Results for 'Jane Blankenship'

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  1.  34
    A simplification of the Bachmann method for generating large countable ordinals.Jane Bridge - 1975 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 40 (2):171-185.
  2.  55
    Positive and negative evidence in language acquistion.Jane Grimshaw & Steven Pinker - 1989 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12 (2):341-342.
  3.  18
    Reclaiming a Conversation: The Ideal of the Educated Woman.Jane Roland Martin - 1985 - Yale University Press.
    Examines the theories of Plato, Rousseau, Mary Wollstonecraft, Catherine Beecher, and Charlotte Perkins Gilman concerning the education of women.
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  4. Functionalism and replication.Jane Heal - 1986 - In Jeremy Butterfield (ed.), Language, mind and logic. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  5.  5
    Person and population as psychometric concepts.Jane Loevinger - 1965 - Psychological Review 72 (2):143-155.
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  6.  35
    The Program of Giotto's Saint Francis Cycle at Santa Croce in Florence.Jane C. Long - 1992 - Franciscan Studies 52 (1):85-133.
  7. Moore's paradox: A Wittgensteinian approach.Jane Heal - 1994 - Mind 103 (409):5-24.
  8.  13
    Human simulations of vocabulary learning.Jane Gillette, Lila Gleitman, Henry Gleitman & Anne Lederer - 1999 - Cognition 73 (2):135-176.
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  9.  32
    Art expertise modulates the emotional response to modern art, especially abstract: an ERP investigation.Jane E. Else, Jason Ellis & Elizabeth Orme - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  10.  21
    Transforming Traditions in American Biology, 1880-1915.Jane Maienschein - 1992 - Journal of the History of Biology 25 (1):157-162.
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  11.  48
    Theorising the Ethical Organization.Jane Collier - 1998 - Business Ethics Quarterly 8 (4):621-654.
    Abstract:The aim of this paper is to create a framework which can serve as a guide to the understanding of organizational ethicality. This is done by linking ethical and organizational theory. Organizational ethicality is about “being” as well as “doing”: relevant ethical theory is therefore both substantive (agent-centred, concerned with the “good”) as well as procedural (act-centred, concerned with the “right” in the sense of the moral or just thing to do). The ethical theories of Alasdair MacIntyre and Jurgen Habermas, (...)
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  12. Anne Viscountess Conway: A Seventeenth Century Rationalist.Jane Duran - 1989 - Hypatia 4 (1):64 - 79.
    The work of Spinoza, Descartes and Leibniz is cited in an attempt to develop, both expositorily and critically, the philosophy of Anne Viscountess Conway. Broadly, it is contended that Conway's metaphysics, epistemology and account of the passions not only bear intriguing comparison with the work of the other well-known rationalists, but supersede them in some ways, particularly insofar as the notions of substance and ontological hierarchy are concerned. Citing the commentary of Loptson and Carolyn Merchant, and alluding to other commentary (...)
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  13.  31
    The relationship amongst ethical position, religiosity and self-identified culture in student nurses.Jane H. White, Anne Griswold Peirce & William Jacobowitz - 2019 - Nursing Ethics 26 (7-8):2398-2412.
    Background/purpose:Research from other disciplines demonstrates that ethical position, idealism, or relativism predicts ethical decision-making. Individuals from diverse cultures ascribe to various religious beliefs and studies have found that religiosity and culture affect ethical decision-making. Moreover, little literature exists regarding undergraduate nursing students’ ethical position; no studies have been conducted in the United States on students’ ethical position, their self-identified culture, and intrinsic religiosity despite an increase in the diversity of nursing students across the United States.Participants and Research Context Objectives:The study’s (...)
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  14.  32
    The Schoolhome: Rethinking Schools for Changing Families.Jane Roland Martin - 1993 - British Journal of Educational Studies 41 (4):426-427.
  15.  10
    Governing biobanks: understanding the interplay between law and practice.Jane Kaye (ed.) - 2012 - Portland, Or.: Hart.
    Biobanks are proliferating rapidly worldwide because they are powerful tools and organisational structures for undertaking medical research. By linking samples to data on the health of individuals, it is anticipated that biobanks will be used to explore the relationship between genes, environment and lifestyle for many diseases, as well as the potential of individually-tailored drug treatments based on genetic predisposition. However, they also raise considerable challenges for existing legal frameworks and research governance structures. This book critically examines the current governance (...)
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  16.  31
    Ethical implications of the use of whole genome methods in medical research.Jane Kaye, Paula Boddington, Jantina de Vries, Naomi Hawkins & Karen Melham - unknown
    The use of genome-wide association studies in medical research and the increased ability to share data give a new twist to some of the perennial ethical issues associated with genomic research. GWAS create particular challenges because they produce fine, detailed, genotype information at high resolution, and the results of more focused studies can potentially be used to determine genetic variation for a wide range of conditions and traits. The information from a GWA scan is derived from DNA that is a (...)
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  17.  65
    Chimpanzees as vulnerable subjects in research.Jane Johnson & Neal D. Barnard - 2014 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 35 (2):133-141.
    Using an approach developed in the context of human bioethics, we argue that chimpanzees in research can be regarded as vulnerable subjects. This vulnerability is primarily due to communication barriers and situational factors—confinement and dependency—that make chimpanzees particularly susceptible to risks of harm and exploitation in experimental settings. In human research, individuals who are deemed vulnerable are accorded special protections. Using conceptual and moral resources developed in the context of research with vulnerable humans, we show how chimpanzees warrant additional safeguards (...)
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  18.  15
    The complexity principle and the morphosyntactic alternation between case affixes and postpositions in Estonian.Jane Klavan & Ole Schützler - 2023 - Cognitive Linguistics 34 (2):297-331.
    This paper investigates three morphosyntactic alternations in Estonian – those between the exterior locative cases allative, adessive and ablative and the corresponding postpositionspeale‘onto’,peal‘on’ andpealt‘off’. Based on the Complexity Principle (e.g., Rohdenburg, Günter. 2002. Processing complexity and the variable use of prepositions in English. In Hubert Cuyckens & Günter Radden (eds.),Perspectives on prepositions, 79–100. Tübingen: Niemeyer), we expect cognitively more complex constructions to use more explicit (i.e., morphologically more substantial) marking by means of a postposition. Further, we expect variation to be (...)
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  19.  16
    The Way of Water and Sprouts of Virtue.Jane M. Geaney & Sarah Allan - 2000 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 120 (2):304.
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  20. The theory of perception in Plato's Theaetetus 152-183.Jane Day - 1997 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 15:51-80.
     
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  21.  44
    Flaming? What flaming? The pitfalls and potentials of researching online hostility.Emma A. Jane - 2015 - Ethics and Information Technology 17 (1):65-87.
    This article identifies several critical problems with the last 30 years of research into hostile communication on the internet and offers suggestions about how scholars might address these problems and better respond to an emergent and increasingly dominant form of online discourse which I call ‘e-bile’. Although e-bile is new in terms of its prevalence, rhetorical noxiousness, and stark misogyny, prototypes of this discourse—most commonly referred to as ‘flaming’—have always circulated on the internet, and, as such, have been discussed by (...)
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  22.  33
    Plato's Meno in Focus.Jane M. Day (ed.) - 1993 - New York: Routledge.
    In one volume, this book brings together a new English translation of Plato's _Meno_, a selection of illuminating articles on themes in the dialogue published between 1965 and 1985 and an introduction setting the _Meno_ in its historical context and opening up the key philosophical issues which the various articles discuss. A glossary is provided which briefly introduces some of the key terms and indicates how they are translated. The _Meno_ is an excellent introduction to Plato and philosophy.
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  23. Mindreading and Social Cognition.Jane Suilin Lavelle - 2022 - Cambridge University Press.
    The cognitive ability to think about other people's psychological states is known as `mindreading'. This Element critiques assumptions that have been formative in shaping philosophical theories of mindreading: that mindreading is ubiquitous, underpinning the vast majority of our social interactions; and that its primary goal is to provide predictions and explanations of other people's behaviour. It begins with an overview of key positions and empirical literature in the debate. It then introduces and motivates the pluralist turn in this literature, which (...)
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  24. Indexical predicates and their uses.Jane Heal - 1997 - Mind 106 (424):619--640.
    Indexicality is a feature of predicates and predicate components (verbs, adjectives, adverbs and the like) as well as of referring expressions. With classic referring indexicals such as 'I' or 'that' a distinctive rule takes us from token and context to some item present in the content which is the semantic correlate of the token. Predicates and predicate components may function in an analogous fashion. For example 'thus' is an indexical adverb which latches onto some manner of performance present in its (...)
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  25.  51
    On underestimating us.Jane Heal - 2020 - Think 19 (54):9-20.
    Human beings are social animals. A solitary life would be horrible for most of us. What makes life worthwhile is being with others and engaging in shared projects with them. To do justice to these facts, philosophers need to pay more attention to the first-person plural, we/us, and to rethink their accounts of value and virtue.
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  26.  16
    Plato's Meno in Focus.Jane M. Day (ed.) - 1993 - New York: Routledge.
    In one volume, this book brings together a new English translation of Plato's _Meno_, a selection of illuminating articles on themes in the dialogue published between 1965 and 1985 and an introduction setting the _Meno_ in its historical context and opening up the key philosophical issues which the various articles discuss. A glossary is provided which briefly introduces some of the key terms and indicates how they are translated. The _Meno_ is an excellent introduction to Plato and philosophy.
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  27.  94
    Using Power/Fighting Power.Jane Mansbridge - 1994 - Constellations 1 (1):53-73.
  28.  33
    Biology and the foundation of ethics.Jane Maienschein & Michael Ruse (eds.) - 1999 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    There has been much attention devoted in recent years to the question of whether our moral principles can be related to our biological nature. This collection of new essays focuses on the connection between biology, in particular evolutionary biology, and foundational questions in ethics. The book asks such questions as whether humans are innately selfish, and whether there are particular facets of human nature that bear directly on social practices. The volume is organised historically beginning with Aristotle and covering such (...)
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  29.  33
    Imitation of Life: Cinema and the Moral Imagination.Jane Stadler - 2020 - Paragraph 43 (3):298-313.
    The influence of film's compelling images, characters and storylines has polarized perspectives on cinema and the moral imagination. Does film stimulate the audience's imagination and foster imitation in morally dangerous ways, or elicit ethical insight and empathy? Might the presentation of images on screen denude the capacity to conjure images in the mind's eye, or cultivate the imaginative capacity for moral vision as spectators attend to the plight of protagonists? Using Imitation of Life to interrogate paradoxical perspectives on the cinematic (...)
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  30.  49
    Idealized and Industrialized Labor: Anatomy of a Feminist Controversy.Jane Clare Jones - 2012 - Hypatia 27 (1):99-117.
    Prompted by the ever-increasing cesarean rate, this paper considers the interpretive disjunct between two significant strands of feminist analysis that have arisen in the last four decades as a consequence of the phenomenon of medicalized birth. In contrast to the dominant paradigm of bioethical “Principalism,” both modes of analysis, understood as “the critique of industrialized labor” and “the critique of idealized labor,” are attentive to the way in which social discourses inform bioethical deliberation and practice, but significantly diverge in the (...)
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  31.  9
    What has philosophy ever done for nursing: A discursive shift from margins to mainstream.Jane M. Georges - 2023 - Nursing Philosophy 24 (3):e12451.
    This paper is a personal dialogue of maneuvering the landscape of scholarship in the United States as a nurse faculty. The principal thesis of this paper is that a discursive shift from margins to mainstream literature has occurred within nursing discourse during the past 20 years as the result of a growing body of work by nurse philosophers. I utilize my own work in nursing philosophy as an exemplar and provide a narrative situated in a feminist‐critical paradigm. This paper: (1) (...)
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  32. Fact and meaning: Quine and Wittgenstein on philosophy of language.Jane Heal - 1989 - New York, NY, USA: Blackwell.
  33. Mary Astell: A pre-Humean Christian empiricist and feminist.Jane Duran - 2000 - In Cecile Thérèse Tougas & Sara Ebenreck (eds.), Presenting women philosophers. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. pp. 147--154.
  34.  20
    New Essays in the Philosophy of Education.Jane R. Martin - 1976 - Philosophical Review 85 (4):566.
  35. Fact and Meaning: Quine and Wittgenstein on Philosophy of Language.Jane Heal - 1990 - Mind 99 (396):642-647.
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  36.  25
    I-On First-person Authority.Jane Heal - 2002 - Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 102 (1):1-19.
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  37.  4
    Getting to Sewers and Sanitation: Doing Public Health within Nineteenth-Century Britain's Citizenship Regimes.Jane Jenson - 2008 - Politics and Society 36 (4):532-556.
    For well over a millennium, public institutions have sought to limit the spread of disease. This article claims that shared political narratives about collective solidarity and belonging expressed in ideas about citizenship shape and constrain public health interventions. While a Sanitarian medical paradigm fit the mid-nineteenth-century British citizenship regime better than one based on limiting contagion by quarantine, full implementation of the “sanitary idea” had to wait upon adjustments after 1870 in the predominantly liberal citizenship regime, and particularly in the (...)
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  38. On grace and dignity".Jane Veronica Curran, Christophe Fricker & Friedrich Schiller - 2005 - In Jane Veronica Curran, Christophe Fricker & Friedrich Schiller (eds.), Schiller's "On grace and dignity" in its cultural context: essays and a new translation. Rochester, N.Y.: Camden House.
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  39.  7
    The Pythagorean World: Why Mathematics Is Unreasonably Effective In Physics.Jane McDonnell - 2017 - Cham: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
    This book explores the persistence of Pythagorean ideas in theoretical physics. It shows that the Pythagorean position is both philosophically deep and scientifically interesting. However, it does not endorse pure Pythagoreanism; rather, it defends the thesis that mind and mathematical structure are the grounds of reality. The book begins by examining Wigner's paper on the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics in the natural sciences. It argues that, whilst many issues surrounding the applicability of mathematics disappear upon examination, there are some core (...)
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  40.  19
    On Speaking Thus: the Semantics of Indirect Discourse.Jane Heal - 2001 - Philosophical Quarterly 51 (205):433-454.
    Indexical predication is possible as well as the more familiar indexical reference. ‘My curtains are coloured thus’ describes my curtains. The indexical predicate expression it contains stands to possible non‐indexical replacements as a referring indexical does to possible non‐indexical replacements, in that it calls upon the context of utterance to fix its semantic contribution to the whole. Indexical predication is the natural resource to call upon in talk about skilful human performances, where we exhibit considerable know‐how but little explicit know‐that. (...)
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  41.  69
    Descriptive epistemology.Jane Duran - 1984 - Metaphilosophy 15 (3-4):185-195.
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  42.  34
    Animals-as-patients: Improving the Practice of Animal Experimentation.Jane Johnson & Christopher Degeling - 2012 - Between the Species 15 (1):4.
    In this paper we propose a new way of conceptualizing animals in experimentation – the animal-as-patient. Construing and treating animals as patients offers a way of successfully addressing some of the entrenched epistemological and ethical problems within a practice of animal experimentation directed to human clinical benefit. This approach is grounded in an epistemological insight and builds on work with so-called ‘pet models’. It relies upon the occurrence and characterization of analogous human and nonhuman animal diseases, where, if certain criteria (...)
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  43.  4
    Do Electrons Have Politics? Constructing User Identities in Swedish Electricity.Jane Summerton - 2004 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 29 (4):486-511.
    Electricity systems in many parts of Europe and the United States are currently undergoing transformations that have potentially profound implications for managerial practice and the politics of user identities within these systems. After more than a century of “universal service” that provided technical goods and services to all users on essentially equal terms, utility managers are now constructing and exploiting heterogeneity and difference among users. This article explores local managerial practices within Swedish electricity in the mid-1990s, where managers promoted “brand-name” (...)
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  44.  23
    Unmasking the Big Bluff of Legitimate Governance and So-Called Independence: Creolizing Rousseau through the Reflections of Anna Julia Cooper.Jane Anna Gordon - 2018 - Critical Philosophy of Race 6 (1):1-25.
    This article explains what is meant by the creolizing of ideas and then demonstrates it through exploring a political observation about political illegitimacy made by eighteenth-century Genevan social and political thinker Jean-Jacques Rousseau and creolized when the nineteenth-century African-American educator and social critic Anna Julia Cooper argued that the ideal of independence that lay at the core of political doctrines of republican self-governance relied on forms of willful blindness that cloaked the ongoing dependence of all human beings on one another. (...)
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  45.  35
    The Empath and the Psychopath: Ethics, Imagination, and Intercorporeality in Bryan Fuller's Hannibal.Jane Stadler - 2017 - Film-Philosophy 21 (3):410-427.
    The long-form television drama series Hannibal thematises the embodied imagination and the elicitation of empathy and ethical understanding at the level of narrative and characterisation as well as through character engagement and screen aesthetics. Using Hannibal as a case study, this research investigates how stylistic choices frame the experiences of screen characters and engender forms of intersubjectivity based on corporeal and cognitive routes to empathy; in particular, it examines the capacity for screen media to facilitate what neuroscientist Vittorio Gallese terms (...)
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  46.  10
    Telling stories about comprehensive education: Hidden histories of politics, policy and practice in post-war England.Jane Martin - 2020 - British Journal of Educational Studies 68 (5):649-669.
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  47.  39
    Basic Actions and Simple Actions.Jane R. Martin - 1972 - American Philosophical Quarterly 9 (1):59 - 68.
  48.  9
    Embryos, microscopes, and society.Jane Maienschein - 2016 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 57:129-136.
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  49.  78
    Explicit performative utterances and statements.Jane Heal - 1974 - Philosophical Quarterly 24 (95):106-121.
  50.  29
    Providing Subsidies and Incentives for Norplant, Sterilization and Other Contraception: Allowing Economic Theory to Inform Ethical Analysis.Jane Gilbert Mauldon - 2003 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 31 (3):351-364.
    Policymakers use financial incentives to achieve a wide variety of public objectives, from pollution reduction to the employment of welfare recipients. Combining insights from economic theory with lessons learned from actual implementation, this article analyzes the implications of two such policies: first, subsidizing contraception, and second, offering financial incentives to individuals for sterilization or for using a long-term, semipermanent method of contraception such as the Intra-Uterine Device, Depo-Provera or Norplant. These subsidy and incentive policies achieve their goals through a myriad (...)
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