Results for 'Ades Dawn'

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  1. Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 167, 2009 Lectures.Adès Dawn - 2011
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  2. Marcel Duchamp and the Paradox of Modernity.Dawn Ades - 1996 - In Ades Dawn (ed.), Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 90: 1995 Lectures and Memoirs. pp. 129-145.
     
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  3.  18
    Surrealism and its Legacies in Latin America.Dawn Adès - 2011 - In Adès Dawn (ed.), Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 167, 2009 Lectures. pp. 393.
    This chapter presents the text of a lecture on the legacies of surrealism in Latin America given at the 2009 British Academy Lecture Series. This text discusses the tensions between surrealist internationalism and local cultural nationalisms, the contested relationship between surrealism and Magic Realism, and the enduring surrealist fascination with Pre-Columbian art and architecture. It analyzes the works of Mexican artists Frida Kahlo and Gunther Gerzso and works of contemporary Brazilian artist Cildo Meireles. It contents that art from Latin America (...)
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  4. Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 90: 1995 Lectures and Memoirs.Ades Dawn - 1996
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  5. Joseph Acquisto. French Symbolist Poetry and the Idea of Music (Aldershot, UK: Ashgate, 2006), viii+ 193 pp.£ 50.00 cloth. Dawn Ades and Simon Baker. Undercover Surrealism: Georges Bataille and Documents (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2006), 272 pp. $38.00 paper. Alain Badiou. Briefings on Existence: A Short Treatise on Transitory Ontology (Albany. [REVIEW]Carollee Bengelsdorf, Margaret Cerullo & Yogesh Chandrani - 2007 - The European Legacy 12 (5):659-661.
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  6.  9
    Surrealism: Key Concepts.Krzysztof Fijalkowski & Michael Richardson (eds.) - 2016 - Routledge.
    Emerging from the disruption of the First World War, surrealism confronted the resulting ‘crisis of consciousness’ in a way that was arguably more profound than any other cultural movement of the time._ _The past few decades have seen an expansion of interest in surrealist writers, whose contribution to the history of ideas in the twentieth-century is only now being recognised._ Surrealism: Key Concepts_ is the first book in English to present an overview of surrealism through the central ideas motivating the (...)
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  7.  40
    Developmental changes within the core of artifact concepts.Adee Matan & Susan Carey - 2001 - Cognition 78 (1):1-26.
  8.  27
    Sensation and Perception in the History of Experimental Psychology.Harlow W. Ades - 1943 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 4 (1):104-106.
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  9.  4
    Adès chez Bergson: reliques inconnues d'une amitié.Albert Adès - 1949 - Paris,: [S.N.].
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  10.  20
    Media-reported corporate governance transgressions in broad-based black economic empowerment deals in the South African mining sector.Adèle Thomas - 2014 - African Journal of Business Ethics 8 (2).
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  11. Di balik sertifikasi Hak atas tanah dalam perspektif pluralisme hukum.Ade Saptomo - unknown
     
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  12.  26
    Attitudes of management students towards workplace ethics: A comparative study between South Africa and Cyprus.Adèle Thomas, Maria Krambia- Kapardis & Anastasios Zopiatis - 2014 - African Journal of Business Ethics 3 (1):1.
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  13.  15
    The Sacred.Wernmei Yong Ade - 2012 - Philosophy Today 56 (2):221-231.
  14.  61
    Relations between innate endowments, cognitive development, domain specificity, and a taxonomy-creator.Adee Matan & Sidney Strauss - 1998 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21 (4):584-584.
    Atran proposes that humans have a unique, innate, domain-specific tendency to create taxonomies of biological kinds. We show that: (1) in ontogenesis, children develop a notion Atran claims to be innate; (2) what Atran claims is unique to biological kinds may be found in artifact kinds; and (3) although Atran proposes a domain-specific mental construct for biological rank, it can be explained in domain- general terms.
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  15. Right and Duty to Emergency Care Under the Provision of Indonesian Health Act 36/2009.Ade Firmansyah Sugiharto - 2010 - Asian Bioethics Review 2 (3):195-201.
     
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  16.  46
    How Not to Individuate Destiny: a Critique of Segun Ogungbemi’s Conception of Destiny.Olúkáyọ̀dé R. Adéṣuyì - 2019 - Philosophia 47 (5):1391-1404.
    The social nature of human beings and individualistic characterizing destiny of individuals is contradictory and call for philosophical interrogation. Segun Ogungbemi has unrepentantly argued that destiny is individualistic and neither connective nor collective. This paper critiques Segun Ogungbemi’s conception of destiny, instead, argues for connectiveness and collectiveness of destiny. It argues that destiny, as an individualistic phenomenon, challenges and raises the Yorùbá notion of corporate communal existence. The paper concludes that individuating destiny is not only a non-plausible conception; it is (...)
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  17.  10
    Catamania: the dissonance of female pleasure and dissent.Adèle Olivia Gladwell - 1995 - Monroe, Or.: Distributors to the US book trade, Subterranean Company.
    A radical, compelling study of the female voice.,Multi-contextual theorist Gladwell puts forward,her analysis of the polemic of feminist rhetorical,discourse as it presents a fresh and vital,approach to an anatomy of female subjectivity,through precise listening and the audacity to,speak aloud.
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  18. Photography and causation: Responding to Scruton's scepticism.Dawn M. Phillips - 2009 - British Journal of Aesthetics 49 (4):327-340.
    According to Roger Scruton, it is not possible for photographs to be representational art. Most responses to Scruton’s scepticism are versions of the claim that Scruton disregards the extent to which intentionality features in photography; but these cannot force him to give up his notion of the ideal photograph. My approach is to argue that Scruton has misconstrued the role of causation in his discussion of photography. I claim that although Scruton insists that the ideal photograph is defined by its (...)
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  19.  6
    Negotiating bioethics: the governance of UNESCO's Bioethics Programme.Adèle Langlois - 2013 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    The sequencing of the entire human genome has opened up unprecedented possibilities for healthcare, but also ethical and social dilemmas about how these can be achieved, particularly in developing countries. UNESCO's Bioethics Programme was established to address such issues in 1993. Since then, it has adopted three declarations on human genetics and bioethics (1997, 2003 and 2005), set up numerous training programmes around the world and debated the need for an international convention on human reproductive cloning. Negotiating Bioethics presents Langlois' (...)
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  20.  21
    On the Order of Words.Anthony E. Ades - 1980 - Linguistics and Philosophy 4:517.
  21. Nārī-vaibhava.Adeśakumārī Jaina (ed.) - 1992 - Akalūja, Ji. Solāpūra: Sonāja Āṇi Kampanī.
    Contributed articles on the role and position of women in society according to Jainism.
     
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  22. On the order of words.Anthony E. Ades & Mark J. Steedman - 1982 - Linguistics and Philosophy 4 (4):517 - 558.
    There is no doubt that the model presented here is incomplete. Many important categories, particularly negation and the adverbials, have been entirely ignored, and the treatment of Tense and the affixes is certainly inadequate. It also remains to be seen how the many constructions that have been ignored here are to be accommodated within the framework that has been outlined. However, the fact that a standard categorial lexicon, plus the four rule schemata, seems to come close to exhaustively specifying the (...)
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  23. Heidegger Teaching: An analysis and interpretation of pedagogy.Dawn C. Riley - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (8):797-815.
    German philosopher Martin Heidegger stirred educators when in 1951 he claimed teaching is more difficult than learning because teachers must ‘learn to let learn’. However in the main he left the aphorism unexplained as part of a brief four-paragraph, less than two-page set of observations concerning the relationship of teaching to learning; and concluded at the end of those observations that to become a teacher is an ‘exalted matter’. This paper investigates both of Heidegger's claims, interpreting letting learn in the (...)
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  24.  48
    An Exceptional Path: An Ethnographic Narrative Reflecting on Autistic Parenthood from Evolutionary, Cultural, and Spiritual Perspectives.Dawn Eddings Prince - 2010 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 38 (1):56-68.
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  25. Institutionalization of organizational ethics through transformational leadership.Dawn S. Carlson & Pamela L. Perrewe - 1995 - Journal of Business Ethics 14 (10):829 - 838.
    Concerns regarding corporate ethics have grown steadily throughout the past decade. In order to remain competitive, many organizational leaders are faced with the challenge of creating an ethical environment within their organization. A model is presented showing the process and elements necessary for the institutionalization of organizational ethics. The transformational leadership style lends itself well to the creation of an ethical environment and is suggested as a means to facilitate the institutionalization of corporate ethics. Finally, the benefits of using transformational (...)
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  26.  31
    An investigation of the moral reasoning of managers.Dawn R. Elm & Mary Lippitt Nichols - 1993 - Journal of Business Ethics 12 (11):817 - 833.
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  27.  63
    Facing the Camera: Self‐portraits of Photographers as Artists.Dawn M. Wilson - 2012 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 70 (1):56-66.
    Self-portrait photography presents an elucidatory range of cases for investigating the relationship between automatism and artistic agency in photography— a relationship that is seen as a problem in the philosophy of art. I discuss self-portraits by photographers who examine and portray their own identities as artists working in the medium of photography. I argue that the automatism inherent in the production of a photograph has made it possible for artists to extend the tradition of self-portraiture in a way that is (...)
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  28.  34
    Constrained Morality in the Professional Work of Corporate Lawyers.Dawn Yi Lin Chow & Thomas Calvard - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 170 (2):213-228.
    In this article, we contribute to sociological literatures on morality, professional and institutional contexts, and morally stigmatized ‘dirty work’ by emphasizing and exploring how they mutually inform one another in lawyers’ work activities. Drawing on interview data with 58 practitioners in the commercial legal industry in Singapore, we analyze how they experience professional and institutional constraints on the expressions of morality in their work. Our findings illustrate how a dominant managerial and economic focus maintains and reproduces a constrained form of (...)
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  29.  55
    Sunsets and Solidarity: Overcoming Sacramental Shame in Conservative Christian Churches to Forge a Queer Vision of Love and Justice.Dawne Moon & Theresa Weynand Tobin - 2018 - Hypatia 33 (3):451-468.
    Drawing from our interdisciplinary qualitative study of LGBTI conservative Christians and their allies, we name an especially toxic form of shame—what we call sacramental shame—that affects the lives of LGBTI and other conservative Christians. Sacramental shame results from conservative Christianity's allegiance to the doctrine of gender complementarity, which elevates heteronormativity to the level of the sacred and renders those who violate it as not persons, but monsters. In dispensing shame as a sacrament, nonaffirming Christians require constant displays of shame as (...)
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  30.  48
    VII—Reflecting, Registering, Recording and Representing: From Light Image to Photographic Picture.Dawn M. Wilson - 2022 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 122 (2):141-164.
    Photography is valued as a medium for recording and visually reproducing features of the world. I seek to challenge the view that photography is fundamentally a recording process and that every photograph is a record—a view that I claim is based on a ‘single-stage’ misconception of the process. I propose an alternative, ‘multi-stage’ account in which I argue that causal registration of light is not equivalent to recording and reproducing an image. Intervention or non-intervention by photographers is more sophisticated than (...)
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  31.  12
    A expressão da modularidade.César Ades - 2009 - Scientiae Studia 7 (2):283-308.
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  32.  16
    Of cultural dissonance: the UK’s adult literacy policies and the creation of democratic learning spaces.Gordon Ade-Ojo & Vicky Duckworth - unknown
    The broad aim of this paper is to track the evolution of adult literacy policy in the UK across three decades, highlighting convergences between policy phases and the promotion of democratic learning spaces. It is anchored onto the argument that, although it is generally accepted that democratic learning spaces are perceived as beneficial to adult literacy learners, policy has often deterred its promotion and, therefore, implementation. The paper identifies three block phases of adult literacy development: the seventies to mid-eighties, the (...)
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  33.  38
    Time for a purge.Tony Ades - 1981 - Cognition 10 (1-3):7-15.
  34.  44
    The Sacred.Wernmei Yong Ade - 2012 - Philosophy Today 56 (2):221-231.
  35.  10
    From Orality to Visuality: Panegyric and Photography in Contemporary Lagos, Nigeria.Adélékè Adéè̇ó - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 38 (2):330-361.
    A new line of self projection magazines that started blooming in Lagos, Nigeria, about the mid-1990s defined itself by filling almost completely every issue with photographs that depict politicians, businesspeople, sports and show business stars enjoying fruits of their extraordinary achievements on festive occasions. The magazine’s cozy coverage of the rich and famous irks a lot of serious cultural and literary critics who believe that this style resembles praise singing too closely. This paper, unlike mainline criticisms of the pictorial magazines, (...)
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  36.  21
    Discourses of collaborative failure: identity, role and discourse in an interdisciplinary world.Dawn Freshwater, Jane Cahill & Chris Essen - 2014 - Nursing Inquiry 21 (1):59-68.
    Discourses of interdisciplinary health‐care are becoming more centralised in the context of global healthcare practices, which are increasingly based on multisystem interventions. As with all dominant discourses that are narrated into being, many others have been silenced and decentralised in the process. While questions of the nature and constituents of interdisciplinary practices continue to be debated and rehearsed, this paper focuses on the discourse of interdisciplinary collaboration using psychiatry as an example, with the aim of highlighting competing and alternative discourses. (...)
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  37.  56
    Invisible Images and Indeterminacy: Why We Need a Multi-stage Account of Photography.Dawn M. Wilson - 2021 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 79 (2):161-174.
    Some photographs show determinate features of a scene because the photographed scene had those features. This dependency relation is, rightly, a consensus in philosophy of photography. I seek to refute many long-established theories of photography by arguing that they are incompatible with this commitment. In Section II, I classify accounts of photography as either single-stage or multi-stage. In Section III, I analyze the historical basis for single-stage accounts. In Section IV, I explain why the single-stage view led scientists to postulate (...)
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  38.  42
    Multidisciplinarity, Interdisciplinarity, and Bridging Disciplines: A Matter of Process.Dawn Youngblood - 2007 - Journal of Research Practice 3 (2):Article M18.
    Bridging disciplines have much to teach us about how to combine analytical tools to tackle problems and questions that cross traditional disciplinary boundaries. This article uses examples from the older bridging disciplines of geography and anthropology in order to consider what the relatively young undertaking labeled “interdisciplinary studies” can learn from their long existence. It explains what is meant by the fallacy of nomothetic claim and considers the fruitful production of answers and solutions by viewing process (methodology) not domain (academic (...)
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  39.  10
    Regulation in the cell nuleus. BSCB meeting, 20–22 April 1995; University of Kent in Canterbury.Dawn E. Walters - 1995 - Bioessays 17 (9):825-827.
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  40. Fixing the Image: Re-thinking the 'Mind-independence' of Photographs.Dawn M. Phillips - 2009 - Postgraduate Journal of Aesthetics 6 (2):1-22.
    We are told by philosophers that photographs are a distinct category of image because the photographic process is mind-independent. Furthermore, that the experience of viewing a photograph has a special status, justified by a viewer’s knowledge that the photographic process is mind-independent. Versions of these ideas are central to discussions of photography in both the philosophy of art and epistemology and have far-reaching implications for science, forensics and documentary journalism. Mind-independence (sometimes ‘belief independence’) is a term employed to highlight what (...)
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  41.  16
    Differences between decisions made using verbal or numerical quantifiers.Dawn Liu, Marie Juanchich, Miroslav Sirota & Sheina Orbell - 2020 - Thinking and Reasoning 27 (1):69-96.
    Past research suggests that people process verbal quantifiers differently from numerical ones, but this suggestion has yet to be formally tested. Drawing from traditional correlates of dual-process...
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  42.  53
    D. H. Lawrence on cézanne: A study in the psychology of critical intuition.John Adkins Richardson & John I. Ades - 1970 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 28 (4):441-453.
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  43.  32
    The Ability of Not Knowing: Feminist Experience of the Impossible in Ethical Singularity.Dawn Rae Davis - 2002 - Hypatia 17 (2):145-161.
    In neocolonial contexts of globalization, the epistemological terrain of radical diversity poses significant ethical challenges to transnational feminisms. In view of historical associations between knowledge and discourses of love which were conditioned by imperialist brands of humanism and benevolence under colonialism, this paper argues for a deconstructionist approach to conceptualizing love in relation to knowledge and for an ethics that severs the association with benevolence, instead making alterity the basis for its account.
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  44. Reading literature and doing philosophy.Dawn M. Phillips - manuscript
    In this paper I make a comparison between the imaginative activity of reading literature and the elucidatory activity of doing philosophy. My aim is to highlight significant features of a non-traditional view of philosophical method – inspired by Wittgenstein.
     
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  45.  17
    Contemplating Colobus.Dawn Starin - 2009 - Philosophy Now 72:52-54.
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  46.  9
    Pollen maturation: Where ubiquitin is not required?Dawn Worrall & David Twell - 1994 - Bioessays 16 (12):873-875.
    A recent paper(1) describing the stage‐specific loss of ubiquitin (UBQ) and ubiquitinated proteins (UBQ‐Ps) during pollen development has raised some interesting questions regarding our understanding of the regulation of protein turnover during cellular differentiation and the specialized development of the pollen grain. The authors, Callis and Bedinger(1), describe experiments in which the profiles of free and protein‐conjugated ubiquitin were examined during pollen development. UBQ and UBQ‐Ps were immunologically detected in extracts of microspores and maturing pollen of maize at six developmental (...)
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  47.  31
    Wittgenstein’s ‘Picture Theory’ and the Æsthetic Experience of Clear Thoughts.Dawn M. Phillips - 2011 - In David Wagner, Wolfram Pichler, Elisabeth Nemeth & Richard Heinrich (eds.), Publications of the Austrian Ludwig Wittgenstein Society - N.S. 17. De Gruyter. pp. 143-161.
    In the Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus Wittgenstein appeals to clarity when he characterises the aim, task and results of philosophy. In this essay I suggest that his ‘picture theory’ of language implies that clarity has aesthetic significance in philosophical work. Wittgenstein claims that the task of philosophy is to make thoughts clear. In the ‘picture theory’ of thought and language, a thought expressed in language is a proposition with a sense and a proposition is a picture of reality. The question I pose (...)
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  48.  12
    What Returns? Comprehending the “Boomerang Effect” in advance.Dawn Herrera - forthcoming - Arendt Studies.
    The “boomerang thesis” enjoys widespread currency in contemporary scholarship: that the means and ends of colonial domination would “spin back” to the metropole is an idea with intuitive grip. This article extrapolates the depth of meaning this metaphor contains, as well as what it conceals. It first considers the “boomerang” as it appears in Aimé Césaire’s Discourse on Colonialism, a poetic work that captures the moral and experiential return-effects of imperial violence. Turning to Hannah Arendt’s The Origins of Totalitarianism—the only (...)
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  49.  36
    Revisiting the P anopticon: professional regulation, surveillance and sousveillance.Dawn Freshwater, Pamela Fisher & Elizabeth Walsh - 2015 - Nursing Inquiry 22 (1):3-12.
    In this article, we will consider how the regulation of populations is not just a feature of prisons, but of all institutions and organisations that control members though hierarchies, divisions and norms. While nurses and other allied health professionals are considered to be predominantly self‐regulatory, practice is guided by a code of conduct and codes of ethics that act as rules that serve to uphold the safety of the patient, whether they are a sick person in a hospital bed or (...)
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  50.  29
    Social Justice and the Ethics of Recognition.Dawn Jakubowski - 2003 - Southwest Philosophy Review 19 (1):107-114.
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