Results for ' human voices'

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  1. Human Rights and Democracy.Paul Voice - 2009 - In Patrick Hayden (ed.), The Ashgate Research Companion to Ethics and International Relations.
  2.  76
    Consuming the World: Hannah Arendt on Politics and the Environment.Paul Voice - 2013 - Journal of International Political Theory 9 (2):178-193.
    What can Hannah Arendt's writings offer to current thinking on the environment? Although there are some obvious connections between her work and current issues in environmental ethics, not very much has been written on the topic. This article argues that Arendt's philosophy is particularly fruitful for environmental thinking because she explicitly links the material and biological conditions of human existence with the political conditions of human freedom. This is articulated in the article as the requirement of both constrained (...)
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  3.  5
    An injured and sick body – Perspectives on the theology of Psalm 38.Dirk J. Human - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (4):8.
    Descriptions of body imagery and body parts are evident in expressions of Old Testament texts. Although there is no single term for ‘body’ in the Hebrew mind, the concept of ‘body’ functions in its different parts. As part of anthropomorphic descriptions of God and expressions attached to humankind, body parts have special significance, contributing to the theological dimension of texts. The poems in the Psalter are no exception. Several body parts are mentioned in Psalm 38, an individual lament song. In (...)
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  4.  17
    The "Human" Voices in Hallucinations.Richard Rojcewicz & Stephen J. Rojcewicz - 1997 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 28 (1):1-41.
    Schizophrenic hallucinations can be understood only as a function of the totality of the schizophrenic's personality, that is, only in the context of the person's entire being-in-the-world. For essential reasons, there is a predominance of auditory hallucinations in schizophrenia, and these typically take the form of human voices. This paper argues that the essential reasons here are human reasons. That is, hallucinations arise primarily on account of a human or personal deficit. We argue that the deficit (...)
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  5.  9
    Environmental Humanities: Voices From the Anthropocene.Serpil Oppermann & Serenella Iovino (eds.) - 2016 - Rowman & Littlefield International.
    An international and interdisciplinary team of scholars offer innovative models of thinking about environmentality in the humanities and in Anthropocene discourse in the environmental sciences.
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  6.  23
    The human voice of justice.Xunwu Chen - 2007 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 34 (3):379–394.
  7.  12
    Human voice: Its meaning and textuality outside the verbal and the musical.Viivian Jõemets - 2014 - Semiotica 2014 (198):305-320.
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  8.  51
    The synthetization of human voices.Oliver Bendel - 2019 - AI and Society 34 (1):83-89.
    The synthetization of voices, or speech synthesis, has been an object of interest for centuries. It is mostly realized with a text-to-speech system, an automaton that interprets and reads aloud. This system refers to text available for instance on a website or in a book, or entered via popup menu on the website. Today, just a few minutes of samples are enough to be able to imitate a speaker convincingly in all kinds of statements. This article abstracts from actual (...)
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  9.  8
    A Peircean perspective on human voice: the semiotic nonagon of the uses of voice.Juan Pablo Llobet Vallejos & Pablo Antonio Stocco - 2019 - Cognitio 19 (2):258-269.
    La voz humana es un fenómeno ampliamente estudiado desde una gran variedad de disciplinas, desde las especialidades de la medicina hasta las artes. Aunque esta situación resulta enriquecedora, la multiplicidad de perspectivas ha conspirado contra la formulación de una concepción única de la voz y de un sistema lógico que pueda ayudar a entender los fenómenos asociados con ella en términos más generales, enfatizando continuidades y relaciones en lugar de requerir cada vez una definición del objeto de estudio de acuerdo (...)
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  10.  15
    Environmental Humanities: Voices from the Anthropocene. [REVIEW]Robert Wilson - 2018 - Environmental Ethics 40 (2):185-187.
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  11.  9
    Philosophical Practice and the Human Voice.Marianne Vahl - 2012 - Philosophical Practice: Journal of the American Philosophical Practitioners Association (American Philosophical Practitioners Association) 7 (3).
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  12.  65
    Striving to Speak in a Human Voice.Vincent Colapietro - 2004 - Review of Metaphysics 58 (2):367-398.
    A. N. WHITEHEAD SUGGESTS philosophy is akin to poetry. Let me count the ways or, more exactly, identify four facets of this kinship. After touching upon these facets, I will in the second part of this paper focus directly on the relationship between being and articulation, regardless of the form in which being comes to expression. Then, in the third section, I offer Charles S. Peirce’s categoreal scheme as a compelling articulation of what are, arguably, the most ubiquitous and indeed (...)
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  13.  28
    Medicine and Humanities: Voicing Connections. [REVIEW]Christina M. Gillis - 2008 - Journal of Medical Humanities 29 (1):5-14.
    Accepting as a given that the humanities disciplines are not product or “results” driven, this paper argues that the core of an interdisciplinary field of medicine and humanities, or medical humanities, is an interpretive enterprise that is not readily open to quantitative assessment. A more humanistically oriented medical practice can derive, however, from the process that produces new insights and works toward the development of a new, mutually shared, and humanizing language.
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  14. Symposium: Wittgenstein, Solitude, and the Human Voice.Living Alone & I. N. Solipsism - 2005 - Philosophy and Literature 29:409-427.
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  15.  15
    A Review on Five Recent and Near-Future Developments in Computational Processing of Emotion in the Human Voice.Dagmar M. Schuller & Björn W. Schuller - 2020 - Emotion Review 13 (1):44-50.
    We provide a short review on the recent and near-future developments of computational processing of emotion in the voice, highlighting self-learning of representations moving continuously away from traditional expert-crafted or brute-forced feature representations to end-to-end learning, a movement towards the coupling of analysis and synthesis of emotional voices to foster better mutual understanding, weakly supervised learning at a large scale, transfer learning from related domains such as speech recognition or cross-modal transfer learning, and reinforced learning through interactive applications at (...)
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  16.  16
    Wittgenstein and meaning in life: in search of the human voice.Reza Hosseini - 2015 - New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    What could Wittgenstein's body of texts contribute to the rapidly growing literature on life's meaning? This book not only examines Wittgenstein's scattered remarks about value and 'sense of life' but also argues that his philosophy and his 'way of seeing' has far reaching implications for the way current strands in the literature (naturalism, supernaturalism, and nihilism) approach the question of life's meaning. Hosseini argues that Wittgenstein's method of doing philosophy would suggest that the focus should be shifted from finding the (...)
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  17.  6
    Invariant Measures Based on the U-Correlation Integral: An Application to the Study of Human Voice.Juan F. Restrepo & Gastón Schlotthauer - 2018 - Complexity 2018:1-9.
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  18.  16
    Difficulties of the Bardic: Literature and the Human Voice.Donald Wesling - 1981 - Critical Inquiry 8 (1):69-81.
    Speech, like sound, "exists only when it is passing out of existence."1 Although confounded with the very breath of life, speech dies on the lips that give it form. This undulation of air, whose speechprint is so personal that we have not been able to build machines to recognize it, is born in the body but effaces, forgets the body. This quality of speech, that it takes support form the body but does not reside there, has evoked a debate about (...)
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  19.  14
    The perceptual significance of high-frequency energy in the human voice.Brian B. Monson, Eric J. Hunter, Andrew J. Lotto & Brad H. Story - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  20.  27
    'They speak for themselves' or else ... : human voices and the dreams of knowledge.George Myerson - 1997 - History of the Human Sciences 10 (3):134-150.
    This article is about knowledge and argument. The purpose is to dramatize certain questions of knowledge: how and why does the better knowledge not become the better argument; what are the voices access ible to the claiming of new knowledge; what are the limits and destinies of contemporary expertise? The article is also an experiment in aca demic and intellectual forms, an experiment which corresponds to the central inquiry: how should knowledge speak now? There are three parts. The first (...)
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  21.  12
    Emotion expression: The evolutionary heritage in the human voice.Elisabeth Scheiner & Julia Fischer - 2011 - In Welsch Wolfgang, Singer Wolf & Wunder Andre (eds.), Interdisciplinary Anthropology. Springer. pp. 105--129.
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  22. Symposium: Wittgenstein, Solitude, and the Human Voice.David Rudrum - 2005 - Philosophy and Literature 29 (2).
     
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  23.  47
    Reza Hosseini: Wittgenstein and meaning in life: in search of the human voice: Palgrave Macmillan, London and New York, 2015, vii + 179 pp, $95.R. J. Ray - 2016 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 80 (2):199-203.
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  24.  19
    Human rights for more than one voice: rethinking political space beyond the global/local divide.Rebecca Adami - 2014 - Ethics and Global Politics 7 (4).
    This paper considers political agency and space as found in Cavarero's For More Than One Voice: Toward a Philosophy of Vocal Expression in order to take a critical philosophical approach to human rights education and the political implications of its increasingly legal discourse. Like Arendt, Cavarero is concerned with a radical rethinking of political space, as not limited to place or legal borders, but bound by our human condition of plurality and relationality. Both Arendt and Cavarero want politics (...)
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  25.  27
    Encrypting human rights: The intertwining of resistant voices in the UK state surveillance debate.James Allen-Robertson & Amy Stevens - 2021 - Big Data and Society 8 (1).
    The Snowden revelations in 2013 redrew the lines of debate surrounding surveillance, exposing the extent of state surveillance across multiple nations and triggering legislative reform in many. In the UK, this was in the form of the Investigatory Powers Act. As a contribution to understanding resistance to expanding state surveillance activities, this article reveals the intertwining of diverse interests and voices which speak in opposition to UK state surveillance. Through a computational topic modelling-based mixed methods analysis of the submissions (...)
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  26. Another Voice: Bioethics and Human Rights.George Annas - forthcoming - Hastings Center Report.
     
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  27.  19
    The Voices of Time: A Cooperative Survey of Man’s Views of Time as Expressed by the Sciences and by the Humanities.Richard J. Blackwell - 1968 - International Philosophical Quarterly 8 (4):649-651.
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  28.  5
    Voices and Numbers: Spiritual aspects of IT Humanities.S. A. Kolesnikov - forthcoming - Vox Philosophical journal.
    The article examines the situation of the presence of virtual voices in modern reality. The voices of virtual assistants model a new relationship between voice and face, with anonymity and depersonalization being a priority. The closeness of the face from the voice peculiar to virtual assistants, the detachment of the voice from the facial "accompaniment", the fundamental possibility of the existence of a voice without a face — all this gives the voice as an anthropological and cultural phenomenon (...)
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  29. The human person: Vulnerability and responsiveness. Reflections on human dignity, religio and the other's voice.Burkhard Liebsch - 2011 - Naharaim - Zeitschrift Für Deutsch-Jüdische Literatur Und Kulturgeschichte 4 (1).
     
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  30.  2
    The human person: vulnerability and responsiveness. Reflections on human dignity, religio and the other's voice.Burkhard Liebsch - 2010 - Naharaim 4 (1):47-66.
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  31.  9
    Ancient Voices, Contemporary Practice, and Human Musicality.Nicholas Bannan - 2022 - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture 6 (2):71-80.
    Debate continues regarding the purpose and practice of music in relation to participation, cultural origin, and education internationally. A Darwinian approach that sees musical vocalization as the adaptive bridge between animal communication and human language remains hotly disputed where such a model does not suit the prevailing political or social agenda. The two books under review present contrasting viewpoints and evidence, while their concurrent publication illustrates the rich potential for developments in this field. Friedmann’s edited book presents separate chapters (...)
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  32. Human Values in Healthcare Ethics Introduction Many Voices: Human Values in Healthcare Ethics.K. W. M. Fulford, D. Dickenson & T. H. Murray - 2002 - Edited by K. W. M. Fulford, Donna Dickenson & Thomas H. Murray.
    This volume of articles, literature and case studies illustrates the central importance of human values throughout healthcare. The readings are structured around the main stages of the clinical encounter from the patient's perspective.
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  33.  66
    Three Voices/One Message: The Importance of Mimesis for Human Morality.Sally K. Severino & Nancy K. Morrison - 2012 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 19:139-166.
    Our twenty-first century is a time of turbulence. Some of that turbulence is derived from not fully understanding what makes us moral. This article reassesses human morality in order to identify what nurtures and what distorts our moral nature. Such a reassessment potentially offers hope for a way through the escalating violence in our world that currently threatens to destroy us. This article focuses on three voices: the voice of anthropological philosopher René Girard, whose mimetic theory calls us (...)
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  34.  6
    Voice Stress Analysis: A New Framework for Voice and Effort in Human Performance.Martine Van Puyvelde, Xavier Neyt, Francis McGlone & Nathalie Pattyn - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  35.  14
    Unruly Voices: Artists’ Books and Humanities Archives in Health Professions Education.Jennifer S. Tuttle & Cathleen Miller - 2020 - Journal of Medical Humanities 41 (1):53-64.
    Martha A. Hall’s artists’ books documenting her experience of living with breast cancer offer future health professionals a unique opportunity to sit in the patient’s position of vulnerability and fear. Hall’s books have become a cornerstone of our medical humanities pedagogy at the Maine Women Writers Collection because of their emotional directness and their impact on readers. This essay examines the ways that Hall’s call for conversation with healthcare providers is enacted at the University of New England and provides a (...)
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  36.  7
    Human Rights, Southern Voices: Francis Deng, Abdullahi an-Na'im, Yash Ghai and Upendra Baxi.William Twining (ed.) - 2009 - Cambridge University Press.
    A just international order and a healthy cosmopolitan discipline of law need to include perspectives that take account of the standpoints, interests, concerns and beliefs of non-Western people and traditions. The dominant scholarly and activist discourses about human rights have developed largely without reference to these other viewpoints. Claims about universality sit uneasily with ignorance of other traditions and parochial or ethnocentric tendencies. The object of the book is to make accessible the ideas of four jurists who present distinct (...)
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  37.  18
    Voices from the forest: Disputes among human beings and trees in the emergence of a new moral community in the south Chilean mountain range.Juan Carlos Skewes Vodanovic, Lorenzo Palma Morales & Debbie Guerra Maldonado - 2017 - Alpha (Osorno) 45:105-126.
    Resumen: Las cambiantes relaciones entre seres humanos y árboles en los relatos de los habitantes cordilleranos del sur de Chile invitan a revisar los límites de la comunidad moral para incluir en ella a los seres con que se convive y de los que se depende. La presencia de prácticas mapuches cordilleranas de largo aliento junto con las transformaciones experimentadas por las poblaciones madereras y los relatos de las personas que explotaron los árboles nativos se encarnan en conversaciones que invitan (...)
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  38. The Voices of Time: A Cooperative Survey of Man's Views of Time as Expressed by the Sciences and by the Humanities.J. T. Fraser - 1967 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 17 (4):341-343.
     
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  39. Humanizing the Profession: Lawyers Find Their Public Voices Through Blogging.Colin Samuels - 2006 - Nexus 11:89.
     
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  40.  23
    The Voices of time: a cooperative survey of man's views of time as expressed by the sciences and by the humanities.J. T. Fraser (ed.) - 1968 - Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press.
  41.  30
    Voices of chiapas: The zapatistas, Bakhtin, and human rights.Fred Evans - 1999 - Philosophy Today 43 (4):196-210.
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  42. All Human Beings as Mathematical Workers: Sociology of Mathematics as a Voice in Support of the Ethnomathematics Posture and Against Essentialism.Mônica Mesquita & Sal Restivo - 2013 - Philosophy of Mathematics Education Journal 27.
     
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  43.  5
    A Voice of Liberal Education against Teaching Method Renovation: an Implication of Michael Oakeshott’s On Human Conduct.Ju-Byung Park - 2019 - Journal of Moral Education 31 (3):65-87.
  44.  3
    The Voices of Time: A Cooperative Survey of Man’s Views of Time as Expressed by the Sciences and by the Humanities. [REVIEW]Richard J. Blackwell - 1968 - International Philosophical Quarterly 8 (4):649-651.
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  45.  11
    Young Children and Voice Search: What We Know From Human-Computer Interaction Research.Silvia B. Lovato & Anne Marie Piper - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    Young children are prolific question-askers. The growing ubiquity of voice interfaces (e.g., Apple’s Siri, Amazon’s Alexa), as well as the availability of voice input in search fields, now make it possible for children to ask questions via Internet search when they are able to speak clearly, but before they have learned to read and write, typically between 3 and 6 years of age. The prevalence of voice search makes it important to understand children’s changing conceptions of digital devices as a (...)
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  46.  24
    Context, voice and choice: A curricular framework for the medical humanities. [REVIEW]Martin Kohn - 1989 - Journal of Medical Humanities 10 (2):93-98.
    Although the humanities' place in the medical school curriculum has been established, how we can best approach our teaching remains unanswered. A curricular framework which addresses process, as well as subject matter and structure is needed. A process-oriented framework demands that we enhance our student's ability to contextualize experience through multiple realms of meaning; encourage our students in the struggle to find a voice; and once a voice is found, to endow our students with the courage to let it be (...)
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  47.  17
    Socially Responsible Human Resource Management and Employee Moral Voice: Based on the Self-determination Theory.Hongdan Zhao, Yuanhua Chen & Weiwei Liu - 2022 - Journal of Business Ethics 183 (3):929-946.
    Behind the frequent occurrence of business scandals, it is often the silence and connivance of organizational immorality. Moral voice, a kind of employee active moral behavior, inhibits and prevents the organizational unethical phenomenon. Some researchers have sought to explore how to arouse employee moral voice. However, the limited studies mainly investigated the antecedents of leadership styles, ignoring the impact of the organizational factor on moral voice. Based on the self-determination theory, the current study constructs a theoretical model about how socially (...)
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  48.  5
    The Indexical Voice: Communication of Personal States and Traits in Humans and Other Primates.John L. Locke - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Many studies of primate vocalization have been undertaken to improve our understanding of the evolution of language. Perhaps, for this reason, investigators have focused on calls that were thought to carry symbolic information about the environment. Here I suggest that even if these calls were in fact symbolic, there were independent reasons to question this approach in the first place. I begin by asking what kind of communication system would satisfy a species’ biological needs. For example, where animals benefit from (...)
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  49. Introduction: many voices: human values in healthcare ethics.K. W. M. Fulford, D. Dickenson & T. H. Murray - 2002 - In K. W. M. Fulford, Donna Dickenson & Thomas H. Murray (eds.), Healthcare Ethics and Human Values: An Introductory Text with Readings and Case Studies. Blackwell.
    This edited volume illustrates the central importance of diversity of human values throughout healthcare. The readings are organised around the main stages of the clinical encounter from the patient's perspective. This introductory chapter opens up crucial issues of methodology and of practical application in this highly innovative approach to the role of ethics in healthcare.
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  50.  12
    Liberal Democracy, Human Rights, and the Eucharistic Community: Contrasting Voices in American Orthodox Ethics.Philip LeMasters - 2022 - Studies in Christian Ethics 35 (3):486-518.
    The relationship between Eastern Orthodoxy and the political ethos of the West is of crucial importance for contextualizing the Church’s social engagement in the present day. Aristotle Papanikolaou and Vigen Guroian highlight points of tension in their respective accounts of the relationship between the Orthodoxy and western democratic social orders. Analysis of their argument provides a context for examining their contrasting understandings of human rights as a dimension of the public engagement of Orthodox Christians with the political realm. While (...)
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