Results for 'Anthony Fc Wallace'

999 found
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  1.  33
    Commentary:“Growing Up Indian”: Childhood and the Survival of Nations.Anthony Fc Wallace - 2013 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 41 (4):337-340.
  2.  32
    The Consciousness of Time.Anthony Fc Wallace - 2005 - Anthropology of Consciousness 16 (2):1-15.
  3.  9
    Conceptual differences amongst the data collection instruments used in clinical audit.Anthony Hopkins, Penny Irwin & Henrietta Wallace - 1996 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 2 (2):153-156.
  4.  10
    An investigation of basic facial expression recognition in autism spectrum disorders.Simon Wallace, Michael Coleman & Anthony Bailey - 2008 - Cognition and Emotion 22 (7):1353-1380.
    This study was designed to test three competing hypotheses (impaired configural processing; impaired Theory of Mind; atypical amygdala functioning) to explain the basic facial expression recognition profile of adults with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). In Experiment 1 the Ekman and Friesen (1976) series were presented upright and inverted. Individuals with ASD were significantly less accurate than controls at recognising upright facial expressions of fear, sadness and disgust and their pattern of errors suggested some configural processing difficulties. Impaired recognition of inverted (...)
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  5.  57
    Rituals: Sacred and profane.Anthony F. C. Wallace - 1966 - Zygon 1 (1):60-81.
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  6.  8
    Technology in Culture: The Meaning of Cultural Fit.Anthony F. C. Wallace - 1995 - Science in Context 8 (2):293-324.
    The ArgumentThe thesis of this paper is that there are three basic processes by which a technological innovation is fitted into an existing culture: Rejection, in situations where all interested groups are satisfied with a traditional technology and reject apparently superior innovations because they would force unwanted changes in technology and ideology; Acceptance, in situations where a new technology is embraced by all because it appears to serve the same social and ideological functions as an inferior, or inoperative, traditional technology; (...)
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  7.  33
    Perceptions of order and richness in human cultures.Anthony F. C. Wallace - 1971 - Zygon 6 (2):151-156.
  8.  10
    The industrialist as hero: An emerging educational theme in nineteenth century America.Anthony F. C. Wallace - 1981 - Educational Studies 12 (1):69-83.
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  9. Insights & Perspectives.David S. Goodsell, Wallace F. Marshall, Anthony M. Poole, Takehiko Kobayashi, Austen Rd Ganley, Bertrand Jordan, Luke Isbel, Emma Whitelaw, Dylan Owen & Astrid Magenau - unknown - Bioessays 34:718 - 720.
     
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  10.  14
    Ethics, Literature, and Theory: An Introductory Reader.Wayne C. Booth, Dudley Barlow, Orson Scott Card, Anthony Cunningham, John Gardner, Marshall Gregory, John J. Han, Jack Harrell, Richard E. Hart, Barbara A. Heavilin, Marianne Jennings, Charles Johnson, Bernard Malamud, Toni Morrison, Georgia A. Newman, Joyce Carol Oates, Jay Parini, David Parker, James Phelan, Richard A. Posner, Mary R. Reichardt, Nina Rosenstand, Stephen L. Tanner, John Updike, John H. Wallace, Abraham B. Yehoshua & Bruce Young (eds.) - 2005 - Sheed & Ward.
    Do the rich descriptions and narrative shapings of literature provide a valuable resource for readers, writers, philosophers, and everyday people to imagine and confront the ultimate questions of life? Do the human activities of storytelling and complex moral decision-making have a deep connection? What are the moral responsibilities of the artist, critic, and reader? What can religious perspectives—from Catholic to Protestant to Mormon—contribute to literary criticism? Thirty well known contributors reflect on these questions, including iterary theorists Marshall Gregory, James Phelan, (...)
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  11.  5
    A Bibliographical Problem in the Works of Wallace.Anthony Manser - 1983 - Hegel Bulletin 4 (1):52.
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  12.  13
    Tractatus de praecognitionibus et praecognitis and Tractatio de demonstratione. Galileo Galilei, William F. Edwards, William A. Wallace[REVIEW]Anthony Grafton - 1992 - Isis 83 (4):656-657.
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  13. Propositional Attitudes: The Role of Content in Logic, Language, and Mind.C. Anthony Anderson (ed.) - 1990 - Stanford: CSLI.
    These papers treat those issues involved in formulating a logic of propositional attitutudes and consider the relevance of the attitudes to the continuing study of both the philosophy of language and the philosophy of mind. Table of Contents: Introduction, by C. Anthony Anderson and Joseph Owens Quine on Quantifying In, by Kit Fine Prolegomena to a Structural Theory of Belief and Other Attitudes, by Hans Kemp A Study in Comparitive Semantics, by Ernest LePore and Barry Loewer Wherein is Language (...)
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  14.  5
    Tractatus de praecognitionibus et praecognitis and Tractatio de demonstratione by Galileo Galilei; William F. Edwards; William A. Wallace[REVIEW]Anthony Grafton - 1992 - Isis 83:656-657.
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  15.  41
    Not a Matter of Life and Death?Anthony O'Hear - 2013 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 73:65-77.
    ‘Come on, it's not a matter of life and death’, said some Job-like comforter, following a defeat in a football match. ‘No’, replied Bill Shankly, the granite-like Scot who was manager of Liverpool FC during their days of pre-eminence, whose team had just lost, ‘it is more important than that’.
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  16.  9
    Anthony F. C. Wallace. Jefferson and the Indians: The Tragic Fate of the First Americans. xvi + 394 pp., frontis., figs., illus., apps., index. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1999. $29.95, £18.50. [REVIEW]Jon Parmenter - 2002 - Isis 93 (2):307-308.
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  17.  8
    The Social Context of Innovation: Bureaucrats, Families, and Heroes in the Early Industrial Revolution, as Foreseen in Bacon's "New Atlantis." by Anthony F. C. Wallace[REVIEW]A. Hall - 1983 - Isis 74:438-438.
  18.  16
    The Social Context of Innovation: Bureaucrats, Families, and Heroes in the Early Industrial Revolution, as Foreseen in Bacon's "New Atlantis.". Anthony F. C. Wallace[REVIEW]A. Rupert Hall - 1983 - Isis 74 (3):438-438.
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  19.  2
    The existentialist contradiction in David Foster Wallace: how Wallace’s sociology illuminates the contradiction in Wallace’s ethics.Paolo Pitari - 2022 - European Journal of American Studies 17 (2).
    This essay argues that Wallace’s non-fiction presents a sociology that constitutes the foundation of Wallace’s literary project. By tracing the influences of Wallace’s sociology and by contrasting Wallace’s non-fictional works with those of Zygmunt Bauman, Ulrich Beck, Anthony Giddens and Christopher Lasch, this essay provides a necessary contribution to an adequate critique of the foundation of Wallace’s literary ethics. Finally, the analysis proposes that an existentialist contradiction pervades Wallace’s work. This contradiction revolves around (...)
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  20.  2
    The Problem of Free Will in David Foster Wallace.Paolo Pitari - forthcoming - Routledge.
    This book argues that David Foster Wallace failed to provide a response to the existential predicament of our time. Wallace wanted to confront despair through art, but he remained trapped, and his entrapment originates in the ‘existentialist contradiction’: the impossibility of affirming the meaningfulness of life and an ethics of compassion while believing in free will. To substantiate this thesis, the analysis reads Wallace in conversation with the existentialist philosophers and writers who influenced him: Søren Kierkegaard, Fyodor (...)
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  21.  42
    Bimodal bilinguals co-activate both languages during spoken comprehension.Anthony Shook & Viorica Marian - 2012 - Cognition 124 (3):314-324.
  22.  18
    Tattersall, Ian. The Monkey in the Mirror: Essays on the Science of What Makes Us Human.Anthony Zimmerman - 2004 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 4 (1):222-223.
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  23. A Heterotopology of Urban Margins: Publicness in the Space of the City.Yvonne Wallace & Meg Stalcup - 2022 - City and Society 2 (34):1-25.
    Through publicness we offer a reconceptualization of marginality in the city, one that makes apparent the “inherent porosity” of the boundaries that organize urban life (Harvey 2006, 19). Our analysis attends to moments of publicness during fieldwork spent in various spaces within the city of Ottawa, Ontario, with individuals who use drugs and/or panhandle. Much of this research took place in central neighborhoods of Ottawa, which serve as the public image of the nation’s capital: Lowertown to the East of Parliament (...)
     
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  24.  62
    The Problem of Counterfactuals in Substituted Judgement Decision-Making.Anthony Wrigley - 2011 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 28 (2):169-187.
    The standard by which we apply decision-making for those unable to do so for themselves is an important practical ethical issue with substantial implications for the treatment and welfare of such individuals. The approach to proxy or surrogate decision-making based upon substituted judgement is often seen as the ideal standard to aim for but suffers from a need to provide a clear account of how to determine the validity of the proxy's judgements. Proponents have responded to this demand by providing (...)
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  25. Moral Responsibility, Praise, and Blame.Hannah Tierney & Robert H. Wallace - 2023 - In Christian B. Miller (ed.), The Bloomsbury Handbook of Ethics. Bloomsbury Academic.
  26.  21
    Approaches to Teaching the Hebrew Bible as Literature in Translation.Anthony D. York, Barry N. Olshen & Yael S. Feldman - 1996 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 116 (2):287.
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  27.  18
    ‘The Problem of the Color Line’: Faculty approaches to teaching Social Justice in Baccalaureate Nursing Programs.Claire Paulino Valderama-Wallace & Ester Carolina Apesoa-Varano - 2020 - Nursing Inquiry 27 (3):e12349.
    Social justice is put forth as a core professional nursing value, although conceptualizations within foundational documents and among nurse educators remain inconsistent and contradictory. The purpose of this study was to explore how faculty teach social justice in theory courses in Baccalaureate programs. This qualitative study utilized constructivist grounded theory methods to examine processes informing participants' teaching. Participants utilize four overarching approaches: fostering engaging classroom climates, utilizing various naming strategies, framing diversity and culture as social justice, and role modeling a (...)
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  28.  10
    Journals and New Books.Wallace Craig - 1929 - Journal of Philosophy 26 (17):474-475.
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  29.  28
    Karl Popper.Anthony O'Hear (ed.) - 1980 - Boston: Routledge.
    This book is available either individually, or as part of the specially-priced Arguments of the Philosphers Collection.
  30.  24
    Book Review:Thus Spake Zarathustra: A Book for All and None. Friedrich Nietzsche. [REVIEW]W. Wallace - 1897 - International Journal of Ethics 7 (3):360-.
  31.  23
    Aquinas.Anthony Kenny - 2004 - Philosophical Quarterly 54 (216):457-462.
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  32. 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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  33.  46
    Sport: An Historical Phenomenology.Anthony Skillen - 1993 - Philosophy 68 (265):343-368.
    Sport often seems to teeter on the edge, on one side of the entertainment industry, on the other of cheating violent aggression: from a make-believe simulacrum of serious play to a nasty chemically enhanced descent into a Hobbesian state of nature. Such perversions lend credibility to reductive views of sport itself as a metonymic feature of capitalism. But that sport as entertainment means fixing it to produce exciting outcomes and amplifying capacities to superhuman proportions, while sport as aggression means treating (...)
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  34.  32
    Phenomenology and Mysticism: The Verticality of Religious Experience.Anthony J. Steinbock - 2007 - Indiana University Press.
    Exploring the first-person narratives of three figures from the Christian, Jewish, and Islamic mystical traditions—St. Teresa of Avila, Rabbi Dov Baer, and Rzbihn Baql—Anthony J. Steinbock provides a complete phenomenology of mysticism based in the Abrahamic religious traditions. He relates a broad range of religious experiences, or verticality, to philosophical problems of evidence, selfhood, and otherness. From this philosophical description of vertical experience, Steinbock develops a social and cultural critique in terms of idolatry—as pride, secularism, and fundamentalism—and suggests that (...)
  35.  74
    Personal identity, autonomy and advance statements.Anthony Wrigley - 2007 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 24 (4):381–396.
    Recent legal rulings concerning the status of advance statements have raised interest in the topic but failed to provide any definitive general guidelines for their enforcement. I examine arguments used to justify the moral authority of such statements. The fundamental ethical issue I am concerned with is how accounts of personal identity underpin our account of moral authority through the connection between personal identity and autonomy. I focus on how recent Animalist accounts of personal identity initially appear to provide a (...)
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  36.  24
    An ethic of the fitting: a conceptual framework for nursing practice.Anthony G. Tuckett - 1998 - Nursing Inquiry 5 (4):220-227.
    An ethic of the fitting: a conceptual framework for nursing practiceNurses are expected to act within an ethos of care cognisant of duty, the right, and the good. Concepts of virtue theory, utilitarianism and deontology are used to outline a conceptual ethical framework for nurses in practice. This ‘Moebius’ framework aims to locate the virtues in a symbiotic relationship with the principles of utilitarianism and deontology. Under this framework, fitting ethical responses are sought. Within an ethic of the fitting, rules (...)
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  37.  49
    Self-Validating Reduction: Toward a Theory of Environmental Devaluation.Anthony Weston - 1996 - Environmental Ethics 18 (2):115-132.
    Disvaluing nature—a cognitive act—usually leads quickly to devaluing it too: to real-world exploitation and destruction. Worse, in fact, nature in its devalued state can then be held up as an excuse and justification for the initial disvaluation. In this way, dismissal and destruction perpetuate themselves. I call this process “self-validating reduction.” It is crucial to recognize the cycle of self-validating reduction, both in general and specifically as it applies to nature, if we are to have any chance of reversing it.
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  38. Studies in Social and Political Theory.Anthony Giddens - 1980 - Zeitschrift für Philosophische Forschung 34 (1):153-156.
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  39.  79
    Before environmental ethics.Anthony Weston - 1992 - Environmental Ethics 14 (4):321-338.
    Contemporary nonanthropocentic environmental ethics is profoundly shaped by the very anthropocentrism that it tries to transcend. New values only slowly struggle free of old contexts. Recognizing this struggle, however, opens a space for—indeed, necessitates—alternative models for contemporary environmental ethics. Rather than trying to unify or fine-tune our theories, we require more pluralistic andexploratory methods. We cannot reach theoretical finality; we can only co-evolve an ethic with transformed practices.
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  40.  84
    Between Means and Ends.Anthony Weston - 1992 - The Monist 75 (2):236-249.
    We might begin by trying to unsettle the apparently natural inferences that are supposed to lead us so ineluctably to recognize something called “intrinsic value”.
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  41.  7
    Theory of knowledge.Anthony Douglas Woozley - 1949 - New York,: Hutchinson's University Library.
  42.  8
    ‘To give an imagination to the listeners’: The neglected poetics of Navajo ideophony.Anthony K. Webster - 2008 - Semiotica 2008 (171):343-365.
    Ideophony is a neglected aspect of investigations of world poetic traditions. This article looks at the use of ideophony in a variety of Navajo poetic genres. Examples are given from Navajo place-names, narratives, and songs. A final example involves the use of ideophony in contemporary written Navajo poetry. Using the work of Woodbury, Friedrich, and Becker it is argued that ideophones are an example of form-dependent expression, poetic indeterminacy, and the inherent exuberances and deficiencies of translation and thus strongly resists (...)
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  43.  14
    Return to Reason.Anthony OHear - 2003 - Mind 112 (447):576-579.
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  44.  8
    The eyes of the mind : proportion in Spinoza, Swift, and Ibn Tufayl.Anthony Uhlmann - 2018 - In Beth Lord (ed.), Spinoza’s Philosophy of Ratio. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 155-168.
  45.  26
    On Callicott’s Case against Moral Pluralism.Anthony Weston - 1991 - Environmental Ethics 13 (3):283-286.
  46.  15
    Genetic Selection and Modal Harms.Anthony Wrigley - 2006 - The Monist 89 (4):505-525.
    Parfit’s (1984) Non-Identity Problem provides a strong line of argument that we cannot be harmed by pre-conception choices or actions. I argue that we can no longer appeal to the Non-Identity problem in order to justify using pre-conception genetic screening and selection techniques as a harmless tool to determine the genetic constitution of future individuals. My criticism of the Non-Identity problem is based on a rejection of the metaphysical foundations of Parfit’s argument - Kripke’s (1980) essentialist arguments for the necessity (...)
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  47.  26
    Legal Positivism in American Jurisprudence.Anthony James Sebok - 1998 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book represents a serious and philosophically sophisticated guide to modern American legal theory, demonstrating that legal positivism has been a misunderstood and underappreciated perspective through most of twentieth-century American legal thought. Anthony Sebok traces the roots of positivism through the first half of the twentieth century, and rejects the view that one must adopt some version of natural law theory in order to recognize moral principles in the law. On the contrary, once one corrects for the mistakes of (...)
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  48.  19
    Saving the Dead.Anthony P. Smith - 2017 - American Journal of Bioethics 17 (5):26-27.
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  49.  6
    “Cut Out to do Work”: Recruitment Experiences of a Folk Healer.Stephen Childs - 1991 - Anthropology of Consciousness 2 (1-2):25-31.
    There exists a variety of types of folk healers in African American society. This paper examines the sequence of dreams and visions whereby a woman realized the status of evangelical healer. "It was hypothesized that these altered states functioned as facilitating mechanisms whereby the subject could alleviate anxiety while at the same time realize a new master status. By gathering extensive interview data and employing a structuralist analysis, it was possible to relate the dreams and visions to personal crises, thus (...)
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  50.  26
    Urban-semantic computer vision: a framework for contextual understanding of people in urban spaces.Anthony Vanky & Ri Le - 2023 - AI and Society 38 (3):1193-1207.
    Increasing computational power and improving deep learning methods have made computer vision technologies pervasively common in urban environments. Their applications in policing, traffic management, and documenting public spaces are increasingly common (Ridgeway 2018, Coifman et al. 1998, Sun et al. 2020). Despite the often-discussed biases in the algorithms' training and unequally borne benefits (Khosla et al. 2012), almost all applications similarly reduce urban experiences to simplistic, reductive, and mechanistic measures. There is a lack of context, depth, and specificity in these (...)
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