Results for 'Kathryn Gillespie'

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Kathryn Gillespie
Harvard University
  1.  49
    Witnessing Animal Others: Bearing Witness, Grief, and the Political Function of Emotion.Kathryn Gillespie - 2016 - Hypatia 31 (3):572-588.
    This article theorizes the politics of witnessing and grief in the context of the embodied experience of cows raised for dairy in the Pacific Northwestern United States. Bearing witness to the mundane features of dairy production and their impact on cows' physical and emotional worlds enables us to understand the violence of commodification and the political dimensions of witnessing the suffering of an Other. I argue that greater attention should be paid to the uneven hierarchies of power in the act (...)
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  2.  41
    The Wrong of Injustice: Dehumanization and its Role in Feminist Philosophy by Mari Mikkola.Kathryn Gillespie - 2017 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 27 (2):1-5.
    Mari Mikkola identifies three primary forms of social injustice—oppression, domination, and discrimination—and asks what makes them wrong. She argues that feminist philosophy has thus far focused heavily on gender as a lens or anchor through which to understand and respond to injustice. In Mikkola's view, this orientation around gender is limiting feminist philosophers' theoretical engagement with the roots of injustice. To remedy this problem, she builds a case for moving toward a more broadly humanist conception of injustice. The humanist feminism (...)
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  3.  2
    The Theological Origins of Modernity.Michael Allen Gillespie - 2009 - University of Chicago Press.
    Exposing the religious roots of our ostensibly godless age, Michael Allen Gillespie reveals in this landmark study that modernity is much less secular than conventional wisdom suggests. Taking as his starting point the collapse of the medieval world, Gillespie argues that from the very beginning moderns sought not to eliminate religion but to support a new view of religion and its place in human life. He goes on to explore the ideas of such figures as William of Ockham, (...)
  4.  67
    Moral Passages: Toward a Collectivist Moral Theory.Kathryn Pyne Addelson - 1994 - Routledge.
    In Moral Passages, Kathryn Pyne Addelson presents an original moral theory suited for contemporary life and its moral problems. Her basic principle is that knowledge and morality are generated in collective action, and she develops it through a critical examination of theories in philosophy, sociology and women's studies, most of which hide the collective nature and as a result hide the lives and knowledge of many people. At issue are the questions of what morality is, and how moral theories (...)
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  5.  24
    What Money Cannot Buy and What Money Ought Not Buy: Dignity, Motives, and Markets in Human Organ Procurement Debates.Ryan Gillespie - 2019 - Journal of Medical Humanities 40 (1):101-116.
    Given the current organ shortage, a prevalent alternative to the altruism-based policy is a market-based solution: pay people for their organs. Receiving much popular and scholarly attention, a salient normative argument against neoliberal pressures is the preservation of human dignity. This article examines how advocates of both the altruistic status quo and market challengers reason and weigh the central normative concept of dignity, meant as inherent worth and/or rank. Key rhetorical strategies, including motivations and broader social visions, of the two (...)
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  6. Nietzsche's Final Teaching.Michael Allen Gillespie - 2017 - University of Chicago Press.
    In the seven and a half years before his collapse into madness, Nietzsche completed Thus Spoke Zarathustra, the best-selling and most widely read philosophical work of all time, as well as six additional works that are today considered required reading for Western intellectuals. Together, these works mark the final period of Nietzsche’s thought, when he developed a new, more profound, and more systematic teaching rooted in the idea of the eternal recurrence, which he considered his deepest thought. Cutting against the (...)
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  7.  57
    Hannah Arendt and the Negro Question.Kathryn T. Gines - 2014 - Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
    While acknowledging Hannah Arendt's keen philosophical and political insights, Kathryn T. Gines claims that there are some problematic assertions and oversights regarding Arendt’s treatment of the "Negro question." Gines focuses on Arendt's reaction to the desegregation of Little Rock schools, to laws making mixed marriages illegal, and to the growing civil rights movement in the south. Reading them alongside Arendt's writings on revolution, the human condition, violence, and responses to the Eichmann war crimes trial, Gines provides a systematic analysis (...)
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  8.  1
    Hegel, Heidegger, and the Ground of History.Michael Allen Gillespie - 2019 - University of Chicago Press.
    In this wide-ranging and thoughtful study, Michael Allen Gillespie explores the philosophical foundation, or ground, of the concept of history. Analyzing the historical conflict between human nature and freedom, he centers his discussion on Hegel and Heidegger but also draws on the pertinent thought of other philosophers whose contributions to the debate is crucial—particularly Rousseau, Kant, and Nietzsche.
  9. Wrongful Risks And Unintended Consequences.Norman Gillespie - 1997 - Jahrbuch für Recht Und Ethik 5.
    This paper explores whether it is possible to use Kant's writings on law and his Principle of Right to develop a theory of tort liability for the unintended harmful consequences to other persons that materialize from the wrongful risks created by human actions. The paper uses PR to identify such risks, and imputes to their authors the wrongful hindrances of other persons that result from them. PR protects the freedom of action of human agents, but it also permits them to (...)
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  10.  21
    Public Health Virtue Ethics.Kathryn MacKay - 2022 - Public Health Ethics 15 (1):1-10.
    This paper proposes that public health is the sort of institution that has a role in producing structures of virtue in society. This proposal builds upon work that describes how virtues are structured by the practices of institutions, at the collective or whole-of-society level. This work seeks to fill a gap in public health ethics when it comes to virtues. Mainstay moral theories tend to incorporate some role for virtues, but within public health ethics this role has not been fully (...)
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  11. Reconciliation: 'From Little Things, Big Things Grow'.Glenda Inglis-Gillespie - 2008 - Ethos: Social Education Victoria 16 (3):30.
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  12.  14
    Impure Thoughts: Essays on Philosophy, Feminism, & Ethics.Kathryn Pyne Addelson - 1991 - Temple University Press.
  13.  18
    On Debt and Redemption: Friedrich Nietzsche's Doctrine of Eternal Recurrence.Michael Allen Gillespie - 2018 - Journal of Religious Ethics 46 (2):267-287.
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  14.  12
    Expecting some action: Predictive Processing and the construction of conscious experience.Kathryn Nave, George Deane, Mark Miller & Andy Clark - 2022 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 13 (4):1019-1037.
    Predictive processing has begun to offer new insights into the nature of conscious experience—but the link is not straightforward. A wide variety of systems may be described as predictive machines, raising the question: what differentiates those for which it makes sense to talk about conscious experience? One possible answer lies in the involvement of a higher-order form of prediction error, termed expected free energy. In this paper we explore under what conditions the minimization of this new quantity might underpin conscious (...)
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  15.  9
    Richard Gillespie. The Great Melbourne Telescope. 188 pp., illus., bibl., index. Melbourne: Museum Victoria Publishing, 2011. $29.95. [REVIEW]Barbara J. Becker - 2012 - Isis 103 (4):797-798.
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  16.  25
    Virtual morality: transitioning from moral judgment to moral action?Kathryn B. Francis, Charles Howard, Ian S. Howard, Michaela Gummerum, Giorgio Ganis, Grace Anderson & Sylvia Terbeck - unknown
    The nature of moral action versus moral judgment has been extensively debated in numerous disciplines. We introduce Virtual Reality moral paradigms examining the action individuals take in a high emotionally arousing, direct action-focused, moral scenario. In two studies involving qualitatively different populations, we found a greater endorsement of utilitarian responses–killing one in order to save many others–when action was required in moral virtual dilemmas compared to their judgment counterparts. Heart rate in virtual moral dilemmas was significantly increased when compared to (...)
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  17.  10
    On the Megarians.C. M. Gillespie - 1911 - Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 24 (2):218-241.
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  18. The unconscious roots of creativity.Kathryn Madden (ed.) - 2016 - Asheville, North Carolina: Chiron Publications.
    From whence spring the sparks of creativity? It is to this very question that the field of depth psychology--especially that of C.G. Jung and his intellectual descendants--has much to contribute. Just as the Muses were the offspring of Mnemosyne, the goddess of memory, our memories are the ancestors of our creativity that finds its multifaceted expression in the written word, image, theater, dance, and music. The Unconscious Roots of Creativity seeks to push the investigation into that domain of memory that (...)
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  19. Change happens: a compendium of wisdom.Kathryn Petras - 2018 - New York: Workman Publishing.
    "Change is not merely necessary to life--it is life." That's Alvin Toffler, characteristically stating the profound in a profoundly direct way. And yes, even when we see change coming--as we're about to graduate from school, take a new job, get married--it's still not so easy to accept. And when we don't see it coming--oof, we have an even harder time. Here to help us embrace change and defuse its unsettling power is Change Happens, a full-color illustrated gift book to consult, (...)
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  20.  3
    The Hidden Face of Rights: Embracing and Practicing Responsibilities.Kathryn Sikkink - 2020 - Yale University Press.
    _Why we cannot truly implement human rights unless we also recognize human responsibilities_ When we debate questions in international law, politics, and justice, we often use the language of rights—and far less often the language of responsibilities. Human rights scholars and activists talk about state responsibility for rights, but they do not articulate clear norms about other actors’ obligations. In this book, Kathryn Sikkink argues that we cannot truly implement human rights unless we also recognize and practice the corresponding (...)
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  21.  3
    Between Greece and Babylonia: Hellenistic Intellectual History in Cross-Cultural Perspective.Kathryn Stevens - 2019 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book argues for a new approach to the intellectual history of the Hellenistic world. Despite the intense cross-cultural interactions which characterised the period after Alexander, studies of 'Hellenistic' intellectual life have tended to focus on Greek scholars and institutions. Where cross-cultural connections have been drawn, it is through borrowing: the Greek adoption of Babylonian astrology; the Egyptian scholar Manetho deploying Greek historiographical models. In this book, however, Kathryn Stevens advances a 'Hellenistic intellectual history' which is cross-cultural in scope (...)
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  22. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Philosophy of Education.Kathryn Ann Hytten (ed.) - 2022 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    This edited collection provides a comprehensive, global, invitational, and accessible overview of contemporary issues in the field of philosophy of education. It includes a wide range topics, ideas, and diverse perspectives from around the world. Each chapter is an in-depth exploration of a philosophic topic or issue relevant to teaching, education, pedagogy, and/or schooling. Authors include well-known and emerging scholars who write in invitational ways to a non-specialist audience. Taken together, the chapter authors illuminate the kinds of questions that philosophers (...)
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  23.  4
    Paying the Price: Contextualizing Exchange in Phaedo 69a–c.Kathryn Morgan - 2021 - Rhizomata 8 (2):239-267.
    This paper uses a problematic passage at Phaedo 69a–c as a case study to explore the advantages we can gain by reading Plato in his cultural context. Socrates argues that the common conception of courage is strange: people fear death, but endure it because they are afraid of greater evils. They are thus brave through fear. He proposes that we should not exchange greater pleasures, pains, and fears for lesser, like coins, but that there is the only correct coin, for (...)
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  24. Real (and) Imaginal Relationships with the Dead.Kathryn J. Norlock - 2017 - Journal of Value Inquiry 51 (2):341-356.
    Open Access: Appreciating the relationship of the living to our dead is an aspect of human life that seems to be neglected in philosophy. I argue that living individuals can have ongoing, non-imaginary, valuable relationships with deceased loved ones. This is important to establish because arguments for such relationships better generate claims in applied ethics about our conduct with respect to our dead. In the first half of the paper I advance the narrower claim that psychological literature affirmative of “imaginal (...)
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  25.  74
    How Doctors Think: Clinical Judgment and the Practice of Medicine.Kathryn Montgomery - 2006 - Oxford University Press.
    How Doctors Think defines the nature and importance of clinical judgment. Although physicians make use of science, this book argues that medicine is not itself a science but rather an interpretive practice that relies on clinical reasoning. A physician looks at the patient's history along with the presenting physical signs and symptoms and juxtaposes these with clinical experience and empirical studies to construct a tentative account of the illness. How Doctors Think is divided into four parts. Part one introduces the (...)
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  26.  42
    Management as a practice: A response to Alasdair Macintyre. [REVIEW]Kathryn Balstad Brewer - 1991 - Journal of Business Ethics 16 (8):825-833.
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  27.  4
    Agent-centered epistemic rationality.James Gillespie - 2023 - Synthese 201 (3):1-22.
    It is a plausible and compelling theoretical assumption that epistemic rationality is just a matter of having doxastic attitudes that are the correct responses to one’s epistemic reasons, or that all requirements of epistemic rationality reduce to requirements on doxastic attitudes. According to this idea, all instances of epistemic rationality are instances of rational belief. Call this assumption, and any theory working under it, _belief-centered_. In what follows, I argue that we should not accept belief-centered theories of epistemic rationality. This (...)
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  28. Common sense.Katie Gillespie - 2018 - New York, NY: AV2 By Weigl.
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  29. The International Comparative Literature Association (AILC/icla): Association Internationale de Littérature Comparée.Gerald Gillespie - 2003 - Diogenes 50 (2):117-120.
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  30.  33
    Animal, Vegetable, or Woman?: A Feminist Critique of Ethical Vegetarianism.Kathryn Paxton George - 2000 - State University of New York Press.
    Challenges current claims that humans ought to be vegetarians because animals have moral standing.
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  31.  6
    Realism, Philosophy and Social Science.Kathryn Dean (ed.) - 2006 - Palgrave-Macmillan.
    The authors examine the nature of the relationship between social science and philosophy and address the sort of work social science should do, and the role and sorts of claims that an accompanying philosophy should engage in. In particular, the authors reintroduce the question of ontology, an area long overlooked by philosophers of social science, and present a cricital engagement with the work of Roy Bhaskar. The book argues against the excesses of philosophising and commits itself to a philosophical approach (...)
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  32.  5
    Nietzsche and the Anthropology of Nihilism.Michael Allen Gillespie - 1999 - Nietzsche Studien (1973) 28:141-155.
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  33. Peer relationships, motivation, and academic performance at school.Kathryn R. Wentzel - 2005 - In Andrew J. Elliot & Carol S. Dweck (eds.), Handbook of Competence and Motivation. The Guilford Press. pp. 279--296.
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  34. Locked in the Family Cell: Gender, Sexuality and Political Agency in Irish National Discourse.Kathryn A. Conrad - 2004
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  35.  58
    Make My Memory: How Advertising Can Change Our Memories of the Past.Kathryn A. Braun, Rhiannon Ellis & Elizabeth F. Loftus - 2002 - Psychology and Marketing 19 (1):1-23.
    Marketers use autobiographical advertising as a means to create nostalgia for their products. This research explores whether such referencing can cause people to believe that they had experiences as children that are mentioned in the ads. In Experiment 1, participants viewed an ad for Disney that suggested that they shook hands with Mickey Mouse as a child. Relative to controls, the ad increased their confidence that they personally had shaken hands with Mickey as a child at a Disney resort. The (...)
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  36.  5
    A Crusade for Humanity. The History of Organized Positivism in England.Frances E. Gillespie - 1932 - International Journal of Ethics 42 (3):380-381.
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  37. A long-term therapy case illustrating treatment by attitude.Kathryn Pryor - 2005 - In George Silberschatz (ed.), Transformative Relationships: The Control-Mastery Theory of Psychotherapy. Routledge. pp. 121--151.
     
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  38.  56
    Forgiveness from a Feminist Perspective.Kathryn Norlock - 2009 - Lexington Books.
    In this monograph, I offer feminist reasons to develop a multidimensional account of forgiveness as a moral, and therefore at least partially deliberative, action or set of actions, which functions as a remedy in responding to blame or condemnation, releasing offenders from the fullness of their blameworthiness, in relational contexts which therefore require considerations of power between relata. I rely on feminist philosophical account of the relational self in order to contextualise these power relations. I provide accounts of forgiveness as (...)
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  39. “Don't think zebras”: Uncertainty, interpretation, and the place of paradox in clinical education.Kathryn Hunter - 1996 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 17 (3).
    Working retrospectively in an uncertain field of knowledge, physicians are engaged in an interpretive practice that is guided by couterweighted, competing, sometimes paradoxical maxims. When you hear hoofbeats, don't think zebras, is the chief of these, the epitome of medicine's practical wisdom, its hermeneutic rule. The accumulated and contradictory wisdom distilled in clinical maxims arises necessarily from the case-based nature of medical practice and the narrative rationality that good practice requires. That these maxims all have their opposites enforces in students (...)
     
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  40.  14
    Saving What We Love at Any Cost: The Rhetoric of Heroic Medicine as Diversion.Michael Gillespie - 2002 - Journal of Medical Humanities 23 (1):73-86.
    Discussion of the worldwide corporate development of biotechnologies is sometimes diverted through the introduction of images of heroic medical intervention, exemplified by the statement, I would do anything to save my daughter. Such heroic images seem to justify virtually any deployment of resources and nearly any health or environmental risk. But it is instructive for future public discussions to examine the use of such images, and to note that those advocating a prominent role for biotechnologies in an expanding global economy (...)
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  41.  11
    Christianity and the New Spirit of Capitalism. [REVIEW]Kathryn D. Blanchard - 2019 - Studies in Christian Ethics 34 (4):574-578.
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  42. Christ the Key.Kathryn Tanner - unknown
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  43.  7
    Gender Struggles: Practical Approaches to Contemporary Feminism.Kathryn Pyne Addelson, Sandra Lee Bartky, Susan Bordo, Rosi Braidotti, Susan J. Brison, Judith Butler, Drucilla L. Cornell, Deirdre E. Davis, Nancy Fraser, Evelynn M. Hammonds, Nancy J. Hirschmann, Eva Feder Kittay, Sharon Marcus, Marsha Marotta, Julien S. Murphy, Iris MarionYoung & Linda M. G. Zerilli (eds.) - 2002 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    The sixteen essays in Gender Struggles address a wide range of issues in gender struggles, from the more familiar ones that, for the last thirty years, have been the mainstay of feminist scholarship, such as motherhood, beauty, and sexual violence, to new topics inspired by post-industrialization and multiculturalism, such as the welfare state, cyberspace, hate speech, and queer politics, and finally to topics that traditionally have not been seen as appropriate subjects for philosophizing, such as adoption, care work, and the (...)
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  44. An introduction to Christian environmentalism: ecology, virtue, and ethics.Kathryn D'Arcy Blanchard - 2014 - Waco, Texas: Baylor University Press.
    Christians share a common concern for the earth. Evangelicals emphasize creation care; mainline Protestants embrace the green movement; the Catholic Church lists "10 deadly environmental sins;" and the Eastern Orthodox Patriarch has declared climate change an urgent issue of social and economic justice. This textbook examines seven contemporary environmental challenges through the lens of classical Christian virtues. Authors Kathryn Blanchard and Kevin O'Brien use these classical Christian virtues to seek a "golden mean" between extreme positions by pairing each virtue (...)
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  45. Water shaping stone: faith, relationships, and conscience formation.Kathryn Lilla Cox - 2015 - Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press.
    The Catholic Tradition requires the faithful to form and follow their conscience. This is the case even with the recognition that consciences can be malformed and one can make errors in practical judgments. Water Shaping Stone examines various aspects of this tradition regarding conscience by using, among other sources, twentieth-century magisterial documents, theologians' works, and Scripture. Kathryn Lilla Cox argues that while the Magisterium retains teaching authority, and a responsibility to help form consciences through its teaching, focusing only on (...)
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  46. Interests and Rights: The Case Against Animals.Raymond Gillespie Frey - 1980 - Oxford University Press.
  47. Disciplines: the lenses of learning.Kathryn Coleman - 2013 - Champaign, Ill.: Common Ground.
     
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  48.  62
    Myth and Philosophy From the Presocratics to Plato.Kathryn A. Morgan - 2000 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book explores the dynamic relationship between myth and philosophy in the Presocratics, the Sophists, and in Plato - a relationship which is found to be more extensive and programmatic than has been recognized. The story of philosophy's relationship with myth is that of its relationship with literary and social convention. The intellectuals studied here wanted to reformulate popular ideas about cultural authority and they achieved this goal by manipulating myth. Their self-conscious use of myth creates a self-reflective philosophic sensibility (...)
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  49.  11
    Book Review:Modern English Reform: From Individualism to Socialism (Lowell Lectures). Edward P. Cheyney. [REVIEW]Frances E. Gillespie - 1932 - International Journal of Ethics 42 (4):496-.
  50.  4
    Current Methods in Historical Semantics.Kathryn Allan & Justyna A. Robinson (eds.) - 2011 - De Gruyter Mouton.
    Innovative, data-driven methods provide more rigorous and systematic evidence for the description and explanation of diachronic semantic processes. The volume systematises, reviews, and promotes a range of empirical research techniques and theoretical perspectives that currently inform work across the discipline of historical semantics. In addition to emphasising the use of new technology, the potential of current theoretical models (e.g. within variationist, sociolinguistic or cognitive frameworks) is explored along the way.
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