Results for 'Mary Wright'

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  1.  7
    Learning to Teach Re in the Secondary School: A Companion to School Experience.Anne-Marie Brandom & Andrew Wright (eds.) - 2000 - Routledge.
    _Learning to Teach Religious Education in the Secondary School_ draws together insights from current educational theory and the best contemporary classroom teaching and learning, and suggests tasks, activities, and further reading designed to enhance the quality of initial school experience for the student teacher. It aims to support teachers in developing levels of religious and theological literacy, both of individual pupils and the society as a whole. Practising teachers and students will appreciate this comprehensive and accessible introduction to the craft (...)
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  2.  9
    Money and patrimony: religious and their personal property.Mary Wright - 1997 - The Australasian Catholic Record 74 (4):407.
  3.  21
    Implicit associations between anxiety-related symptoms and catastrophic consequences in high anxiety sensitive individuals.Marie-josée Lefaivre, Margo Watt, Sherry Stewart & Kristi Wright - 2006 - Cognition and Emotion 20 (2):295-308.
  4.  10
    China and the West, 1858-1861; The Origins of the Tsungli Yamen.Mary C. Wright & Banno Masataka - 1964 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 84 (3):281.
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  5.  29
    Creating Community in the Philosophy Classroom.J. Lenore Wright & Anne-Marie Bowery - 2006 - Teaching Philosophy 29 (1):1-21.
    In this paper, we describe Blackboard’s Online Journal program and explain how we use the online journal in a variety of philosophy courses. We outline our pedagogical motivation for using online journals and analyze how online journals help to improve our students’ ability to read, write and think philosophically. We analyze the strengths and weaknesses of online journals in comparison to online discussion boards. Finally, we address several concerns that philosophy teachers may have about using online journals.
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  6.  15
    Chest Pain Patients at Veterans Hospitals Are Increasingly More Likely to Be Observed Than Admitted for Short Stays.Brad Wright, Amy M. J. O’Shea, Justin M. Glasgow, Padmaja Ayyagari & Mary Vaughan Sarrazin - 2016 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 53:004695801666675.
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  7.  4
    Friends, Guests, and Colleagues: The Mu-fu System in the Late Ch'ing Period.Mary Clabaugh Wright & Kenneth E. Folsom - 1969 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 89 (2):426.
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  8.  20
    Relational ethics of delirium care: Findings from a hospice ethnography.David Kenneth Wright, Susan Brajtman & Mary Ellen Macdonald - 2018 - Nursing Inquiry 25 (3):e12234.
    Delirium, a common syndrome in terminally ill people, presents specific challenges to a good death in end‐of‐life care. This paper examines the relational engagement between hospice nurses and their patients in a context of end‐of‐life delirium. Ethnographic fieldwork spanning 15 months was conducted at a freestanding residential hospice in eastern Canada. A shared value system was apparent within the nursing community of hospice; patients’ comfort and dignity were deemed most at stake and therefore commanded nurses’ primary attention. This overarching commitment (...)
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  9.  25
    Socrates at the Cinema.J. Lenore Wright & Anne-Marie Bowery - 2003 - Teaching Philosophy 26 (1):21-41.
    This paper assesses the educational benefits of showing films in philosophy courses in four ways. First, a Socratic justification is given for why contemporary films are an effective means for raising philosophical questions, illustrating important philosophical concepts, and making philosophy more accessible. Second, the authors discuss several specific ways that films can be used to teach philosophy in introductory and upper-level courses. Third, the authors describe two ways that films can be effectively incorporated into a course: by showing them during (...)
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  10.  13
    The erosion of privacy.Marie A. Wright & John S. Kakalik - 1997 - Acm Sigcas Computers and Society 27 (4):22-25.
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  11.  17
    The Nien Army and Their Guerrilla Warfare, 1851-1868.Mary C. Wright, Ssu-yü Teng & Ssu-yu Teng - 1962 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 82 (4):610.
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  12.  10
    The Nien Rebellion.Mary C. Wright & Chiang Siang-Tseh - 1956 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 76 (2):134.
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  13.  44
    Of dilemmas and tensions: a qualitative study of palliative care physicians’ positions regarding voluntary active euthanasia in Quebec, Canada.Emmanuelle Bélanger, Anna Towers, David Kenneth Wright, Yuexi Chen, Golda Tradounsky & Mary Ellen Macdonald - 2019 - Journal of Medical Ethics 45 (1):48-53.
    ObjectivesIn 2015, the Province of Quebec, Canada passed a law that allowed voluntary active euthanasia. Palliative care stakeholders in Canada have been largely opposed to euthanasia, yet there is little research about their views. The research question guiding this study was the following: How do palliative care physicians in Quebec position themselves regarding the practice of VAE in the context of the new provincial legislation?MethodsWe used interpretive description, an inductive methodology to answer research questions about clinical practice. A total of (...)
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  14.  43
    The Last Stand of Chinese Conservatism: The T'ung-Chih Restoration, 1862-1874.Charles MacSherry & Mary Clabaugh Wright - 1958 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 78 (3):220.
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  15.  8
    China in Revolution: The First Phase, 1900-1913.Immanuel C. Y. Hsü, Mary Clabaugh Wright & Immanuel C. Y. Hsu - 1971 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 91 (1):149.
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  16. New books. [REVIEW]G. H. von Wright, H. J. Paton, Anthony Quinton, H. B. Acton, R. J. Spilsbury, S. Körner, Bernard Mayo, G. J. Warnock, W. H. Walsh & Mary Warnock - 1953 - Mind 62 (248):557-576.
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  17.  41
    Accessing food resources: Rural and urban patterns of giving and getting food. [REVIEW]Lois Wright Morton, Ella Annette Bitto, Mary Jane Oakland & Mary Sand - 2007 - Agriculture and Human Values 25 (1):107-119.
    Reciprocity and redistribution economies are often used by low-income households to increase access to food, adequate diets, and food security. A United States study of two high poverty rural counties and two low-income urban neighborhoods reveal poor urban households are more likely to access food through the redistribution economy than poor rural households. Reciprocal nonmarket food exchanges occur more frequently in low-income rural households studied compared to low-income urban ones. The rural low-income purposeful sample was significantly more likely to give (...)
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  18.  47
    The Last Stand of Chinese Conservatism: The Tʿung-Chih Restoration, 1862-1874The Last Stand of Chinese Conservatism: The Tung-Chih Restoration, 1862-1874. [REVIEW]David R. Knechtges & Mary Clabaugh Wright - 1973 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 93 (3):421.
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  19. Mary Immaculate, Patroness of the United States.John Wright - 1954 - The Thomist 17:428.
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  20. “We are not the person we will be when these things happen:” Reflections on personhood from an ethnography of neuropalliative care.Marianne Sofronas, Franco A. Carnevale, Mary Ellen Macdonald, Vasiliki Bitzas & David Kenneth Wright - forthcoming - Nursing Inquiry.
    Neuropalliative care developed to address the needs of patients living with life‐limiting neurologic disease. One critical consideration is that disease‐related changes to cognition, communication, and function challenge illness experiences and care practices. We conducted an ethnography to understand neuropalliative care as a phenomenon; how it was experienced, provided, conceptualized. Personhood served as our conceptual framework; with its long philosophical history and important place in nursing theory, we examined the extent to which it captured neuropalliative experiences and concerns. Personhood contextualized complex (...)
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  21.  21
    Approaches to Modern Chinese History.R. M., Albert Feurerwerker, Rhoads Murphy & Mary C. Wright - 1968 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 88 (2):367.
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  22.  17
    Essays on Ayn Rand's Atlas Shrugged.Michael S. Berliner, Andrew Bernstein, Harry Binswanger, Tore Boeckmann, Jeff Britting, Debi Ghate, Onkar Ghate, Allan Gotthelf, Edwin A. Locke, Shoshana Milgram, Leonard Peikoff, Richard Ralston, Gregory Salmieri, Tara Smith, Mary Ann Sures & Darryl Wright (eds.) - 2009 - Lexington Books.
    This is the first scholarly study of Atlas Shrugged, covering in detail the historical, literary, and philosophical aspects of Ayn Rand's magnum opus. Topics explored in depth include the history behind the novel's creation, publication, and reception; its nature as a romantic novel; and its presentation of a radical new philosophy.
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  23.  11
    Philosophical Feminism and Popular Culture.Kelly Oliver, Cynthia Willett, Julie Willett, Naomi Zack, Anne-Marie Schultz, Jennifer Ingle & Lenore Wright (eds.) - 2012 - Lanham: Lexington Books.
    The eight essays contained in this book explore the portrayal of women, and various philosophical responses to that portrayal in contemporary post-civil rights society. They bring feminist voices to the conversation about gender and attests to the importance of feminist critique in what is sometimes claimed to be a post-feminist era.
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  24.  85
    Wright's Reply to Benacerraf.Marie McGinn - 1984 - Analysis 44 (2):69 - 72.
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  25. The fourth dimension: Why time is of the essence in sacramental theology.Claire Louise Wright - 2017 - The Australasian Catholic Record 94 (1):35.
    Wright, Claire Louise If the sacraments are, as Louis-Marie Chauvet argues, the major symbolic expressions of 'the body as the point where God writes God's self in us', few concepts could be more central to sacramental theology than time, the medium in which human, ecclesial, cultural and cosmic 'bodies' have their being and expression. Christian narratives, traditions and rituals are founded in history and the shared memory of culture. As Miroslav Volf notes, the 'sacred memory' of the death and (...)
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  26.  19
    Mary Ridder, Roots of Change: Nebraska’s New Agriculture: University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, Nebraska, 2007, 139 pp., ISBN 68588-0630. [REVIEW]Wynne Wright - 2008 - Agriculture and Human Values 25 (3):453-454.
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  27.  11
    Causality and Scientific Explanation. Vol. II by William A. Wallace; Causality and Determinism by George Henrik von Wright[REVIEW]Marie-Louise Friquegnon - 1975 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 36 (1):141-142.
  28.  60
    Species, demes, and the omega taxonomy: Gilmour and the newsystematics. [REVIEW]Mary Pickard Winsor - 2000 - Biology and Philosophy 15 (3):349-388.
    The word ``deme'' was coined by the botanists J.S.L. Gilmour and J.W.Gregor in 1939, following the pattern of J.S. Huxley's ``cline''. Its purposewas not only to rationalize the plethora of terms describing chromosomaland genetic variation, but also to reduce hostility between traditionaltaxonomists and researchers on evolution, who sometimes scorned eachother's understanding of species. A multi-layered system of compoundterms based on deme was published by Gilmour and J. Heslop-Harrison in1954 but not widely used. Deme was adopted with a modified meaning byzoologists (...)
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  29.  23
    J. B. S. Haldane's Darwinism in its religious context.Gordon McOuat & Mary P. Winsor - 1995 - British Journal for the History of Science 28 (2):227-231.
    Early in this century, only a few biologists accepted that natural selection was the chief cause of evolution, until the independent calculations of John Burdon Sanderson Haldane (1892–1964), Sewall Wright and R. A. Fisher demonstrated that ideal populations subject to Mendel's laws could behave as Darwin had said they would. Evolutionary theorist John Maynard Smith, a student of Haldane's, has raised the question of why Haldane, who was no naturalist, took up the subject of evolution, and he suggests that (...)
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  30.  12
    Revolutions and Reconstructions in the Philosophy of Science.Mary B. Hesse - 1980 - Harvester Press.
  31. Philosophical discussions.Chauncey Wright - 1877 - New York,: B. Franklin. Edited by Charles Eliot Norton.
  32. Practical Philosophy.Mary J. Gregor (ed.) - 1996 - Cambridge University Press.
    This 1997 book was the first English translation of all of Kant's writings on moral and political philosophy collected in a single volume. No other collection competes with the comprehensiveness of this one. As well as Kant's most famous moral and political writings, the Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals, the Critique of Practical Reason, the Metaphysics of Morals, and Toward Perpetual Peace, the volume includes shorter essays and reviews, some of which have never been translated before. The volume has (...)
     
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  33.  15
    Models and stories in Hadron physics.Mary S. Morgan & Margaret Morrison - 1999 - In Mary S. Morgan & Margaret Morrison (eds.), Models as Mediators: Perspectives on Natural and Social Science. Cambridge University Press. pp. 326-346.
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  34.  37
    Plato’s Individuals.Mary M. McCabe - 1994 - Princeton University Press.
    Contradicting the long-held belief that Aristotle was the first to discuss individuation systematically, Mary Margaret McCabe argues that Plato was concerned with what makes something a something and that he solved the problem in a ...
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  35. Mathematics and reality.Mary Leng - 2010 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 17 (2):267-268.
     
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  36.  34
    Evolution's first philosopher: John Dewey and the continuity of nature (review).David B. Dillard-Wright - 2008 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 44 (1):pp. 178-181.
  37.  29
    Philosophos: Plato’s Missing Dialogue.Mary Louise Gill - 2012 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Plato famously promised to complement the Sophist and the Statesman with another work on a third sort of expert, the philosopher--but we do not have this final dialogue. Mary Louise Gill argues that Plato promised the Philosopher, but did not write it, in order to stimulate his audience and encourage his readers to work out, for themselves, the portrait it would have contained. The Sophist and Statesman are themselves members of a larger series starting with the Theaetetus, Plato's investigation (...)
  38. Kant: Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals.Mary Gregor & Jens Timmermann (eds.) - 2012 - Cambridge University Press.
    Published in 1785, Immanuel Kant's Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals ranks alongside Plato's Republic and Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics as one of the most profound and influential works in moral philosophy ever written. In Kant's own words, its aim is to identify and corroborate the supreme principle of morality, the categorical imperative. He argues that human beings are ends in themselves, never to be used by anyone merely as a means, and that universal and unconditional obligations must be understood as (...)
     
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  39. Bachelard: Science and Objectivity.Mary Tiles - 1984 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This is the first critically evaluative study of Gaston Bachelard's philosophy of science to be written in English. Bachelard's professional reputation was based on his philosophy of science, though that aspect of his thought has tended to be neglected by his English-speaking readers. Dr Tiles concentrates here on Bachelard's critique of scientific knowledge. Bachelard emphasised discontinuities in the history of science; in particular he stressed the ways of thinking about and investigating the world to be found in modern science. This, (...)
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  40.  5
    Reading the Shape of Nature: Comparative Zoology at the Agassiz Museum.Mary P. Winsor - 1991 - University of Chicago Press.
    Reading the Shape of Nature vividly recounts the turbulent early history of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard and the contrasting careers of its founder Louis Agassiz and his son Alexander. Through the story of this institution and the individuals who formed it, Mary P. Winsor explores the conflicting forces that shaped systematics in the second half of the nineteenth century. Debates over the philosophical foundations of classification, details of taxonomic research, the young institution's financial struggles, and the (...)
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  41.  12
    Wickedness: A Philosophical Essay.Mary Midgley - 1984 - New York: Routledge.
    To look into the darkness of the human soul is a frightening venture. Here Mary Midgley does so, with her customary brilliance and clarity. Midgley's analysis proves that the capacity for real wickedness is an inevitable part of human nature. This is not however a blanket acceptance of evil. Out of this dark journey she returns with an offering to us: an understanding of human nature that enhances our very humanity.
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  42. Scepticism, certainty, Moore and Wittgenstein.Crispin Wright - 2004 - In Max Kölbel & Bernhard Weiss (eds.), Wittgenstein's Lasting Significance. New York: Routledge.
  43.  29
    Evolution as a Religion: Strange Hopes and Stranger Fears.Mary Midgley - 1985 - Routledge.
    According to a profile in The Guardian , Mary Midgley is 'the foremost scourge of scientific pretensions in this country; someone whose wit is admired even by those who feel she sometimes oversteps the mark'. Considered one of Britain's finest philosophers, Midgley exposes the illogical logic of poor doctrines that shelter themselves behind the prestige of science. Always at home when taking on the high priests of evolutionary theory - Dawkins, Wilson and their acolytes - she has famously described (...)
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  44.  68
    Wickedness: a philosophical essay.Mary Midgley - 1984 - Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
    To look into the darkness of the human soul is a frightening venture. Here Mary Midgley does so, with her customary brilliance and clarity. Midgley's analysis proves that the capacity for real wickedness is an inevitable part of human nature. This is not however a blanket acceptance of evil. Out of this dark journey she returns with an offering to us: an understanding of human nature that enhances our very humanity.
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  45. Aristotle on Substance. The Paradox of Unity.Mary Louise Gill - 1991 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 181 (4):668-671.
     
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  46.  67
    The Vindications: The Rights of Men and the Rights of Woman.Mary Wollstonecraft - 1997 - Peterborough, CA: Broadview Press.
    The works of Mary Wollstonecraft ranged from the early Thoughts on the Education of Daughters to The Female Reader, a selection of texts for girls, and included two novels. But her reputation is founded on A Vindication of the Rights of Woman of 1792. This treatise is the first great document of feminism—and is now accepted as a core text in western tradition. It is not widely known that the germ of Wollstonecraft's great work came out of an earlier (...)
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  47. Bachelard: Science and Objectivity.Mary Tiles - 1995 - Neusis 2:45-69.
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  48.  58
    An Ethic of Care: Feminist and Interdisciplinary Perspectives.Mary Jeanne Larrabee (ed.) - 1992 - Routledge.
    Published in 1982, Carol Gilligan's _In a Different Voice_ proposed a new model of moral reasoning based on care, arguing that it better described the moral life of women. ____An Ethic of Care__ is the first volume to bring together key contributions to the extensive debate engaging Gilligan's work. It provides the highlights of the often impassioned discussion of the ethic of care, drawing on the literature of the wide range of disciplines that have entered into the debate. _Contributors:_ Annette (...)
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  49. Frankenstein.Mary Shelley & J. Paul Hunter - 1997 - Utopian Studies 8 (1):230-231.
  50. Beast and Man: The Roots of Human Nature.Mary Midgley - 1980 - Philosophy 55 (212):270-273.
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