Results for 'Alison Blay-Palmer'

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  1.  43
    A food politics of the possible? Growing sustainable food systems through networks of knowledge.Alison Blay-Palmer, Roberta Sonnino & Julien Custot - 2016 - Agriculture and Human Values 33 (1):27-43.
    There is increased recognition of a common suite of global challenges that hamper food system sustainability at the community scale. Food price volatility, shortages of basic commodities, increased global rates of obesity and non-communicable food-related diseases, and land grabbing are among the impediments to socially just, economically robust, ecologically regenerative and politically inclusive food systems. While international political initiatives taken in response to these challenges and the groundswell of local alternatives emerging in response to challenges are well documented, more attention (...)
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  2.  16
    Help-Seeking for Mental Health Issues in Professional Rugby League Players.Susanna Kola-Palmer, Kiara Lewis, Alison Rodriguez & Derrol Kola-Palmer - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  3.  72
    Neuroscience and Facial Expressions of Emotion: The Role of Amygdala–Prefrontal Interactions.Paul J. Whalen, Hannah Raila, Randi Bennett, Alison Mattek, Annemarie Brown, James Taylor, Michelle van Tieghem, Alexandra Tanner, Matthew Miner & Amy Palmer - 2013 - Emotion Review 5 (1):78-83.
    The aim of this review is to show the fruitfulness of using images of facial expressions as experimental stimuli in order to study how neural systems support biologically relevant learning as it relates to social interactions. Here we consider facial expressions as naturally conditioned stimuli which, when presented in experimental paradigms, evoke activation in amygdala–prefrontal neural circuits that serve to decipher the predictive meaning of the expressions. Facial expressions offer a relatively innocuous strategy with which to investigate these normal variations (...)
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  4.  22
    Reading Lucretius in the Renaissance by Ada Palmer.Wiep van Bunge - 2016 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 54 (1):164-165.
    This is a truly remarkable first book, based on a Ph.D. thesis. It brilliantly manages to address both the general reader and the experts, is skillfully written and beautifully illustrated. The fate of Epicureanism during the Renaissance has recently drawn considerable attention and produced a series of important monographs by such established authors as Catherine Wilson, Alison Brown, and Stephen Greenblatt. Reading Lucretius in the Renaissance is such a welcome addition to the existing literature because of its special methodology: (...)
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  5. An Introduction to Feminist Philosophy.Alison Stone - 2007 - Malden, MA: Polity.
    This is the first book to offer a systematic account of feminist philosophy as a distinctive field of philosophy. The book introduces key issues and debates in feminist philosophy including: the nature of sex, gender, and the body; the relation between gender, sexuality, and sexual difference; whether there is anything that all women have in common; and the nature of birth and its centrality to human existence. An Introduction to Feminist Philosophy shows how feminist thinking on these and related topics (...)
  6.  41
    Adorno and logic.Alison Stone - unknown
  7.  42
    Petrified Intelligence: Nature in Hegel’s Philosophy.Alison Stone - 2012 - SUNY Press.
    _A critical introduction to Hegel's metaphysics and philosophy of nature._.
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  8.  49
    The Gadamer Reader: A Bouquet of Later Writings.Hans-Georg Gadamer & Richard Palmer - 2007 - Northwestern University Press. Edited by Richard E. Palmer.
    This essay was Gadamer 's position paper in the April 1981 “debate” with Derrida at a conference on “Text and Interpretation” held at the Sorbonne in Paris. In it he discusses his approach to texts and several elements of Derrida's philosophy,..
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  9. Dewey's Critical Pragmatism.Alison Kadlec, Bruno Latour, Peter Weibel & Robert B. Talisse - 2009 - Political Theory 37 (3):423-431.
     
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  10.  17
    Pragmatism, Patronage and Politics in English Biology: The Rise and Fall of Economic Biology 1904–1920.Alison Kraft - 2004 - Journal of the History of Biology 37 (2):213-258.
    The rise of applied biology was one of the most striking features of the biological sciences in the early 20th century. Strongly oriented toward agriculture, this was closely associated with the growth of a number of disciplines, notably, entomology and mycology. This period also saw a marked expansion of the English University system, and biology departments in the newly inaugurated civic universities took an early and leading role in the development of applied biology through their support of Economic Biology. This (...)
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  11.  19
    Accelerated long-term forgetting in aging and intra-sleep awakenings.Alison Mary, Svenia Schreiner & Philippe Peigneux - 2013 - Frontiers in Psychology 4.
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  12. Friedrich Schlegel, Romanticism, and the Re‐enchantment of Nature.Alison Stone - 2005 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 48 (1):3 – 25.
    In this paper I reconstruct Schlegel's idea that romantic poetry can re-enchant nature in a way that is uniquely compatible with modernity's epistemic and political values of criticism, self-criticism, and freedom. I trace several stages in Schlegel's early thinking concerning nature. First, he criticises modern culture for its analytic, reflective form of rationality which encourages a disenchanting view of nature. Second, he re-evaluates this modern form of rationality as making possible an ironic, romantic, poetry, which portrays natural phenomena as mysterious (...)
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  13.  31
    Hegel, Naturalism and the Philosophy of Nature.Alison Stone - 2013 - Hegel Bulletin 34 (1):59-78.
    In this article I consider whether Hegel is a naturalist or an anti-naturalist with respect to his philosophy of nature. I adopt a cluster-based approach to naturalism, on which positions are more or less naturalistic depending how many strands of the clusternaturalismthey exemplify. I focus on two strands: belief that philosophy is continuous with the empirical sciences, and disbelief in supernatural entities. I argue that Hegel regards philosophy of nature as distinct, but not wholly discontinuous, from empirical science and that (...)
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  14.  18
    Early Chinese Migrant Religious Identities in Pre-1947 Canada.Alison R. Marshall - 2023 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 43 (1):235-246.
    abstract: Religion for many of Canada's earliest Chinese community was not about faith or belief in God, the Buddha, or the Goddess of Compassion (Guanyin). While the majority of Chinese migrants did not convert to Christianity or Buddhism before 1947, a very large number of them joined and became converted to Chinese nationalism (Zhongguo guomindang, aka KMT). This paper reflects on the findings of sixteen years of ethnographic and archival research to understand how sixty-two years of institutionalized racism in Canada, (...)
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  15.  32
    Sexing the state : familial and political form in Irigaray and Hegel.Alison Stone - 2006 - Radical Philosophy 113:24-36.
  16.  71
    Global biopolitics and the history of world health.Alison Bashford - 2006 - History of the Human Sciences 19 (1):67-88.
    Many scholars have historicized biopolitics with reference to the emergence of sovereign nations and their colonial extensions over the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. This article begins to conceptualize and trace the history of biopolitics beyond the nation, arguing that the history of world health - the great 20th-century reach of 19th-century health and hygiene - should be understood as a vital politics of population on a newly large field of play. This substantive history of world health and world population (...)
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  17.  14
    The Edinburgh Critical History of Nineteenth-Century Philosophy.Alison Stone - unknown
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  18. Debating Feminist Futures: Slippery Slopes, Cultural Anxiety, and the Case of the Deaf Lesbians.Alison Kafer - 2011 - In Kim Q. Hall (ed.), Feminist Disability Studies. Indiana University Press.
     
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  19.  36
    Mad Pride and the Medical Model.Alison Jost - 2009 - Hastings Center Report 39 (4):3-3.
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  20.  16
    Irigaray's Ecological Phenomenology: Towards an Elemental Materialism.Alison Stone - 2015 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 46 (2):117-131.
    This article provides an interpretation of the ecophenomenological dimension of Luce Irigaray's work. It shows that Irigaray builds upon Heidegger's recovery of the ancient sense of nature as physis, self-emergence into presence. But, against Heidegger, Irigaray insists that self-emergence is a material process undergone by fluid elements, such as air and water, of which the world is basically composed. This article shows that this “elemental materialist” position need not conflict with modern science. However, the article criticises Irigaray's claim that men (...)
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  21.  70
    Narratives of Aging and the Human Rights of Older Persons.Alison Kesby - 2017 - Human Rights Review 18 (4):371-393.
    Amid intensifying calls for an international convention on the rights of older persons, it is timely and important to examine the different narratives of aging that are informing and shaping debates on the human rights of older persons and to explore their implications. The article examines the dominant and competing narratives of aging emerging from public policy and gerontological studies, most notably, aging as a crisis or burden; aging as pathology; conceptions of successful, productive or active aging; and finally, aging (...)
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  22.  53
    The Shifting and Multiple Border and International Law.Alison Kesby - 2005 - Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 27 (1):101-119.
    The question of how the ‘border’ is conceived in international law, and how it shapes identity and peoples’ lives, remains largely unexplored in the international legal literature. This article seeks to contribute to our understanding of the meaning of the border in international law, and in the contemporary context, by drawing on the work of the philosopher and political theorist, Étienne Balibar, and by reflecting, in the light of his work, on the recent decision of the House of Lords in (...)
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  23.  6
    Teaching a Women's Rights Course in a Secondary School.Alison Kirton - 1983 - Feminist Review 15 (1):81-87.
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  24.  48
    II—Europe and Eurocentrism.Alison Stone - 2017 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 91 (1):83-104.
    In this article I explore how philosophical thinking about God, reason, humanity and history has shaped ideas of Europe, focusing on Hegel. For Hegel, Europe is the civilization that, by way of Christianity, has advanced the spirit of freedom which originated in Greece. Hegel is a Eurocentrist whose work indicates how Eurocentrism as a broader discourse has shaped received conceptions of Europe. I then distinguish ‘external’ and ‘internal’ ways of approaching ideas of Europe and defend the former approach, on which (...)
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  25.  5
    Thinking through breasts: Writing maternity.Alison Bartlett - 2000 - Feminist Theory 1 (2):173-188.
    This article begins by wondering how the writer’s transformation into motherhood affects her practice of reading, writing and research: how maternities are made academic. Specifically, this article is interested in thinking through lactating breasts, as a particularly complex and potentially subversive ‘performance’ of maternity. In addition, this article reframes ‘maternal thinking’ through 1990s theories of embodiment and corporeality, and asks how embodied practices like breastfeeding might be theorized, as well as how ‘embodied theory’ might be practised. In looking at various (...)
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  26. Hiking boots and wheelchairs : ecofeminism, the body, and physical disability.Alison Kafer - 2005 - In Barbara S. Andrew, Jean Clare Keller & Lisa H. Schwartzman (eds.), Feminist Interventions in Ethics and Politics: Feminist Ethics and Social Theory. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
  27.  11
    Feminism, Religion and This Incredible Need to Believe: Working with Julia Kristeva Again.Alison Jasper - 2013 - Feminist Theology 21 (3):279-294.
    In This Incredible Need to Believe, philosopher Julia Kristeva identifies the present as a time of crisis identified with ‘ideality’; historically significant cultural idealizations are failing us, leading to social and cultural breakdown, which Kristeva believes is not being addressed in ‘secular’ western societies. Remarkably, she defends the universal significance of what she defines as ‘belief’, revisiting earlier work on language, literature and the unconscious, against the background of a recent revival of interest in ‘religion’. In an introductory way, this (...)
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  28.  26
    Michèle Roberts: Female Genius and the Theology of an English Novelist.Alison Jasper - 2011 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 1 (1):61-75.
    Michèle Roberts: Female Genius and the Theology of an English Novelist Since Simone de Beauvoir published The Second Sex in 1949, feminist analysis has tended to assume that the conditions of male normativity—reducing woman to the merely excluded "Other" of man—holds true in the experience of all women, not the least, women in the context of Christian praxis and theology. Beauvoir's powerful analysis—showing us how problematic it is to establish a position outside patriarchy's dominance of our conceptual fields—has helped to (...)
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  29.  14
    MORTAL VULNERABILITIES: reflecting on death and dying with pamela sue anderson.Alison Jasper - 2020 - Angelaki 25 (1-2):97-108.
    A consideration of some of the embedded themes with which Pamela Sue Anderson was concerned during her career will bear out the suggestion that her approach to enhancing life was richly engaging and distinctive. However, it is perhaps the idea of vulnerability, most of all, that crystallizes this distinctiveness and addresses the aims of the Enhancing Life Project with which she was associated at the time of her death in March 2017, but also brings her philosophy as well as her (...)
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  30.  12
    Professor Dorota Filipczak In Memoriam.Alison Jasper - 2021 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 11:9-14.
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  31.  7
    ‘RE/trs’ is a Girl’s Subject: Talking about Gender and the Discourse of ‘Religion’ in UK Educational Spaces.Alison Jasper - 2015 - Feminist Theology 24 (1):69-78.
    This article addresses what appears to be a retrenchment into narrower forms of identification and an increased suspicion of difference in the context of educational policy in the UK – especially in relation to ‘Religious Education’. The adoption of standardized management protocols – ‘managerialism’ – across most if not all policy contexts including public educational spaces reduces spaces for encountering or addressing genuine difference and for discovering something new and creative. A theory of the ‘feminization of religion’ associated historically with (...)
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  32. Recollecting Religion in the Realm of the Body (or Body©).Alison Jasper - 2004 - In Pamela Sue Anderson & Beverley Clack (eds.), Feminist philosophy of religion: critical readings. New York: Routledge. pp. 170--182.
     
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  33.  9
    Raising the Dead? Reflections on Feminist Biblical Criticism in the Light of Pamela Sue Anderson's Book: A Feminist Philosophy of Religion, 1988.Alison Jasper - 2001 - Feminist Theology 9 (26):110-120.
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  34.  5
    ‘The Past Is Not A Husk Yet Change Goes On’: Reimagining (Feminist) Theology.Alison Jasper - 2007 - Feminist Theology 15 (2):202-219.
    Feminism is still often dismissed as an outmoded or discredited concept, out of touch with the feelings and desires of real women and men or antithetical to any proper vision of Christianity. So for the feminist theologian it is as important as ever to find ways of discriminating between truth and falsity and of discerning a future path. In this piece I try to articulate one possible feminist approach using insights from the work of philosophers Deleuze and Guattari—particularly on assemblages—and (...)
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  35.  34
    Taking Sides on Severed Heads: Kristeva at the Louvre.Alison Jasper - 2014 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 4 (4):173-183.
    The theorist and philosopher Julia Kristeva is invited to curate an exhibition at the Louvre in Paris as part of a series-Parti Pris - and to turn this into a book, The Severed Head: Capital Visions. The organiser, Régis Michel, wants something partisan, that will challenge people to think, and Kristeva delivers in response a collection of severed heads neatly summarising her critique of the whole of western culture! Three figures dominate, providing a key to making sense of the exhibition: (...)
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  36.  8
    Womanspirit Still Rising? Some Feminist Reflections on ‘Religious Education’ in the UK.Alison Jasper - 2015 - Feminist Theology 23 (3):240-253.
    It is a complex and sometimes frustrating business to effect change that is in accordance with recognizably feminist principles in the world as it is and we inevitably risk confrontation, misunderstanding and compromise. In this paper I consider some of the complexities and obstacles to effecting feminist-friendly changes in educational spaces with specific reference to the field of teaching most familiar to a majority of us – Religion/religious Studies or Theology and Religious Studies. I suggest an approach to change based (...)
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  37.  2
    Learning greek in late antique Gaul.Alison John - 2020 - Classical Quarterly 70 (2):846-864.
    Greek had held an important place in Roman society and culture since the Late Republican period, and educated Romans were expected to be bilingual and well versed in both Greek and Latin literature. The Roman school ‘curriculum’ was based on Hellenistic educational culture, and in the De grammaticis et rhetoribus Suetonius says that the earliest teachers in Rome, Livius and Ennius, were ‘poets and half Greeks’, who taught both Latin and Greek ‘publicly and privately’ and ‘merely clarified the meaning of (...)
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  38. Perspective: Mad Pride and the Medical Model.Alison Jost - forthcoming - Hastings Center Report.
     
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  39. Universities and community colleges.Alison Kadlec & Mario Martinez - 2015 - In Mark Schneider & K. C. Deane (eds.), The university next door: what is a comprehensive university, who does it educate, and can it survive? New York: Teachers College, Columbia University.
     
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  40. Ethics of WIldife Management and Conservation: What Should we Try To Protect?Christian Gambourg, Clare Palmer & Peter Sandoe - 2012 - Nature Education Knowledge 3 (7):8.
  41.  55
    Love, Socrates, and Pedagogy.Alison Assiter - 2013 - Educational Theory 63 (3):253-263.
    A recent report on the UK's higher education system by Lord John Browne exemplifies the dominant trend in education policy initiatives toward a focus on education primarily for employment and for the acquisition of skills. In this essay, Alison Assiter argues that such an entrepreneurial approach neglects essential aspects of the processes of teaching and learning. She draws on the work of Hannah Arendt, who saw the proper role of education as imparting the love of a subject, to critique (...)
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  42.  81
    The Man Blind from Birth and the Subversion of Sin: Some Questions About Fundamental Morals.James Alison - 1997 - Contagion: Journal of Violence, Mimesis, and Culture 4 (1):26-46.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:THE MAN BLIND FROM BIRTH AND THE SUBVERSION OF SIN: SOME QUESTIONS ABOUT FUNDAMENTAL MORALS1 James Alison I would like to undertake with you a reading of a passage from the Bible, John Chapter 9. I hope that we will see this chapter yield some interesting insights in the light of my attempt to apply to it the mimetic theory ofRené Girard. I'm not going to expound mimetic (...)
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  43. Hegel on women, law, and contract.Alison Stone - 2014 - In Maria Drakopoulou (ed.), Feminist Encounters with Legal Philosophy.
  44.  2
    First principles of philosophy.Manly Palmer Hall - 1935 - Los Angeles, Calif.,: The Phoenix press.
    This simple and informal approach to the study of philosophy offers a straightforward explanation and interpretation of the seven departments of philosophy: Metaphysics, the Nature of Being and of God; Logic, the Rule of Reason: Ethics, the Code of Conduct: Psychology, the Science of the Soul; Epistemology, the Nature of Knowledge: Esthetics, the Urge to Beauty; and Theurgy, the Living of Wisdom.
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  45.  4
    He freed the minds of men: René Descartes.Edwin Palmer Hoyt - 1969 - New York,: Messner.
    A biography of the seventeenth-century French mathematician and philosopher whose revolutionary methods of reasoning greatly influenced future scientific thinking.
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  46.  17
    Women Philosophers in the Long Nineteenth Century: The German Tradition ed. by Kristin Gjesdal and Dalia Nassar (review).Alison Stone - 2023 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 61 (2):336-337.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Women Philosophers in the Long Nineteenth Century: The German Tradition ed. by Kristin Gjesdal and Dalia NassarAlison StoneKristin Gjesdal and Dalia Nassar, editors. Women Philosophers in the Long Nineteenth Century: The German Tradition. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2021. Pp. 336. Hardback, $99.00."How plausible, [Dalia Nassar and I] kept asking, is it that women published philosophy in the early modern period and then simply ceased to think and publish (...)
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  47. Irigaray and Hölderlin on the relation between nature and culture.Alison Stone - 2003 - Continental Philosophy Review 36 (4):415-432.
    This paper explores the compatibility of Luce Irigaray's recent insistence on the need to revalue nature, and to recognise culture's natural roots, with her earlier advocacy of social transformation towards a culture of sexual difference. Prima facie, there is tension between Irigaray's political imperatives, for if culture really is continuous with nature, this implies that our existing, non-sexuate, culture is naturally grounded and unchallengeable. To dissolve this tension, Irigaray must conceive culture as having self-transformative agency without positioning culture as active (...)
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  48.  18
    Border Medicine.Alison Bashford - 2005 - Metascience 14 (3):423-425.
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  49.  18
    Intervening in International Health.Alison Bashford - 2008 - Metascience 17 (1):69-71.
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  50.  16
    Political Descent: Malthus, Mutualism, and the Politics of Evolution in Victorian England.Alison Bashford - 2015 - Annals of Science 72 (3):411-413.
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