Results for 'Gerald L. Peterson'

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  1.  35
    Historical self-understanding in the social sciences: The use of Thomas Kuhn in psychology.Gerald L. Peterson - 1981 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 11 (1):1–30.
    Thomas Kuhn's thesis concerning the structure of scientific change was critically examined in relation to the historical problems of social science. The use and interpretation of Kuhn's ideas by psychologists was reviewed and found to center around the proliferation of theoretical views as paradigms, the viewing of theoretical differences as paradigm clashes, and efforts to affirm particular conceptions of psychology's past or future. Such use was seen as curbing discussion of fundamental issues, and to reflect a continuing neglect of the (...)
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  2.  16
    Greenberg, J., Koole, S. L., & Pyszczynski, T. , Handbook of Experimental Existential Psychology. New York, N.Y.: The Guilford Press, 2004, vi + 528 pp.,.Gerald L. Peterson - 2006 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 37 (1):151.
  3. The Self We Live By: Narrative Identify in a Postmodern World & the Presence of Self.Gerald L. Peterson - 2001 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 32 (1).
     
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  4.  39
    Strategies for the control of voluntary movements with one mechanical degree of freedom.Gerald L. Gottlieb, Daniel M. Corcos & Gyan C. Agarwal - 1989 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12 (2):189-210.
    A theory is presented to explain how accurate, single-joint movements are controlled. The theory applies to movements across different distances, with different inertial loads, toward targets of different widths over a wide range of experimentally manipulated velocities. The theory is based on three propositions. (1) Movements are planned according to “strategies” of which there are at least two: a speed-insensitive (SI) and a speed-sensitive (SS) one. (2) These strategies can be equated with sets of rules for performing diverse movement tasks. (...)
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  5.  73
    How emotions inform judgment and regulate thought.Gerald L. Clore & Jeffrey R. Huntsinger - 2007 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 11 (9):393-399.
  6.  23
    Psychotropic Hedonism vs. Pharmacological Calvinism.Gerald L. Klerman - 1972 - Hastings Center Report 2 (4):1-3.
  7.  39
    Psychological Construction in the OCC Model of Emotion.Gerald L. Clore & Andrew Ortony - 2013 - Emotion Review 5 (4):335-343.
    This article presents six ideas about the construction of emotion: (a) Emotions are more readily distinguished by the situations they signify than by patterns of bodily responses; (b) emotions emerge from, rather than cause, emotional thoughts, feelings, and expressions; (c) the impact of emotions is constrained by the nature of the situations they represent; (d) in the OCC account (the model proposed by Ortony, Clore, and Collins in 1988), appraisals are psychological aspects of situations that distinguish one emotion from another, (...)
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  8.  35
    Control theoretic concepts and motor control.Gerald L. Gottlieb & Gyan C. Agarwal - 1982 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 5 (4):546-547.
  9.  6
    Seeds of the Kingdom: Utopian Communities in the Americas.Anna L. Peterson - 2005 - Oxford University Press USA.
    In these skeptical and disillusioned times, there are still groups of people scattered throughout the world who are trying to live out utopian dreams. These communities challenge the inevitability and morality of dominant political and economic models. By putting utopian religious ethics into practice, they attest to the real possibility of social alternatives. In Seeds of the Kingdom, Anna L. Peterson reflects on the experiences of two very different communities, one inhabited by impoverished former refugees in the mountains of (...)
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  10.  49
    Hermeneutics Ancient and Modern.Gerald L. Bruns - 1992 - Yale University Press.
    Gerald L. Bruns. the spell of another, to liberate the language imprisoned in a work in his recreation of that work" (p. 80). The notion of a pure language, a language uncontaminated by mere speech, may be one of modernity's great unkillable ...
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  11.  65
    Cognition in emotion: Always, sometimes, or never.Gerald L. Clore & Andrew Ortony - 2000 - In Richard D. R. Lane, L. Nadel, G. L. Ahern, J. Allen & Alfred W. Kaszniak (eds.), Cognitive Neuroscience of Emotion. Oxford University Press. pp. 24--61.
  12. Affective causes and consequences of social information processing.Gerald L. Clore, Norbert Schwarz & Michael Conway - 1994 - In R. Wyer & T. Srull (eds.), Handbook of Social Cognition. Lawrence Erlbaum. pp. 1--323.
  13.  67
    How the Object of Affect Guides its Impact.Gerald L. Clore & Jeffrey R. Huntsinger - 2009 - Emotion Review 1 (1):39-54.
    In this article, we examine how affect influences judgment and thought, but also how thought transforms affect. The general thesis is that the nature and impact of affective reactions depends largely on their objects. We view affect as a representation of value, and its consequences as dependent on its object or what it is about. Within a review of relevant literature and a discussion of the nature of emotion, we focus on the role of the object of affect in governing (...)
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  14. Hermeneutics Ancient and Modern.Gerald L. Bruns - 1996 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 29 (1):86-90.
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  15. Scientific change, emerging specialties, and research schools.Gerald L. Geison - 1981 - History of Science 19 (43 pt 1):20-40.
  16.  29
    Hermeneutics Ancient and Modern.Gerald L. Bruns - 1995 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 53 (1):100-101.
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  17.  20
    Saving the Text: Literature/Derrida/Philosophy.Gerald L. Bruns & Geoffrey Hartman - 1981 - Substance 10 (3):91.
  18.  13
    Heidegger's Estrangements: Language, Truth, and Poetry in the Later Writings.Gerald L. Bruns - 1989
    This book concerns the relationship between language and poetry in Heidegger's later writings. Gerald L. Bruns illuminates these difficult and strange writings by analyzing his style and form and by reflecting on the philosopher's insights.
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  19.  40
    Cognitive phenomenology: Feelings and the construction of judgment.Gerald L. Clore - 1992 - In L. Martin & A. Tesser (eds.), The Construction of Social Judgments. Lawrence Erlbaum. pp. 10--133.
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  20. Social cognition, language acquisition and the development of the theory of mind.Jay L. Garfield, Candida C. Peterson & Tricia Perry - 2001 - Mind and Language 16 (5):494–541.
    Theory of Mind (ToM) is the cognitive achievement that enables us to report our propositional attitudes, to attribute such attitudes to others, and to use such postulated or observed mental states in the prediction and explanation of behavior. Most normally developing children acquire ToM between the ages of 3 and 5 years, but serious delays beyond this chronological and mental age have been observed in children with autism, as well as in those with severe sensory impairments. We examine data from (...)
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  21. Mental illness, the medical model, and psychiatry.Gerald L. Klerman - 1977 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 2 (3):220-243.
  22. Tracking the Moral Truth: Debunking Street’s Darwinian Dilemma.Gerald L. Hull - manuscript
    Sharon Street’s 2006 article “A Darwinian Dilemma for Realist Theories of Value” challenges the epistemological pretensions of the moral realist, of the nonnaturalist in particular. Given that “Evolutionary forces have played a tremendous role in shaping the content of human evaluative attitudes” – why should one suppose such attitudes and concomitant beliefs would track an independent moral reality? Especially since, on a nonnaturalist view, moral truth is causally inert. I abstract a logical skeleton of Street’s argument and, with its aid, (...)
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  23. S-cubed.Gerald L. Atkinson - forthcoming - Annual Ai Systems in Government Conference: Proceedings.
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  24.  23
    Behavior control and the limits of reform.Gerald L. Klerman - 1975 - Hastings Center Report 5 (4):40-45.
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  25.  3
    Psychotropic Drugs as Therapeutic Agents.Gerald L. Klerman - 1974 - The Hastings Center Studies 2 (1):81.
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  26.  19
    The scientific tasks confronting psychoanalysis.Gerald L. Klerman - 1986 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9 (2):245-245.
  27.  10
    Maurice Blanchot: The Refusal of Philosophy.Gerald L. Bruns - 2005 - JHU Press.
    Ch. 9, "Blanchot's 'holocaust'", discusses the French thinker's philosophy of the Holocaust.
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  28.  23
    The Protoplasmic Theory of Life and the Vitalist-Mechanist Debate.Gerald L. Geison - 1969 - Isis 60 (3):273-292.
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  29.  8
    The Battle without and Within: The Psychology of Sin and Salvation in the Desert Fathers and Mothers.Gerald L. Sittser - 2009 - Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 2 (1):44-66.
    Some 1600 years separate our world from the world of the Desert Fathers and Mothers, a world that might seem strange to us. There is much in it that does in fact seem disturbing and bizarre, especially the strict asceticism that drove these unusual saints into the wilderness. Their worldview becomes more accessible and relevant, however, if we grasp the underlying psychology of the movement, especially as it was explored and explained by one of the great theologians of the movement, (...)
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  30.  6
    The Catechumenate and the Rise of Christianity.Gerald L. Sittser - 2013 - Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 6 (2):179-203.
    Over the past two centuries historians of Christianity have offered various theories concerning why and how the early Christian movement took root and flourished in the Greco-Roman world, which was surprising considering its modest beginning, its small size, its lack of cultural resources, and its bad reputation among the elites. This article argues that the formation of the early Christian catechumenate enabled the church not only to reach pagans but to transition them to the very different world of Christianity and (...)
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  31.  4
    The Long and Deep Memory of Evangelicalism.Gerald L. Sittser - 2017 - Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 10 (2):207-219.
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  32. Water from a Deep Well: Christian Spirituality from Early Martyrs to Modern Missionaries.Gerald L. Sittser - 2007
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  33.  29
    The varied lives of organisms: variation in the historiography of the biological sciences.Gerald L. Geison & Manfred D. Laubichler - 2001 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 32 (1):1-29.
  34.  33
    The varied lives of organisms: variation in the historiography of the biological sciences.Gerald L. Geison & Manfred D. Laubichler - 2001 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 32 (1):1-29.
    This paper emphasizes the crucial role of variation, at several different levels, for a detailed historical understanding of the development of the biomedical sciences. Going beyond valuable recent studies that focus on model organisms, experimental systems and instruments, we argue that all of these categories can be accommodated within our approach, which pays special attention to organismal and cultural variation. Our empirical examples are drawn in particular from recent historical studies of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century genetics and physiology. Based on (...)
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  35. The parallel worlds of affective concepts and feelings.Gerald L. Clore & Stanley Colcombe - 2003 - In Jochen Musch & Karl C. Klauer (eds.), The Psychology of Evaluation: Affective Processes in Cognition and Emotion. Lawerence Erlbaum. pp. 335--369.
     
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  36.  38
    Modern poetry and the idea of language: a critical and historical study.Gerald L. Bruns - 1974 - [Normal, Ill.]: Dalkey Archive Press.
    Bruns lucidly depicts the distinctions and convergences between these two lines of thought by examining the works of Mallarme, Flaubert, Joyce, Beckett, and ...
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  37.  11
    3 On the Tragedy of Hermeneutical Experience.Gerald L. Bruns - unknown - In eds Walter Jost and Michael J. Hyde (ed.), Rhetoric and Hermeneutics in Our Time: A Reader. Yale University Press. pp. 73-89.
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  38.  30
    On the risk-aversion comparability of state-dependent utility functions.Gerald L. Nordquist - 1985 - Theory and Decision 18 (3):287-300.
  39.  12
    The myth of pure perception.Gerald L. Clore & Dennis R. Proffitt - 2016 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 39.
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  40.  25
    Canon and Power in the Hebrew Scriptures.Gerald L. Bruns - 1984 - Critical Inquiry 10 (3):462-480.
    Thus it would not be the content or meaning of a written Torah that Jeremiah would attack; rather it would be the Deuteronomic “claim to final and exclusive authority by means of writing” . Jeremiah’s problem is political rather than theological. He knows that writing is more powerful than prophecy and that he will not be able to withstand it—and he knows that the Deuteronomists know no less. As Blenkinsopp says, “Deuteronomy produced a situation in which prophecy could not continue (...)
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  41.  50
    Blanchot/levinas: Interruption (on the conflict of alterities).Gerald L. Bruns - 1996 - Research in Phenomenology 26 (1):132-154.
  42.  53
    Virtue and Vice.Gerald L. Gingras - 1985 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 60 (4):430-438.
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  43.  6
    Virtue and Vice.Gerald L. Gingras - 1985 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 60 (4):430-438.
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  44.  23
    Shifting frames of reference but the same old point of view.Gerald L. Gottlieb - 1995 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (4):758-758.
    Models of central control variables (CVs) that are expressed in positional reference frames and rely on proprioception as the dominant specifier of muscle activation patterns have not yet been shown to be adequate for the description of fast, voluntary movement, even of single joints. An alternative model with illustrative data is proposed.
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  45.  25
    The invariant characteristic isn't.Gerald L. Gottlieb & Gyan C. Agarwal - 1986 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9 (4):608-609.
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  46.  10
    Intention, Authority, and Meaning.Gerald L. Bruns - 1980 - Critical Inquiry 7 (2):297-309.
    [Herbert F.] Tucker has shown us in a very practical way that the concept of meaning is the problem of problems, not only in hermeneutics but in literary theory and, indeed, literary study generally. It may well be that in literary study there can be no talk of meaning that is not ambiguous, that does not require us to speak in figures or by means of metaphorical improvisations. It would not necessarily follow that our talk of meaning is merely provisional (...)
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  47.  13
    Loose Talk about Religion from William James.Gerald L. Bruns - 1984 - Critical Inquiry 11 (2):299-316.
    In this paper I want to say some things about the way William James talks—as, for example, in The Varieties of Religious Experience , the famous Gifford Lectures in which James attempted to rehabilitate religion as a subject fit for philosophical discourse, or as something still worth talking about.1 Some familiar background for this matter is provided by the epigraph I have just given from “What Pragmatism Means,” in which James shows himself to be a nominalist as against a metaphysical (...)
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  48.  14
    Reply to Crewe and Conant.Gerald L. Bruns - 1991 - Critical Inquiry 17 (3):635-638.
    I am impressed by how angry Jonathan Crewe is, but I found his remarks confused and unclear and so I’m uncertain how to reply. Whatever the matter it, he wants “to forestall a sense of academic obligation on anyone’s part to work back to Cavell through Bruns” . God knows this might be a good idea, judging from what James Conant says.Conant’s criticisms are directed at the section of my paper called “The Moral of Skepticism,” which he cannot help wanting (...)
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  49.  25
    Stanley Cavell's Shakespeare.Gerald L. Bruns - 1990 - Critical Inquiry 16 (3):612-632.
    “The Avoidance of Love” is Cavell’s magic looking glass onto Shakespeare, where the idea of missing something, not getting what is obvious, is, on Cavell’s reading, very close to a philosophical obsession. Shakespeare here means—besides Lear—Othello, Coriolanus, Hamlet, The Winter’s Tale, and Antony and Cleopatra, and what Cavell finds in these plays is an attempt to think through what elsewhere, in the formation of the modern philosophical tradition, was getting formulated as the problem of skepticism, or not being able to (...)
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  50.  9
    On the anarchy of poetry and philosophy: a guide for the unruly.Gerald L. Bruns - 2006 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Marcel Duchamp once asked whether it is possible to make something that is not a work of art. This question returns over and over in modernist culture, where there are no longer any authoritative criteria for what can be identified (or excluded) as a work of art. As William Carlos Williams says, “A poem can be made of anything,” even newspaper clippings.At this point, art turns into philosophy, all art is now conceptual art, and the manifesto becomes the distinctive genre (...)
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