Results for 'Lisa Raye Garlock'

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  1. Unconscious compensation and integration : art making for wholeness and balance.Jordan S. Potash & Lisa Raye Garlock - 2016 - In Kathryn Wood Madden (ed.), The unconscious roots of creativity. Asheville, North Carolina: Chiron Publications.
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  2.  11
    The unconscious roots of creativity.Kathryn Wood 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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  3.  55
    Human Stakeholders and the Use of Animals in Drug Development.Lisa A. Kramer & Ray Greek - 2018 - Business and Society Review 123 (1):3-58.
    Pharmaceutical firms seek to fulfill their responsibilities to stakeholders by developing drugs that treat diseases. We evaluate the social and financial costs of developing new drugs relative to the realized benefits and find the industry falls short of its potential. This is primarily due to legislation-mandated reliance on animal test results in early stages of the drug development process, leading to a mere 10 percent success rate for new drugs entering human clinical trials. We cite hundreds of biomedical studies from (...)
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  4.  31
    Assistive HCI-Serious Games Co-design Insights: The Case Study of i-PROGNOSIS Personalized Game Suite for Parkinson’s Disease.Sofia Balula Dias, José Alves Diniz, Evdokimos Konstantinidis, Theodore Savvidis, Vicky Zilidou, Panagiotis D. Bamidis, Athina Grammatikopoulou, Kosmas Dimitropoulos, Nikos Grammalidis, Hagen Jaeger, Michael Stadtschnitzer, Hugo Silva, Gonçalo Telo, Ioannis Ioakeimidis, George Ntakakis, Fotis Karayiannis, Estelle Huchet, Vera Hoermann, Konstantinos Filis, Elina Theodoropoulou, George Lyberopoulos, Konstantinos Kyritsis, Alexandros Papadopoulos, Anastasios Depoulos, Dhaval Trivedi, Ray K. Chaudhuri, Lisa Klingelhoefer, Heinz Reichmann, Sevasti Bostantzopoulou, Zoe Katsarou, Dimitrios Iakovakis, Stelios Hadjidimitriou, Vasileios Charisis, George Apostolidis & Leontios J. Hadjileontiadis - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Human-Computer Interaction and games set a new domain in understanding people’s motivations in gaming, behavioral implications of game play, game adaptation to player preferences and needs for increased engaging experiences in the context of HCI serious games. When the latter relate with people’s health status, they can become a part of their daily life as assistive health status monitoring/enhancement systems. Co-designing HCI-SGs can be seen as a combination of art and science that involves a meticulous collaborative process. The design elements (...)
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  5.  8
    For Bioethics to Center Justice, We Must Reconsider Funding, Training, and the Taxonomy of Bioethics.Lisa M. Lee - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (3):26-28.
    In their article “The Bioethics of Environmental Injustice: Ethical, Legal, and Clinical Implications of Unhealthy Environments,” Ray and Cooper (2024) invite us to prioritize environmental health...
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  6.  19
    Beaufort: The Duke and His Duchess, 1657–1715. [REVIEW]Lisa Sarasohn - 2002 - Isis 93:123-124.
    In a study based on archival research and imaginative reconstruction, Molly McClain tries to prove that the political and personal activities of Henry Somerset, third marquis of Worcester and first duke of Beaufort , and his wife, Mary Capel Somerset , demonstrate the transformation of the aristocracy in the Restoration period. Her work seems to embrace the thesis of Theodore K. Rabb in The Struggle for Stability in Early Modern Europe about the “crisis of the seventeenth century” and its resolution (...)
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  7.  9
    The X-ray Chirp of a Compact Black Hole Binary: A Phase Template for the Gravitational Wave Inspiral.Zoltán Haiman - 2018 - Foundations of Physics 48 (10):1430-1445.
    The gravitational waves from a binary black hole with masses \ can be detected with the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna once their orbital frequency exceeds 10\–10\ Hz. The binary separation at this stage is \R_{\mathrm{g}}\), and the orbital speed is \\). I argue that at this stage, the binary will be producing bright electromagnetic radiation via gas bound to the individual BHs. Both BHs will have their own photospheres in X-ray and possibly also in optical bands. Relativistic Doppler modulations and (...)
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  8.  34
    Reality monitoring vs. discriminating between external sources of memories.Carol L. Raye & Marcia K. Johnson - 1980 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 15 (6):405-408.
  9. A hastened death.Nicola G. Raye - 2009 - In James L. Werth & Dean Blevins (eds.), Decision making near the end of life: issues, developments, and future directions. New York: Routledge.
     
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  10.  48
    Restorative processes.Barbara E. Raye & Ann Warner Roberts - 2007 - In Gerry Johnstone & Daniel W. Van Ness (eds.), Handbook of Restorative Justice. Taylor & Francis.
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  11.  68
    Reality monitoring.Marcia K. Johnson & Carol L. Raye - 1981 - Psychological Review 88 (1):67-85.
  12.  26
    Applied ethics: a reader.Earl Raye Winkler & Jerrold R. Coombs (eds.) - 1993 - Cambridge [Mass.]: Blackwell.
    The essays in this book range over the fields of environmental ethics, business ethics, professional ethics, and bio-medical ethics. In each of the essays a significant question in the field of applied ethics is treated in a way that is methodologically revealing and provides some sense of new directions and preoccupations in the field. Among the questions discussed are: How should we conceive of the relations between theoretical ethics and practical ethics? What is the nature of responsible moral reasoning and (...)
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  13.  8
    Children’s Preference for Causal Information in Storybooks.Margaret Shavlik, Jessie Raye Bauer & Amy E. Booth - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  14. Cognitive and brain mechanisms of false memories and beliefs.Marcia K. Johnson & Carol L. Raye - 2000 - In Daniel L. Schacter & Elaine Scarry (eds.), Memory, Brain, and Belief. Harvard Univ Pr. pp. 35--86.
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  15.  47
    Clinical Ethics Consultants are not “Ethics” Experts—But They do Have Expertise.Lisa M. Rasmussen - 2016 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 41 (4):384-400.
    The attempt to critique the profession of clinical ethics consultation by establishing the impossibility of ethics expertise has been a red herring. Decisions made in clinical ethics cases are almost never based purely on moral judgments. Instead, they are all-things-considered judgments that involve determining how to balance other values as well. A standard of justified decision-making in this context would enable us to identify experts who could achieve these standards more often than others, and thus provide a basis for expertise (...)
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  16.  27
    Causally-Rich Group Play: A Powerful Context for Building Preschoolers’ Vocabulary.Jessie Raye Bauer, Amy E. Booth & Kathleen McGroarty-Torres - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  17.  21
    Is It Just for a Screening Program to Give People All the Information They Want?Lisa Dive, Isabella Holmes & Ainsley J. Newson - 2023 - American Journal of Bioethics 23 (7):34-42.
    Genomic screening at population scale generates many ethical considerations. One is the normative role that people’s preferences should play in determining access to genomic information in screening contexts, particularly information that falls beyond the scope of screening. We expect both that people will express a preference to receive such results and that there will be interest from the professional community in providing them. In this paper, we consider this issue in relation to the just and equitable design of population screening (...)
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  18.  47
    Francis Bacon: discovery and the art of discourse.Lisa Jardine - 1974 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Dr Jardine finds a unifying principle in Bacon's preoccupation with 'method', the evaluation and organisation of information as a procedure of investigation or ...
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  19.  26
    Consistent Performance Differences between Children and Adults Despite Manipulation of Cue-Target Variables.Jessie-Raye Bauer, Joel E. Martinez, Mary Abbe Roe & Jessica A. Church - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  20.  22
    Pictures and images: Spatial and temporal information compared.Marcia K. Johnson, Carol L. Raye, Mary Ann Foley & Jung K. Kim - 1982 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 19 (1):23-26.
  21. Meta-confidence judgments in rhesus macaques : explicit versus implicit mechanisms.Lisa K. Son & Nate Kornell - 2005 - In Herbert S. Terrace & Janet Metcalfe (eds.), The Missing Link in Cognition: Origins of Self-Reflective Consciousness. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  22.  38
    Positioning uterus transplantation as a ‘more ethical’ alternative to surrogacy: Exploring symmetries between uterus transplantation and surrogacy through analysis of a Swedish government white paper.Lisa Guntram & Nicola Jane Williams - 2018 - Bioethics 32 (8):509-518.
    Within the ethics and science literature surrounding uterus transplantation (UTx), emphasis is often placed on the extent to which UTx might improve upon, or offer additional benefits when compared to, existing ‘treatment options’ for women with absolute uterine factor infertility, such as adoption and gestational surrogacy. Within this literature UTx is often positioned as superior to surrogacy because it can deliver things that surrogacy cannot (such as the experience of gestation). Yet, in addition to claims that UTx is superior in (...)
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  23.  29
    Questions asked and unasked: how by worrying less about the ‘really real’ philosophers of science might better contribute to debates about genetics and race.Lisa Gannett - 2010 - Synthese 177 (3):363-385.
    Increased attention paid to inter-group genetic variability following completion of the Human Genome Project has provoked debate about race as a category of classification in biomedicine and as a biological phenomenon at the level of the genome. Philosophers of science favor a metaphysical approach relying on natural kind theorizing, the underlying assumptions of which structure the questions asked. Limitations arise the more metaphysically invested and less attuned to scientific practice these questions are. Other questions—arguably, those that matter most socially and (...)
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  24.  47
    Ideal and Non‐ideal Theory and the Problem of Knowledge.Lisa Herzog - 2012 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 29 (4):271-288.
    This article analyses a hitherto neglected problem at the transition from ideal to non‐ideal theory: the problem of knowledge. Ideal theories often make idealising assumptions about the availability of knowledge, for example knowledge of social scientific facts. This can lead to problems when this knowledge turns out not to be available at the non‐ideal level. Knowledge can be unavailable in a number of ways: in principle, for practical reasons, or because there are normative reasons not to use it. This can (...)
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  25.  15
    Passing on Feminism: From Consciousness to Reflexivity?Lisa Adkins - 2004 - European Journal of Women's Studies 11 (4):427-444.
    As has been widely observed, histories of feminism have often been conceived via notions of generation where feminism is positioned as a kind of familial property, a form of inheritance and legacy which is transmitted through generations. Thus feminism and its history have been imagined as following a familial mode of social reproduction. Despite the dominance of this model, it has nonetheless been subject to critique, not least because of its reliance on teleological and progressive notions of history. Judith Roof, (...)
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  26.  21
    Feminist Intersections in Science: Race, Gender and Sexuality through the Microscope.Lisa H. Weasel - 2004 - Hypatia 19 (1):183-193.
    This paper investigates the mutual embeddedness of “nature” and “culture,” as well as the intersections between race, gender, and sexuality, in the story of the HeLa cell line as viewed by a practicing feminist scientist. It provides a feminist analysis of the scientific discourse surrounding the HeLa cell line, and explores how feminist theories of science can provide a constructive and critical lens through which laboratory scientists can view their work.
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  27.  14
    Who are the humanities for? Decolonizing the humanities.Lisa L. Stenmark - 2021 - Zygon 56 (3):718-731.
    Drees makes a strong case for the importance of the humanities in the university, providing an excellent resource for anyone in the Western Academy. Its usefulness for those who want to work outside the West is limited, however, because he does not engage with literature that challenges its methods and disciplines. If we are to have a positive global impact, we need to do more than clarify existing boundaries, we need to blur them, beginning with an examination of inherent biases (...)
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  28.  46
    Hedonic Tone, Perceived Arousal, and Item Desirability: Three Components of Self-reported Mood.Lisa Feldman Barrett - 1996 - Cognition and Emotion 10 (1):47-68.
  29.  14
    Perceptual dimensions differentiate emotions.Lisa A. Cavanaugh, Deborah J. MacInnis & Allen M. Weiss - 2016 - Cognition and Emotion 30 (8).
    Individuals often describe objects in their world in terms of perceptual dimensions that span a variety of modalities; the visual (e.g., brightness: dark–bright), the auditory (e.g., loudness: quiet–loud), the gustatory (e.g., taste: sour–sweet), the tactile (e.g., hardness: soft vs. hard) and the kinaesthetic (e.g., speed: slow–fast). We ask whether individuals use perceptual dimensions to differentiate emotions from one another. Participants in two studies (one where respondents reported on abstract emotion concepts and a second where they reported on specific emotion episodes) (...)
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  30.  23
    Racism and Human Genome Diversity Research: The Ethical Limits of "Population Thinking".Lisa Gannett - 2001 - Philosophy of Science 68 (S3):S479-S492.
    This paper questions the prevailing historical understanding that scientific racism “retreated” in the 1950s when anthropology adopted the concepts and methods of population genetics and race was recognized to be a social construct and replaced by the concept of population. More accurately, a “populational” concept of race was substituted for a “typological one”—this is demonstrated by looking at the work of Theodosius Dobzhansky circa 1950. The potential for contemporary research in human population genetics to contribute to racism needs to be (...)
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  31.  9
    The effect of outcome severity on moral judgment and interpersonal goals of perpetrators, victims, and bystanders.Lisa Katharina Frisch, Markus Kneer, Joachim Israel Krueger & Johannes Ullrich - 2021 - European Journal of Social Psychology 51 (7):1158-1171.
    When two actors have the same mental state but one happens to harm another person (unlucky actor) and the other one does not (lucky actor), the latter elicits a milder moral judgement. To understand how this outcome effect would affect post-harm interactions between victims and perpetrators, we examined how the social role from which transgressions are perceived moderates the outcome effect, and how outcome effects on moral judgements transfer to agentic and communal interpersonal goals. Three vignette experiments (N = 950) (...)
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  32. Background on human metacognition.Lisa K. Son & Nate Kornell - 2005 - In Herbert S. Terrace & Janet Metcalfe (eds.), The Missing Link in Cognition: Origins of Self-Reflective Consciousness. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 296.
     
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  33.  58
    Biogeographical ancestry and race.Lisa Gannett - 2014 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 47:173-184.
  34. Legal Education Beyond the Academy: The Neoliberal Reorientation of Public Legal Education.Lisa Wintersteiger - 2019 - Law and Critique 30 (2):123-129.
    In order to re-make the world in its own image, neoliberal expansionism is predicated on the dominance of a particular regime of reason. The dominance of economic-juridical rationality relies in no small part on education to reproduce itself. In this sense, how and why a populace is educated in the law becomes a locus of struggle and of alternative and competing constructions of normative and political orders. Over the last decade the United Kingdom’s justice policy has become more attentive to (...)
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  35. Questions asked and unasked: how by worrying less about the 'really real' philosophers of science might better contribute to debates about genetics and race.Lisa Gannett - 2010 - Synthese 177 (3):363 - 385.
    Increased attention paid to inter-group genetic variability following completion of the Human Genome Project has provoked debate about race as a category of classification in biomedicine and as a biological phenomenon at the level of the genome. Philosophers of science favor a metaphysical approach relying on natural kind theorizing, the underlying assumptions of which structure the questions asked. Limitations arise the more metaphysically invested and less attuned to scientific practice these questions are. Other questions—arguably, those that matter most socially and (...)
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  36.  56
    The role of truth when communicating knowledge across epistemic difference.Lisa A. Bergin - 2001 - Social Epistemology 15 (4):367 – 378.
  37. Knowing Words: Wisdom and Cunning in the Classical Tradition of China and Greece.Lisa Raphals - 1994 - Philosophy East and West 44 (2):387-395.
     
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  38.  31
    To report or not to report: Exploring healthy volunteers' rationales for disclosing adverse events in Phase I drug trials.Lisa McManus & Jill A. Fisher - 2018 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 9 (2):82-90.
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  39.  69
    Public Health Ethics Theory: Review and Path to Convergence.Lisa M. Lee - 2012 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (1):85-98.
    Public health ethics is a nascent field, emerging over the past decade as an applied field merging concepts of clinical and research ethics. Because the “patient” in public health is the population rather than the individual, existing principles might be weighted differently, or there might be different ethical principles to consider. This paper reviewed the evolution of public health ethics, the use of bioethics as its model, and the proposed frameworks for public health ethics through 2010. Review of 13 major (...)
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  40. Fertile Ground: The Future of Higher Education in the Arab World.Lisa Anderson - 2012 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 79 (3):771-784.
     
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  41.  47
    Solitude as a positive experience.Motta Valeria Bortolotti Lisa - 2020 - Metodo. International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy 8 (2):119-147.
    What makes solitude a positive experience? What distinguishes experiences of solitude from experiences of loneliness? We review some of the literature on the benefits of solitude, focusing on freedom, creativity, and spirituality. Then, we argue that the relationship between agent and environment is an important factor in determining the quality of experiences of solitude. In particular, we find that solitude may support a person’s sense of agency, expanding the possibilities for action that a person has, and creating the conditions for (...)
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  42. Making populations: Bounding genes in space and in time.Lisa Gannett - 2003 - Philosophy of Science 70 (5):989-1001.
    At least below the level of species, biological populations are not mind‐independent objects that scientists discover. Rather, biological populations are pragmatically constructed as objects of investigation according to the aims, interests, and values that inform particular research contexts. The relations among organisms that are constitutive of population‐level phenomena (e.g., mating propensity, genealogy, and competition) occur as matters of degree and so give rise to statistically defined open‐ended biological systems. These systems are rendered discrete units to satisfy practical needs and theoretical (...)
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  43.  27
    Affect, Relationality and the `Problem of Personality'.Lisa Blackman - 2008 - Theory, Culture and Society 25 (1):23-47.
  44.  29
    Displacement and solidarity: An ethic of place‐making.Lisa Eckenwiler - 2018 - Bioethics 32 (9):562-568.
    Drawing on a conception of people as ‘ecological subjects’, creatures situated in specific social relations, locations, and material environments, I want to emphasize the importance of place and place‐making for basing, demonstrating, and forging future solidarity. Solidarity, as I will define it here, involves reaching out through moral imagination and responsive action across social and/or geographic distance and asymmetry to assist other people who are vulnerable, and to advance justice. Contained in the practice of solidarity are two core ‘enacted commitments’, (...)
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  45.  18
    ‘Creative destruction’: States, identities and legitimacy in the Arab world.Lisa Anderson - 2014 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 40 (4-5):369-379.
    In the modern Middle East, the public institutions associated with the internationally recognized states of the region are rarely viewed as trustworthy or reliable. Born in the demise of the Ottoman Empire, midwifed by European imperial powers who paid lip service to the development of the inhabitants, and nurtured in the cold war by superpowers largely indifferent to the well-being of the peoples of the region, the existing states came to be associated with expectations of welfare provision and structures of (...)
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  46.  24
    Reality monitoring: Second perceptions and thoughts.Marcia K. Johnson, Carol L. Raye & Francis T. Durso - 1980 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 15 (6):402-404.
  47.  14
    The Social Life of Class Clowns: Class Clown Behavior Is Associated With More Friends, but Also More Aggressive Behavior in the Classroom.Lisa Wagner - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    A dimensional rather than a typological approach to studying class clown behavior was recently proposed (Ruch, Platt, & Hofmann, 2014). In the present study, four dimensions of class clown behavior (class clown role, comic talent, disruptive rule-breaker, and subversive joker) were used to investigate the associations between class clown behavior and indicators of social status and social functioning in the classroom in a sample of N = 300 students attending grades 6 to 9 (mean age: 13 years, 47.7% male). Participants (...)
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  48.  12
    Her Mother Her Self: The Ethics of the Antigone Family Romance.Lisa Walsh - 1999 - Hypatia 14 (3):96-125.
    This essay discusses the implications of Irigaray's readings of the Antigone in the construction of a feminist ethics. By focusing on the gaps and intersections between Lacanian psychoanalysis and Hegelian phenomenology as formulative of Irigaray's eventual call for an ethics of sexual difference, 1 emphasize the inevitability of rethinking the functions of historicity, femininity, and maternity in the formation of new models of intersubjectivity.
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  49. The Mystery of Mirror.Lisa Warenski - 2014 - In Jason Holt (ed.), Leonard Cohen and Philosophy: Various Positions. Open Court. pp. 101-112.
  50.  14
    The Power of Suggestion: Rasa, Dhvani, and the Ineffable.Lisa Widdison - 2019 - Journal of Dharma Studies 2 (1):1-14.
    There is no denying the difficulty of expressing in words the meanings behind complex emotions. If they cannot be conveyed because they are personal and private, then how are they conveyed when they are neither entirely private nor personal, as in the case of generalized emotions, or the rasa experience? In Ānandavardhana’s Dhvanyāloka, we find a theory of suggestion (dhvani) which can be expanded beyond poetics to account for the evocative nature of emotion outside of all other modes of expression. (...)
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