Results for 'Lloyd I. Richardson'

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  1.  9
    Do Mathematical Gender Differences Continue? A Longitudinal Study of Gender Difference and Excellence in Mathematics Performance in the U.S.Cody S. Ding, Kim Song & Lloyd I. Richardson - 2006 - Educational Studies 40 (3):279-295.
    A persistent belief in American culture is that males both outperform and have a higher inherent aptitude for mathematics than females. Using data from two school districts in two different states in the United States, this study used longitudinal multilevel modeling to examine whether overall performance on standardized as well as classroom tests reveals a gender difference in mathematics performance. The results suggest that both male and female students demonstrated the same growth trend in mathematics performance (as measured by standardized (...)
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  2.  1
    Book ReviewsBart Gruzalski,. On Gandhi.Belmont, Calif.: Wadsworth/Thomson Learning, 2001. Pp. 86. $15.95.Lloyd I. Rudolph - 2005 - Ethics 115 (2):416-417.
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  3.  2
    Experiencing the State.Lloyd I. Rudolph & John Kurt Jacobsen (eds.) - 2009 - Oxford University Press India.
    This collection of essays by 13 well-known social scientists and commentators examines the modern state from different inter-disciplinary and thematic perspectives.
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  4.  8
    Gandhi and the Stoics: Modern Experiments on Ancient Values.Lloyd I. Rudolph - 2013 - Common Knowledge 19 (3):567-568.
  5.  1
    Gandhi and the Stoics: Modern Experiments on Ancient Values by Richard Sorabji (review).Lloyd I. Rudolph - 2013 - Common Knowledge 19 (3):567-568.
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  6. Setting the table: Amar Singh aboard the SS Mohawk.Lloyd I. Rudolph & Susanne Rudolph - 1994 - Common Knowledge 3 (1):158-77.
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  7.  3
    The Modernity of Tradition.Philip H. Ashby, Lloyd I. Rudolph & Susanne Hoeber Rudolph - 1969 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 89 (4):791.
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  8.  9
    The relationship between perceptual and memorial psychophysics.E. I. Chew & J. T. E. Richardson - 1980 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 16 (1):25-26.
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  9.  9
    Bart Gruzalski, On Gandhi:On Gandhi.Lloyd I. Rudolph - 2005 - Ethics 115 (2):416-417.
  10. Gandhi's Experiments with Truth: Essential Writings by and About Mahatma Gandhi.Douglas Allen, Judith M. Brown, Richard Falk, Michael Nagler, Makarand Paranjape, Glenn Paige, Bhikhu Parekh, Anthony J. Parel, Lloyd I. Rudolph, Michael Sonnleitner & Ronald J. Terchek (eds.) - 2005 - Lexington Books.
    This comprehensive Gandhi reader provides an essential new reference for scholars and students of his life and thought. It is the only text available that presents Gandhi's own writings, including excerpts from three of his books—An Autobiography: The Story of My Experiments with Truth, Satyagraha in South Africa, Hind Swaraj —a major pamphlet, Constructive Programme: Its Meaning and Place, and many journal articles and letters, along with a biographical sketch of his life in historical context and recent essays by highly (...)
     
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  11.  4
    I Experientially Remember, Therefore I Exist? A reply to R. D. Smith.D. I. Lloyd - 1983 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 17 (1):97-102.
    D I Lloyd; I Experientially Remember, Therefore I Exist? A reply to R. D. Smith, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 17, Issue 1, 30 May 2006, Pages 97–1.
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  12.  20
    Direction of fit.I. Lloyd Humberstone - 1992 - Mind 101 (401):59-83.
  13.  2
    Theory and Practice1.D. I. Lloyd - 1976 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 10 (1):98-113.
    D I Lloyd; Theory and Practice1, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 10, Issue 1, 30 May 2006, Pages 98–113, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9752.1976.tb0.
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  14.  3
    What’s in a Laugh? Humour and its educational significance.D. I. Lloyd - 1985 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 19 (1):73-79.
    D I Lloyd; What’s in a Laugh? Humour and its educational significance, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 19, Issue 1, 30 May 2006, Pages 73–79, https:/.
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  15.  5
    I experientially remember, therefore I exist? A reply to R. D. Smith.D. I. Lloyd - 1983 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 17 (1):97–102.
    D I Lloyd; I Experientially Remember, Therefore I Exist? A reply to R. D. Smith, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 17, Issue 1, 30 May 2006, Pages 97–1.
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  16.  10
    Mischievous responders: data quality lessons learned in mental health research.Morgan E. Browning, Sidney L. Satterfield & Elizabeth E. Lloyd-Richardson - 2024 - Ethics and Behavior 34 (5):303-313.
    Internet recruitment methods for research are rapidly evolving as technology and participant preferences do as well. This brings data security concerns, balanced with respect to persons for research participants. Internet recruitment research strategies are still important given the importance of creating private and accessible pathways for potentially marginalized populations or people experiencing stigmatized mental health conditions to participate in research. This manuscript describes the case of social media recruitment for a mental health and racism study in Fall 2022 that was (...)
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  17.  6
    I—Elisabeth A. Lloyd: Varieties of Support and Confirmation of Climate Models.Elisabeth A. Lloyd - 2009 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 83 (1):213-232.
  18.  4
    Ratios of specific heat and high-frequency viscosities in organic liquids under pressure, derived from ultrasonic propagation.E. G. Richardson & R. I. Tait - 1957 - Philosophical Magazine 2 (16):441-454.
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  19.  2
    Notes & Correspondence.I. Cohen, Roger Hahn, Lloyd Espenschied, Marshall Clagett & Bertha Rubinstein - 1955 - Isis 46:278-283.
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  20.  10
    Notes & Correspondence.I. Bernard Cohen, Roger Hahn, Lloyd Espenschied, Marshall Clagett, Bertha W. Rubinstein, George Sarton, Vasco Ronch, Bruno Boni, Chester G. Moore, Jane D. Oppenheimer, Vasco Ronchi & Roberto Almagia - 1955 - Isis 46 (3):278-283.
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  21.  2
    A comparison of three varieties of training in human problem solving.Lloyd Morrisett & Carl I. Hovland - 1959 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 58 (1):52.
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  22.  13
    I_— _Lloyd Humberstone.Lloyd Humberstone - 2006 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 80 (1):265-320.
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  23.  8
    I—Alan W. Richardson: ‘The Tenacious, Malleable, Indefatigable, and Yet, Eternally Modifiable Will’: Hans Reichenbach's Knowing Subject.Alan W. Richardson - 2005 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 79 (1):73-87.
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  24.  2
    Philosophy and the teacher.D. I. Lloyd (ed.) - 1976 - Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul.
  25. Memory: Task dissociations, process dissociations and dissociations of consciousness.A. Richardson-Klavehn, John M. Gardiner & R. I. Java - 1995 - In Geoffrey D. M. Underwood (ed.), Implicit Cognition. Oxford University Press.
  26.  6
    I—Elisabeth A. Lloyd: Varieties of Support and Confirmation of Climate Models.Elisabeth A. Lloyd - 2009 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 83 (1):213-232.
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  27.  6
    Deliberate Introductions of Species: Research Needs.John Ewel, Dennis O'Dowd, Joy Bergelson, Curtis Daehler, Carla D'Antonio, Luis Diego Gómez, Doria Gordon, Richard Hobbs, Alan Holt, Keith Hopper, Colin Hughes, Marcy LaHart, Roger Leakey, William Lee, Lloyd Loope, David Lorence, Svata Louda, Ariel Lugo, Peter McEvoy, David Richardson & Peter Vitousek - 1999 - BioScience 49 (8).
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  28. Leibniz on Number Systems.Lloyd Strickland - 2024 - In Bharath Sriraman (ed.), Handbook of the History and Philosophy of Mathematical Practice. Springer. pp. 167-197.
    This chapter examines the pioneering work of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646-1716) on various number systems, in particular binary, which he independently invented in the mid-to-late 1670s, and hexadecimal, which he invented in 1679. The chapter begins with the oft-debated question of who may have influenced Leibniz’s invention of binary, though as none of the proposed candidates is plausible I suggest a different hypothesis, that Leibniz initially developed binary notation as a tool to assist his investigations in mathematical problems that were (...)
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  29.  7
    A paradigm for understanding trust and mistrust in medical research: The Community VOICES study.M. Smirnoff, I. Wilets, D. F. Ragin, R. Adams, J. Holohan, R. Rhodes, G. Winkel, E. M. Ricci, C. Clesca & L. D. Richardson - 2018 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 9 (1):39-47.
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  30.  2
    Theory and practice.D. I. Lloyd - 1976 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 10 (1):98–113.
    D I Lloyd; Theory and Practice1, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 10, Issue 1, 30 May 2006, Pages 98–113, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9752.1976.tb0.
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  31. Philosophy and the Teacher.D. I. Lloyd - 1977 - Philosophy 52 (201):366-368.
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  32.  2
    D. H. Lawrence on cézanne: A study in the psychology of critical intuition.John Adkins Richardson & John I. Ades - 1970 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 28 (4):441-453.
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  33. 3.0 tasks, retrieval strategies, and states of consciousness: A framework.Alan Richardson-Klavehn, John M. Gardiner & Rosalind I. Java - 1995 - In Geoffrey D. M. Underwood (ed.), Implicit Cognition. Oxford University Press. pp. 85.
  34.  1
    Comment ne pas être charitable dans l'interprétation.G. E. R. Lloyd & I. Delpla - 2002 - Philosophia Scientiae 6 (2):163-179.
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  35.  4
    Philosophy and the teacher.Ed D. I. Lloyd - 1979 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 11 (1):62–64.
  36.  1
    The recovery of rhetoric: Persuasive discourse and disciplinarity in the human sciences.I. D. Lloyd-Jones - 1994 - History of European Ideas 18 (6):1006-1007.
  37.  6
    Rethinking the I-You relation through dialogical philosophy in the Ethics of AI and robotics.Kathleen Richardson - 2019 - AI and Society 34 (1):1-2.
  38.  14
    Institutionally Divided Moral Responsibility*: HENRY S. RICHARDSON.Henry S. Richardson - 1999 - Social Philosophy and Policy 16 (2):218-249.
    I am going to be discussing a mode of moral responsibility that anglophone philosophers have largely neglected. It is a type of responsibility that looks to the future rather than the past. Because this forward-looking moral responsibility is relatively unfamiliar in the lexicon of analytic philosophy, many of my locutions will initially strike many readers as odd. As a matter of everyday speech, however, the notion of forward-looking moral responsibility is perfectly familiar. Today, for instance, I said I would be (...)
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  39.  5
    Sight and the body.Louise Richardson - 2017 - In Frederique De Vignemont & Adrian J. T. Alsmith (eds.), The Subject's Matter: Self-Consciousness and the Body. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
    When I see some object, it visually seems as if the location of that object is distinct from the location from which it is perceived. For example, if I hold out my pencil in front of me, it visually seems to be at some location there, but I seem to it see it from some other location here. The place from which one perceives is, of course, occupied by one's body, and in this chapter I consider whether, in order to (...)
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  40.  11
    Science, Politics, and Evolution. By Elisabeth A. Lloyd.Sarah S. Richardson - 2010 - Hypatia 25 (2):455-459.
  41.  43
    Social Change, Solidarity, and Mass Agency.Kevin Richardson - 2024 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 105 (2):210-232.
    Critics of social injustice argue that the agent of transformative social change will (or should) be a mass agent; namely, an agent that is large, complex, and geographically dispersed. Traditional theories of collective agency emphasize the presence of shared intentions and common knowledge, but mass agents are too large for such cohesion. To make sense of mass agency, I suggest a new approach. On the solidarity theory of mass agency, a mass agent is composed of (a) organizers who intend to (...)
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  42.  8
    A Phenomenological Calculus for Anisotropic Systems.A. H. Louie & I. W. Richardson - 2006 - Axiomathes 16 (1-2):215-243.
    The phenomenological calculus is a relational paradigm for complex systems, closely related in substance and spirit to Robert Rosen’s own approach. Its mathematical language is multilinear algebra. The epistemological exploration continues in this paper, with the expansion of the phenomenological calculus into the realm of anisotropy.
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  43.  14
    Space, Time and Molyneux's Question.Louise Richardson - 2014 - Ratio 27 (4):483-505.
    Whatever the answer to Molyneux's question is, it is certainly not obvious that the answer is ‘yes’. In contrast, it seems clear that we should answer affirmatively a temporal variation on Molyneux's question, introduced by Gareth Evans. I offer a phenomenological explanation of this asymmetry in our responses to the two questions. This explanation appeals to the modality-specific spatial structure of perceptual experience and its amodal temporal structure. On this explanation, there are differences in the perception of spatial properties in (...)
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  44.  20
    The human relationship in the ethics of robotics: a call to Martin Buber’s I and Thou.Kathleen Richardson - 2019 - AI and Society 34 (1):75-82.
    Artificially Intelligent robotic technologies increasingly reflect a language of interaction and relationship and this vocabulary is part and parcel of the meanings now attached to machines. No longer are they inert, but interconnected, responsive and engaging. As machines become more sophisticated, they are predicted to be a “direct object” of an interaction for a human, but what kinds of human would that give rise to? Before robots, animals played the role of the relational other, what can stories of feral children (...)
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  45.  6
    What will I discover?Tanya Lloyd Kyi - 2023 - London: Greystone Kids. Edited by Rachel Qiuqi.
    Sometimes, it seems as if scientists know everything about the world. They've recorded the songs of humpback whales, dug up the bones of dinosaurs, and tracked the storms of Jupiter. But the child scientist in What Will I Discover? knows there is so much more to explore. Do different trees speak different languages to one another through their tangled rainforest roots? Do faraway suns have planets like ours, with air and oceans and land? How do ideas pop into our heads, (...)
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  46.  5
    Bertrand Russell's triumph and failure.Lloyd Reinhardt - 2016 - Think 15 (42):79-95.
    Bertrand Russell was, along with G.E. Moore, deserving of accolade as a founder of analytic philosophy, and of its close companion, the linguistic turn. Here I explain how his relocates philosophy's concern with appearance and reality as a concern with grammatical surface and logical depth. I then on remark the irony of Russell's unhappiness with views to the effect that an ethical judgment is not, despite linguistic appearances, really something that can be true or false. A further irony lies in (...)
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  47. Grounding Pluralism: Why and How.Kevin Richardson - 2020 - Erkenntnis 85 (6):1399-1415.
    Grounding pluralism is the view that there are multiple kinds of grounding. In this essay, I motivate and defend an explanation-theoretic view of grounding pluralism. Specifically, I argue that there are two kinds of grounding: why-grounding—which tells us why things are the case—and how-grounding—which tells us how things are the case.
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  48.  42
    Intuition in Plato and the Platonic tradition.Lloyd P. Gerson - 2022 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 31 (4):579-596.
    In this paper, I examine what is for Plato and all those who follow in his footsteps the ne plus ultra of cognition, namely, intuition (nous or noēsis). This is the paradigm of cognition, meaning that all forms of human (and even animal) cognition are inferior manifestations of this. Intuition is mental seeing, analogous to physical seeing. Among embodied souls, it is seeing a unity of some sort manifested in some diversity or plurality. Thus, someone who sees that the Morning (...)
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  49. Genesis I–XI.Alan Richardson - 1953
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  50.  14
    Part of Nature: Self-Knowledge In Spinoza’s Ethics.Michael Della Rocca & Genevieve Lloyd - 1996 - Philosophical Review 105 (1):116.
    Writing to Henry Oldenburg in 1665, Spinoza says that he regards the human body as a part of nature. “But,” he adds significantly, “as far as the human mind is concerned, I think it is a part of nature too.” Genevieve Lloyd’s elegantly written book aims to investigate the meaning, implications and attractions of these characteristic Spinozistic claims.
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