Results for 'Experience of meaning'

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  1. For the most clearly understood models of (i) belief,(ii) how the impact of sensory experience changes belief, and (Hi) how beliefs together with desires influence actions.Meaning Logic - 1983 - In Alex Orenstein & Rafael Stern (eds.), Developments in Semantics. Haven. pp. 2--221.
     
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  2.  10
    Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Patient-Provider Communication With Breast Cancer Patients: Evidence From 2011 MEPS and Experiences With Cancer Supplement.I. White-Means Shelley & Osmani Ahmad Reshad - 2017 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 54:004695801772710.
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  3.  6
    Experiences of meaning in life in urban and rural Zambia.Anne Austad, Austin Mumba Cheyeka, Lars Johan Danbolt, Gilbert Kamanga, Nelly Mwale, Hans Stifoss-Hanssen, Torgeir Sørensen & Tatjana Schnell - 2023 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 45 (3):247-268.
    Meaning in life has become an important topic in empirical research in the psychology of religion. Although it has been studied and found applicable in many different contexts, research on meaning in life and sources of meaning in African countries is scarce. This study qualitatively investigates understandings and experiences of meaning in life and sources of meaning among urban and village dwellers with different educational backgrounds in Zambia. Seven focus group interviews (total N = 52) (...)
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  4.  14
    The Experience of Meaning.Jan Zwicky - 2019 - Chicago: Mcgill-Queen's University Press.
    The aim of this book is a recovery of interest in the experience of meaning. Jan Zwicky defends the claim that we experience meaning in the apprehension of wholes and their internal structural relations, providing examples of such insight in mathematics and physics, literature, music, and Plato's ancient theory of forms. Taken together, these essays constitute a powerful indictment of the aggressive reductionism and the reliance on calculative modes of thought that dominate our present conception of (...)
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  5. The Experience of Meaning.Antti Kauppinen - 2022 - In Iddo Landau (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Meaning in Life.
    Recently, psychologists have started to distinguish between three kinds of experience of meaning. Drawing on philosophical as well as empirical literature, I argue that the experience of one’s own life making sense involves a sense of narrative justification, so that not just any kind of intelligibility suffices; the experience of purpose includes enthusiastic future-directed motivation against the background of a global sort of hopefulness, or the resonance of what one does right now with one’s values; and (...)
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  6. Ştefan afloroaei.Experience of Human Finitude - 2012 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 11 (32):155-170.
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  7. Sketch of a partial simulation of the concept of meaning in an automaton Fernand Vandamme.Concept of Meaning in An Automaton - 1966 - Logique Et Analyse 33:372.
     
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  8.  42
    Online Interaction and" Real Information Flow": Contrasts Between Talking About Interdisciplinarity and Achieving Interdisciplinary Collaboration.Janet Smithson, Catherine Hennessy & Robin Means - 2012 - Journal of Research Practice 8 (1):Article - P1.
    In this article we study how members of an interdisciplinary research team use an online forum for communicating about their research project. We use the concepts of "community of practice" and "connectivity" to consider the online interaction within a wider question of how people from different academic traditions "do" interdisciplinarity. The online forum for this Grey and Pleasant Land project did not take off as hoped, even after a series of interventions and amendments, and we consider what the barriers were (...)
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  9. Experience of Meaning, Secondary Use and Aesthetics.Michel Ter Hark - 2010 - Philosophical Investigations 33 (2):142-158.
  10.  96
    Wittgenstein on the Experience of Meaning and the Meaning of Music.Gilead Bar-Elli - 2006 - Philosophical Investigations 29 (3):217-249.
    An argument is presented to the effect that the ability to feel or to experience meaning conditions the ability to mean, and is thus essential to our notion of meaning. The experience of meaning is manifested in the "fine shades" of use and behavior. Theses, so obvious in music, constitute understanding music, which makes music understanding so relevant to understanding language. Applying these notions of understanding, feeling, and experience--as well as their explication in terms (...)
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  11.  87
    Meaning, the Experience of Meaning and the Meaning-Blind in Wittgenstein’s Late Philosophy.Eddy M. Zemach - 1995 - The Monist 78 (4):480-495.
    Wittgenstein’s first account of meaning was that sentences are pictures: the meaning of a sentence is a state of affairs it portrays. States of affairs are arrangements of some basic entities, the Objects. Sentences consist of names of Objects; an arrangement of such names, i.e., a sentence, shows how the named Objects are arranged. A sentence says that the state of affairs it thus pictures exists, hence it is true or false. That theory of meaning as picturing (...)
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  12.  27
    Wittgenstein on the Experience of Meaning: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives.Michel ter Hark - 2013 - Philosophy Study 3 (10).
    This paper discusses a neglected theme in Wittgenstein’s writings on meaning and psychology from the early 1930s until 1949. Throughout this period Wittgenstein deals with aspects of meaning of words and pictures that cannot be accounted for in dispositional terms but have to be related to experience and perception. Wittgenstein’s reading of William James, I argue, has sharpened his eye for the many pitfalls in coming to terms with this experiential notion of meaning. James’s treatment of (...)
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  13.  26
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Experience of Meaning and Interpretation of Existence. [REVIEW]Otto Böcher - 1971 - Philosophy and History 4 (2):164-165.
  14. Wittgenstein on the experience of meaning and secondary use.Michel ter Hark - 2011 - In Marie McGinn & Oskari Kuusela (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Wittgenstein. Oxford University Press.
     
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  15.  98
    Steady-State Work by an Asymmetrically Inelastic Gravitator in a Gas: A Second Law Paradox. [REVIEW]D. P. Sheehan, J. Glick & J. D. Means - 2000 - Foundations of Physics 30 (8):1227-1256.
    A new member of a growing class of unresolved second law paradoxes is examined.(1–7) In a sealed blackbody cavity, a spherical gravitator is suspended in a low density gas. Infalling gas suprathermally strikes the gravitator which is spherically asymmetric between its hemispheres with respect to surface trapping probability for the gas. In principle, this system can be made to perform steady-state work solely at the expense of heat from the heat bath, this in apparent violation of the second law of (...)
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  16.  39
    The human experience of time: the development of its philosophic meaning.Charles M. Sherover - 1975 - Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
    Updated, expanded, and with a new introduction by the editor, this volume is not only a historical overview but also a dialectical analysis displaying the ...
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  17.  11
    The experience of studying the spiritual development of nations with the help of linguistic means.L. M. Abrosimova & E. V. Mykhaylova - 1998 - Ukrainian Religious Studies 7:109-111.
    The appearance of Jesus Christ in his time was inevitable. Plato's ideas were to find a material embodiment on earth. The image of Christ as a balance, the harmony of light-spirit and darkness-matter, is the materialization of the ideal image.
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  18. African heritage and contemporary life.an Experience Of Epistemological - 2002 - In P. H. Coetzee & A. P. J. Roux (eds.), Philosophy from Africa: a text with readings. Oxford University Press.
     
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  19.  46
    The Experience of Transition to Meaning and Purpose in Life.Julene M. Denne & Norman L. Thompson - 1991 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 22 (2):109-133.
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  20.  17
    Parents’ experiences of neonatal transfer. A meta‐study of qualitative research 2000–2017.Hanne Aagaard, Elisabeth O. C. Hall, Mette S. Ludvigsen, Lisbeth Uhrenfeldt & Liv Fegran - 2018 - Nursing Inquiry 25 (3):e12231.
    Transfers of critically ill neonates are frequent phenomena. Even though parents’ participation is regarded as crucial in neonatal care, a transfer often means that parents and neonates are separated. A systematic review of the parents’ experiences of neonatal transfer is lacking. This paper describes a meta‐study addressing qualitative research about parents’ experiences of neonatal transfer. Through deconstruction and reflections of theories, methods, and empirical data, the aim was to achieve a deeper understanding of theoretical, empirical, contextual, historical, and methodological issues (...)
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  21.  22
    “The familiar face of a word”: W ittgenstein and B enjamin on the experience of meaning.Alexander Stern - 2018 - European Journal of Philosophy 26 (4):1297-1311.
    In what is now called Philosophy of Psychology—A Fragment (formerly Part II of the Philosophical Investigations), Wittgenstein writes that the importance of the concept of aspect‐seeing “lies in the connection between the concepts of seeing an aspect and of experiencing the meaning of a word.” Wittgenstein claims that just as we can imagine someone who does not experience shifts between two aspects in the same image—for example, the duck–rabbit—we can imagine people who use language but do not (...) the meaning of a word. In this paper, I explicate the importance of this “meaning‐blindness” and its relation to aspect‐seeing. I then argue—drawing on a similar thought experiment in Walter Benjamin's early philosophy of language—that meaning‐blindness is actually a fatal impediment for language use. The upshot of my analysis is that the aesthetic experience of meaning, regularly marginalized in the philosophy of language, must be understood as fundamental to language and language use. (shrink)
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  22.  28
    Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. Experience of Meaning and Interpretation of Existence. [REVIEW]Richard Wisser - 1969 - Philosophy and History 2 (1):46-48.
  23.  16
    The experience of illness and the meaning of death.Massimo Reichlin - 2001 - In Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka & Evandro Agazzi (eds.), Life Interpretation and the Sense of Illness Within the Human Condition. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 81--95.
  24. Saying and Hearing the Word: Language and the Experience of Meaning in Gadamer's Hermeneutics.James Risser - 2007 - In B. K. Dalai (ed.), Ultimate Reality and Meaning. Centre of Advanced Study in Sanskrit, University of Pune. pp. 30--2.
     
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  25. Saying and Hearing the Word: Language and the Experience of Meaning in Gadamer’s Hermeneutics.James Risser - 2007 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 30 (2).
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  26.  54
    Experiences of Word Meaning.Manuela Ungureanu - 2013 - Dialogue and Universalism 23 (1):15-26.
    I focus on Barry C. Smith’s investigations in the phenomenology of speech, and on his ambitious, unified theory of both sub-personal and first-personal linguistic knowledge (2008, 2009). I argue that empirical hypotheses about our awareness of word meaning challenge the starting points of his phenomenology of speech, as they require both (1) modifications of his proposed theory of speakers experiences of word meaning, and (2) clarifications of what the phenomenology of speech teaches us and why.
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  27.  53
    Crossing the Finite Provinces of Meaning. Experience and Metaphor.Gerd Sebald - 2011 - Human Studies 34 (4):341-352.
    Schutz’s references to literature and arts in his theoretical works are manifold. But literature and theory are both a certain kind of a finite province of meaning, that means they are not easily accessible from the paramount reality of everyday life. Now there is another kind of referring to literature: metaphorizing it. Using it, as may be said with Lakoff and Johnson, to understand and to experience one kind of thing in terms of another. Literally metapherein means “to (...)
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  28.  46
    An Experience of International Terrorism: Reflections on the Meanings of September 11th.Frederick Wertz - 2002 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 33 (1):59-71.
    This lecture, delivered in the "Transcending Tragedy" series at Fordham University in New York City, in February, 2002, presents reflections on the recent experience of international terrorism. A temporal unfolding of meanings experienced during and after the September 11th attacks is described beginning with that fateful morning and concluding with the changed post-9/11 world. This analysis reveals the fragility and plasticity of the social dimension of individual experience as well as our responsibility to create a global order of (...)
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  29.  9
    The semiotics of sensation: A. J. Greimas and the experience of meaning.Ronald Schleifer - 2017 - Semiotica 2017 (214):173-192.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Semiotica Jahrgang: 2017 Heft: 214 Seiten: 173-192.
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  30.  5
    Human Experience of Time: The Development of its Philosophic Meaning.Charles M. Sherover (ed.) - 1975 - Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
    First published in 1975 and still without equal, The Human Experience of Time provides a thorough review of the concept of time in the Western philosophic tradition. Encompassing a wide range of writings, from the Book of Genesis and the classical thinkers to the work of such twentieth-century philosophers as Collingwood and McKeon, all with introductory essays by the editor, this classic anthology offers a synoptic view of the changing philosophic notions of time.
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  31.  15
    The rational roles of experiences of utterance meanings.Berit Brogaard - forthcoming - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy.
    The perennial question of the nature of natural-language understanding has received renewed attention in recent years. Two kinds of natural-language understanding, in particular, have captivated the interest of philosophers: linguistic understanding and utterance understanding. While the literature is rife with discussions of linguistic understanding and utterance understanding, the question of how the two types of understanding explanatorily depend on each other has received relatively scant attention. Exceptions include the linguistic ability/know-how views of linguistic understanding proposed by Dean Pettit and Brendan (...)
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  32.  18
    Possible directions of meaning in oncological disease: an experience of liminality, meaning making and existential planning.Stefano Benini - 2021 - ENCYCLOPAIDEIA 25 (59):57-70.
    The oncological disease experience is counted as a wound in the body and mind attributable to a traumatic experience that fragments and disorients the person’s biography. The neoplasia leaves marks and scars in both somatic and existential level. The illness experience suggests to patient to look for meaning that cannot be unheard. The literature associating the concept of liminality in oncological disease to understand the process of meaning making. The definition of new horizons of (...), generated by crossing the limen, opens up a new self-awareness and worldview. The autopoietic dimension present in oncological disease reveals new scenarios of generativity and existential planning in the direction of self-realization in the cipher of the possible. The contribution presents the story of Anastasia, a 41-years-old nurse. A few months after her new marriage and close to a professional promotion, she receives the diagnosis of cholangiocarcinoma: a very aggressive, low-incidence, neoplasia, without specific therapeutic lines and with a negative prognosis. Anastasia’s words, thoughts and emotions, collected in the course of some testimonies in a university classroom, are analyzed and deciphered within the pedagogical paradigm, refering to the perspective of pedagogical problematicism and phenomenological pedagogy. (shrink)
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  33.  13
    The Detection of Connections, the Experience of Meaning, and Adaptation.Laura A. King & Hope Rose - 2020 - Evolutionary Studies in Imaginative Culture 4 (1):47-50.
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  34. Aesthetic experience of (landscape) nature as a means for environmental awareness.Ignacio Español Echániz - 2010 - Enrahonar: Quaderns de Filosofía 45:41-50.
     
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  35.  6
    The Stressful Experience of Goal Orientations Under Frustration: Evidence Using Physiological Means.Faye Antoniou & Ghadah S. Alkhadim - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The purpose of the present study was to test the hypothesis that goal orientation is associated with divergent forms of emotional reactivity under frustration. Goal orientations were assessed using bifurcations of performance goals described earlier. Physiological stress levels were measured via a blood volume pulse analysis after individuals were subjected to a computerized Stroop task using a malfunctioning mouse to induce enhanced frustration. The results indicated that performance-avoidance goals were associated with the highest levels of emotional reactivity, with normative outcome (...)
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  36.  50
    Temporal experience in anxiety: embodiment, selfhood, and the collapse of meaning.Kevin Aho - 2020 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 19 (2):259-270.
    This essay explores the unique temporal experience in anxiety. Drawing on first-person accounts as well as examples from literature, I attempt to show how anxiety not only disrupts our physiological and cognitive timing but also disturbs the embodied rhythms of everyday social life. The primary goal, however, is to articulate the extent to which human existence itself is a temporally structured event and to identity the ways that anxiety disrupts this structure. Using Martin Heidegger’s account of human existence as (...)
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  37.  10
    Experience and meaning in music performance.Martin Clayton, Byron Dueck & Laura Leante (eds.) - 2013 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This book explores how the immediate experience of musical sound relates to processes of meaning construction and discursive mediation. A unique multi-authored work that both draws on and contributes to current debates in ethnomusicology, musicology, psychology, and cognitive science, it presents a novel and productive view of how cultural practice relates to the experience and meaning of musical performance.
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  38.  47
    Temporal experience in anxiety: embodiment, selfhood, and the collapse of meaning.Kevin Aho - 2018 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences:1-12.
    This essay explores the unique temporal experience in anxiety. Drawing on first-person accounts as well as examples from literature, I attempt to show how anxiety not only disrupts our physiological and cognitive timing but also disturbs the embodied rhythms of everyday social life. The primary goal, however, is to articulate the extent to which human existence itself is a temporally structured event and to identity the ways that anxiety disrupts this structure. Using Martin Heidegger’s account of human existence as (...)
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  39.  33
    Municipal Night Nurses' Experience of the Meaning of Caring.Christine Gustafsson, Margareta Asp & Ingegerd Fagerberg - 2009 - Nursing Ethics 16 (5):599-612.
    The aim of this study was to elucidate municipal night registered nurses’ (RNs) experiences of the meaning of caring in nursing. The research context involved all night duty RNs working in municipal care of older people in a medium-sized municipality located in central Sweden. The meaning of caring in nursing was experienced as: caring for by advocacy, superior responsibility in caring, and consultative nursing service. The municipal night RNs’ experience of caring is interpreted as meanings in paradoxes: (...)
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  40.  4
    Interpretation: The Poetry of Meaning : [philosophical, Religious, and Literary Inquiries Into the Expression of Human Experience Through Language].Stanley Romaine Consultation on Hermeneutics, David L. Hopper & Miller - 1967 - Harcourt, Brace & World.
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  41.  18
    The meaning of middle‐aged female spouses’ lived experience of the relationship with a partner who has suffered a stroke, during the first year postdischarge.Britt Bäckström, Kenneth Asplund & Karin Sundin - 2010 - Nursing Inquiry 17 (3):257-268.
    BÄCKSTRÖM B, ASPLUND K and SUNDIN K.Nursing Inquiry2010;17: 257–268 The meaning of middle‐aged female spouses’ lived experience of the relationship with a partner who has suffered a stroke, during the first year postdischargeStroke consequences present a great long‐term challenge to the spouses of the stroke sufferer. A longitudinal study with a phenomenological hermeneutic approach was used to illuminate the meanings of middle‐aged female spouses’ lived experience of their relationship with a partner who has suffered a stroke, during (...)
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  42.  45
    Gender and the Meaning and Experience of Virginity Loss in the Contemporary United States.Laura M. Carpenter - 2002 - Gender and Society 16 (3):345-365.
    This article draws on in-depth case studies of 61 women and men of diverse sexual identities to show how gender, while apparently diminishing in significance, continues to shape interpretations and experiences of virginity loss in complex ways. Although women and men tended to assign different meanings to virginity, those who shared an interpretation reported similar virginity-loss encounters. Each interpretation of virginity—as a gift, stigma, or process—featured unequal roles for virgin and partner, which interacted with gender differences in power to produce (...)
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  43.  9
    The Lived Experience of African American Women Mentors: What It Means to Guide as Community Pedagogues.Wyletta Gamble-Lomax - 2016 - Lexington Books.
    This book explores the lived experiences of six African American female mentors working with African American female youth. Through philosophical and pedagogical lenses, Gamble-Lomax brings new understanding to African American female experiences and how they connect to today’s educational climate.
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  44.  8
    The Lived Experience of African American Women Mentors: What it Means to Guide as Community Pedagogues.Wyletta Gamble-Lomax - 2016 - Lexington Books.
    This book explores the lived experiences of six African American female mentors working with African American female youth. Through philosophical and pedagogical lenses, Gamble-Lomax brings new understanding to African American female experiences and how they connect to today’s educational climate.
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  45.  11
    Experience and meaning.C. I. Lewis - 1933 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 7:125.
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  46. Interpretation: The Poetry of Meaning; Philosophical, Religious, and Literary Inquiries Into the Expression of Human Experience Through Language, Consultation on Hermeneutics, 3rd, Drew University, 1966.Stanley Romaine Hopper & David L. Miller (eds.) - 1967 - New York,: Harcourt, Brace & World.
     
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  47.  18
    Experiment and the Making of Meaning: Human Agency in Scientific Observation and Experiment. David Gooding.Allan Franklin - 1992 - Isis 83 (1):177-178.
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  48. Beauty as the experience of freedom-On the transcendentalogical meaning of the beautiful in Schiller's aesthetic.G. Rompp - 1998 - Kant Studien 89 (4):428-445.
     
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  49.  22
    Experiences of Silence in Mood Disorders.Dan Degerman - forthcoming - Erkenntnis:1-20.
    This article challenges the consensus that silences about mental disorders are there to be broken. While silence in mental disorders can be painful, even deadly, the consensus rests on an oversimplified understanding of silence. Drawing upon accounts from depression and bipolar memoirs, this article names and analyses some salient experiences of silence in mood disorders. It does so with two goals in mind. The first is to show that mood disorders may involve several different kinds of lived experiences of silence. (...)
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  50.  35
    Some meanings of meaning in Dewey's experience and nature.Everett W. Hall - 1928 - Journal of Philosophy 25 (7):169-181.
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