross investigates psychoanalysis and Marxist thought; Joel Fineman reads the "sound of O" in Othello; Jane Gallop asks "Why does Freud giggle when the women leave the room?"; and Ellie Ragland-Sullivan examines Lacan’s seminars on James Joyce. This stimulating collection of work should still be required reading, especially for students of literature. But _Psychoanalysis and… (...)
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  16.  48
    Ecrits: A Selection.M. E. Ragland Sullivan, Jacques Lacan & Alan Sheridan - 1978 - Substance 6 (21):166.
  17.  15
    Jacques Lacan and the Logic of Structure: Topology and Language in Psychoanalysis.Ellie Ragland - 2015 - Routledge.
    Lacan postulated that the psyche can be understood by means of certain structures, which control our lives and our desires, and which operate differently at different logical moments or stages of formation.Jacques Lacan and the Logic of Structure offers us a reading of the major concepts of Lacan in terms of his later topological theory and aims to show how this was always a concern for Lacan and not only an issue in the last seminars. Ellie Ragland discusses (...)
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  18.  11
    Dreams According to Lacan’s Re-Interpretation of the Freudian Unconscious.Ellie Ragland - 2000 - Parallax 6 (3):63–81.
  19. Evil, Ethics and the Passion of Ignorance.Ellie Ragland - 2000 - Analysis (Australian Centre for Psychoanalysis) 9:69.
     
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  20. Lacan's Topological Unit and the Structure of Mind.Ellie Ragland - 1998 - Analysis (Australian Centre for Psychoanalysis) 8:72.
     
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  21. Sublimation, Antigone and the Violence of the Real.Ellie Ragland - 2002 - Analysis (Australian Centre for Psychoanalysis) 11:47.
     
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  22.  6
    The Logic of Sexuation: From Aristotle to Lacan.Ellie Ragland - 2004 - SUNY Press.
    Challenges essentialist notions of gender through a detailed account of Lacan's theories of gender, sexuality, and sexual difference.
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  23. The Topological Dimension of Lacanian Optics.Ellie Ragland - 2002 - Analysis (Australian Centre for Psychoanalysis) 11:115.
     
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  24.  17
    The Animals Society Institute Fellowship: Catalyzing Work in Human-Animal Studies.Colter Ellis, Robert McKay, Siobhan O’Sullivan, Richard Twine & Kris Weller - 2012 - Society and Animals 20 (2):117-122.
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  25.  38
    Scientism: Philosophy and the Infatuation with Science. [REVIEW]Roger Harris, Kevin Magill, Vincent Geoghegan, Anthony Elliott, Chris Arthur, Michael Gardiner, David Macey, Nöel Parker, Alex Klaushofer, Gary Kitchen, Tom Furniss, Christopher J. Arthur, Sadie Plant, Fred Inglis, Matthew Rampley, Alison Ainley, Daryl Glaser, Jean-Jacques Lecercle, Sean Sayers, Keith Ansell-Pearson & Lucy Frith - 1992 - Radical Philosophy 61 (61).
  26.  16
    Language-play: Chris Lawn, Wittgenstein and Gadamer: towards a post-analytic philosophy of language [Book Review].Alessandra Tanesini - unknown
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  27.  6
    Freud and the Passions.John O'Neill (ed.) - 1996 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    John O'Neill explores the human passions as both the object of psychoanalysis and the creative principle of Freud's own discovery and practice of psychoanalysis. Love, hate, anger, jealousy, envy, knowledge, and ignorance: the passions dominate infancy, adolescence, and adulthood, marking them with narcissism, murder, seduction, and self-destruction. They are both the soul's theater and the soul of theater, art, literature, and music. If fear, hate, envy, and jealousy rival love, beauty, and knowledge, or turn into one another, they just as (...)
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  28.  4
    Freud and the Passions.John O'Neill (ed.) - 2005 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    John O'Neill explores the human passions as both the object of psychoanalysis and the creative principle of Freud's own discovery and practice of psychoanalysis. Love, hate, anger, jealousy, envy, knowledge, and ignorance: the passions dominate infancy, adolescence, and adulthood, marking them with narcissism, murder, seduction, and self-destruction. They are both the soul's theater and the soul of theater, art, literature, and music. If fear, hate, envy, and jealousy rival love, beauty, and knowledge, or turn into one another, they just as (...)
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  29. Descartes on voluntary action and universal conservation.Joel Archer & C. P. Ragland - 2021 - In Gregory E. Ganssle (ed.), Philosophical Essays on Divine Causation. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  30.  23
    Interview: Paul Ekins.Paul Ekins & Ellie Winninghoff - 1992 - Business Ethics: The Magazine of Corporate Responsibility 6 (4):17-18.
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  31.  3
    The Mystery of Analytical Work: Weavings From Jung and Bion.Barbara Stevens Sullivan - 2009 - Routledge.
    This book provides an exploration of the clinical practice of psychoanalysis and analytical psychology. It explores the ways psychoanalysts and other clinicians are taught to evade direct emotional connections with their patients. Sullivan, suggesting that relatedness is the basis of emotional health, examines the universal struggle between socially oriented energies that struggle toward truth and narcissistic impulses that push us to take refuge in lies. She maintains that, rather than making interpretations, it is the clinician’s capacity to bring relatedness (...)
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  32.  28
    Coming to Be without a Cause.T. D. Sullivan - 1990 - Philosophy 65 (253):261 - 270.
    Quentin Smith contends that modern science provides enough evidence ‘to justify the belief that the universe began to exist without being caused to do so.’ There was a time when such a claim would have been dismissed because it conflicts with a principle absolutely fundamental to all human thought, including science itself. As Thomas Reid expressed the matter: That neither existence, nor any mode of existence, can begin without an efficient cause is a principle that appears very early in the (...)
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  33.  18
    Affine geometry having a solid as primitive.Theodore F. Sullivan - 1971 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 12 (1):1-61.
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  34.  14
    The name solid as primitive in projective geometry.Theodore F. Sullivan - 1972 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 13 (1):95-97.
  35.  41
    Harman, ethical naturalism, and token-token identity.Stephen J. Sullivan - 1991 - Philosophical Papers 20 (3):203-205.
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  36.  6
    The geometry of solids in Hilbert spaces.Theodore F. Sullivan - 1973 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 14 (4):575-580.
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  37. Idealizations and Understanding: Much Ado About Nothing?Emily Sullivan & Kareem Khalifa - 2019 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 97 (4):673-689.
    Because idealizations frequently advance scientific understanding, many claim that falsehoods play an epistemic role. In this paper, we argue that these positions greatly overstate idealiza...
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  38. Inductive Risk, Understanding, and Opaque Machine Learning Models.Emily Sullivan - 2022 - Philosophy of Science 89 (5):1065-1074.
    Under what conditions does machine learning (ML) model opacity inhibit the possibility of explaining and understanding phenomena? In this article, I argue that nonepistemic values give shape to the ML opacity problem even if we keep researcher interests fixed. Treating ML models as an instance of doing model-based science to explain and understand phenomena reveals that there is (i) an external opacity problem, where the presence of inductive risk imposes higher standards on externally validating models, and (ii) an internal opacity (...)
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  39. Implicit bias, confabulation, and epistemic innocence.Ema Sullivan-Bissett - 2014 - Consciousness and Cognition 33:548-560.
    In this paper I explore the nature of confabulatory explanations of action guided by implicit bias. I claim that such explanations can have significant epistemic benefits in spite of their obvious epistemic costs, and that such benefits are not otherwise obtainable by the subject at the time at which the explanation is offered. I start by outlining the kinds of cases I have in mind, before characterising the phenomenon of confabulation by focusing on a few common features. Then I introduce (...)
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  40. Digital Wellness and Persuasive Technologies.Laura Specker Sullivan & Peter Reiner - 2019 - Philosophy and Technology 34 (3):413-424.
    The development of personal technologies has recently shifted from devices that seek to capture user attention to those that aim to improve user well-being. Digital wellness technologies use the same attractive qualities of other persuasive apps to motivate users towards behaviors that are personally and socially valuable, such as exercise, wealth-management, and meaningful communication. While these aims are certainly an improvement over the market-driven motivations of earlier technologies, they retain their predecessors’ focus on influencing user behavior as a primary metric (...)
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  41.  83
    Explaining doxastic transparency: aim, norm, or function?Ema Sullivan-Bissett - 2018 - Synthese 195 (8):3453-3476.
    I argue that explanations of doxastic transparency which go via an appeal to an aim or norm of belief are problematic. I offer a new explanation which appeals to a biological function of our mechanisms for belief production. I begin by characterizing the phenomenon, and then move to the teleological and normative accounts of belief, advertised by their proponents as able to give an explanation of it. I argue that, at the very least, both accounts face serious difficulties in this (...)
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  42.  22
    Using meconium to establish prenatal alcohol exposure in the UK: ethical, legal and social considerations.Rachel Arkell & Ellie Lee - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (8):531-535.
    An expanding policy framework aimed at monitoring alcohol consumption during pregnancy has emerged. The primary justification is prevention of harm from what is termed ‘prenatal alcohol exposure’ (PAE), by enabling more extensive diagnosis of the disability labelled fetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD). Here we focus on proposals to include biomarkers as a PAE ‘screening tool’, specifically those found in meconium (the first newborn excrement), which are discussed as an ‘objective’ measure of PAE.We ask the overarching question, ‘Can routine screening of (...)
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  43. Painful Reasons: Representationalism as a Theory of Pain.Brendan O'Sullivan & Robert Schroer - 2012 - Philosophical Quarterly 62 (249):737-758.
    It is widely thought that functionalism and the qualia theory are better positioned to accommodate the ‘affective’ aspect of pain phenomenology than representationalism. In this paper, we attempt to overturn this opinion by raising problems for both functionalism and the qualia theory on this score. With regard to functionalism, we argue that it gets the order of explanation wrong: pain experience gives rise to the effects it does because it hurts, and not the other way around. With regard to the (...)
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  44.  26
    Registration of randomized controlled trials in nursing journals.Annie Topping, Ellie Brown, Daniel Bressington, Martin Jones, Charley Baker, Laileah Barguir, Donna Thomas, Eman Hassanein, Ashish Badnapurkar & Richard Gray - 2017 - Research Integrity and Peer Review 2 (1).
    BackgroundTrial registration helps minimize publication and reporting bias. In leading medical journals, 96% of published trials are registered. The aim of this study was to determine the proportion of randomized controlled trials published in key nursing journals that met criteria for timely registration.MethodsWe reviewed all RCTs published in three (two general, one mental health) nursing journals between August 2011 and September 2016. We classified the included trials as: 1. Not registered, 2. Registered but not reported in manuscript, 3. Registered retrospectively, (...)
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  45.  30
    Incidental Findings in Low‐Resource Settings.Haley K. Sullivan & Benjamin E. Berkman - 2018 - Hastings Center Report 48 (3):20-28.
    Much new global genetic research employs whole genome sequencing, which provides researchers with large amounts of data. The quantity of data has led to the generation and discovery of more incidental or secondary findings and to vigorous theoretical discussions about the ethical obligations that follow from these incidental findings. After a decade of debate in the genetic research community, there is a growing consensus that researchers should, at the very least, offer to return incidental findings that provide high‐impact, medically relevant (...)
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  46.  29
    Inheriting Racist Disparities in Health.Shannon Sullivan - 2013 - Critical Philosophy of Race 1 (2):190-218.
    This article examines how people of color can biologically inherit the deleterious effects of white racism. Drawing primarily on the field of epigenetics, I demonstrate how transgenerational racial disparities are in fact racist disparities that can be manifest physiologically, helping constitute the chemicals, hormones, cells, and fibers of the human body. Epigenetics can be used to demonstrate how white racism can have durable effects on the biological constitution of human beings that are not limited to the specific person who is (...)
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  47. Change We Can Believe In (and Assert).Meghan Sullivan - 2012 - Noûs 48 (3):474-495.
  48. Revealing Whiteness: The Unconscious Habits of Racial Privilege.Shannon Sullivan - 2006 - Indiana University Press.
    "[A] lucid discussion of race that does not sell out the black experience." —Tommy Lott, author of The Invention of Race Revealing Whiteness explores how white privilege operates as an unseen, invisible, and unquestioned norm in society today. In this personal and selfsearching book, Shannon Sullivan interrogates her own whiteness and how being white has affected her. By looking closely at the subtleties of white domination, she issues a call for other white people to own up to their unspoken (...)
  49. Insight and the no‐self in deep brain stimulation.Laura Specker Sullivan - 2018 - Bioethics 33 (4):487-494.
    Ethical analyses of the effects of neural interventions commonly focus on changes to personality and behavior, interpreting these changes in terms of authenticity and identity. These phenomena have led to debate among ethicists about the meaning of these terms for ethical analysis of such interventions. While these theoretical approaches have different criteria for ethical significance, they agree that patients’ reports are concerning because a sense of self is valuable. In this paper, I question this assumption. I propose that the Buddhist (...)
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  50.  63
    Living Across and Through Skins: Transactional Bodies, Pragmatism, and Feminism.Shannon Sullivan - 2001 - Indiana University Press.
    According to Shannon Sullivan, thinking about the body as being in transaction with its social, political, cultural, and physical surroundings is not a new idea.
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