Results for 'Noel Winter'

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  1.  14
    Social and digital media monitoring for nonviolence: a distributed cognition perspective of the precariousness of peace work.Richard Noel Canevez, Jenifer Sunrise Winter & Joseph G. Bock - 2023 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 21 (4):485-501.
    Purpose This paper aims to explore the technologization of peace work through “remote support monitors” that use social and digital media technologies like social media to alert local violence prevention actors to potentially violent situations during demonstrations. Design/methodology/approach Using a distributed cognition lens, the authors explore the information processing of monitors within peace organizations. The authors adopt a qualitative thematic analysis methodology composed of interviews with monitors and documents from their shared communication and discussion channels. The authors’ analysis seeks to (...)
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  2. Pan-gnosticism.Noel Winter - 1895 - New York [etc.]: The Transatlantic Publishing Company.
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  3.  32
    Poseidon's Festival at the Winter Solstice.Noel Robertson - 1984 - Classical Quarterly 34 (01):1-.
    The record shows that Poseidon was once worshipped in every part of Greece as a god of general importance to the community. In the glimpse of Mycenaean ritual afforded by the Pylos tablets Poseidon is the chief deity, and the offerings and perhaps also the custom of ‘spreading the bed’ point to agrarian concerns. In each of the main districts of historical Greece he is rooted in tradition: Arcadia, that ancient landscape, is full of ancient cults of Poseidon; Ionia gathers (...)
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  4.  10
    Un día en el transcurso de una memoria imaginante.María Noel Lapoujade - 2002 - Signos Filosóficos 7:151-173.
    To speak of memory and imagination implies to reflect on cosmic times that govern its inhabitants: days, months, years, centuries, millenia, million years and, also, instants. For us occurs the pass of summers and winters, days and nights, springs and autumns, watches and dreams and, also, insta..
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  5.  20
    Slugan, Mario. Noël Carroll and Film: A Philosophy of Art and Popular Culture. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019, xii + 218 pp., 10 b&w illus., £85.00 cloth. [REVIEW]Laura T. di Summa - 2020 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (1):129-131.
    The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Volume 78, Issue 1, Page 129-131, Winter 2020.
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  6.  28
    Segmentation of object outlines into parts: A large-scale integrative study.Joeri De Winter & Johan Wagemans - 2006 - Cognition 99 (3):275-325.
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  7.  93
    How to make the research agenda in the health sciences less distorted.Jan De Winter - 2012 - Theoria: Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de la Ciencia 27 (1):75-93.
    A well-known problem in the health sciences is the distorted research agenda: the agenda features too little research that is tailored to the health problems of the poor, and it features too little research that supports the development of other solutions to health problems than medicines . This article analyzes these two sub-problems in more detail, and assesses several strategies to deal with them, resulting in some specific recommendations that indicate what governments should do to make the research agenda in (...)
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  8.  30
    Where Does Cumulative Culture Begin? A Plea for a Sociologically Informed Perspective.Miriam Noël Haidle & Oliver Schlaudt - 2020 - Biological Theory 15 (3):161-174.
    Recent field studies have broadened our view on cultural performances in animals. This has consequences for the concept of cumulative culture. Here, we deconstruct the common individualist and differential approaches to culture. Individualistic approaches to the study of cultural evolution are shown to be problematic, because culture cannot be reduced to factors on the micro level of individual behavior but possesses a dynamic that only occurs on the group level and profoundly affects the individuals. Naive individuals, as a prerequisite of (...)
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  9. Choice functions and the scopal semantics of indefinites.Yoad Winter - 1997 - Linguistics and Philosophy 20 (4):399-467.
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  10.  15
    A Personal Narrative on Living and Dealing with Psychiatric Symptoms after DBS Surgery.Frédéricand Gilbert & John Noel M. Viaña - 2018 - Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 8 (1):67-77.
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  11.  32
    Vision dominates in perceptual language: English sensory vocabulary is optimized for usage.Bodo Winter, Marcus Perlman & Asifa Majid - 2018 - Cognition 179 (C):213-220.
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  12.  7
    Comparing similar countries : Italy and Belgium.Lieven De Winter, Donatella Della Porta & Kris Deschouwer - 1996 - Res Publica 38 (2):215-235.
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  13.  4
    Officiële en reële omvang van het absenteïsme bij de na-oorlogse parlementsverkiezingen.Lieven De Winter - 1978 - Res Publica 20 (4):685-692.
    In the official statistics, the total number of nonvoters in the post-war parliamentary elections in Belgium, is considerably over-estimated. This is caused by the method of updating the lists of voters, so that many people who appear as nonvoters, are regular voters who died after the moment of updating, but were not droppedfrom the lists. In this article, we endeavoured to calculate the number of deceased voters, who still appear on the lists, using the monthly death-rates of the total Belgian (...)
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  14.  5
    Parlementaire en buiten-parlementaire activiteiten van Vlaamse volksvertegenwoordigers.Lieven De Winter - 1980 - Res Publica 22 (1-2):223-257.
    In this article, we integrated the data of four inquiries, concerning various activities and features, computing the relations between all these quantitative variables by partialcorrelation and multiple regression techniques.Remarkably, the most determing factor of the amount of preference votes of a candidate seems to be his various activities in parliament.His clientelist activities and his personal electoral campaign influence also, but in a lesser way, the cast of these votes. Parliamentary seniority correlates positively with the number of cumulated offices, which in (...)
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  15. Twintig jaar polls, of de teloorgang van een vorm van interne partijdemocratie.Lieven De Winter - 1980 - Res Publica 22 (4):563-585.
    The lists of candidates, proposed by the parties for the Belgian general elections, is quite determinative. Due to electoral code arrangements, and, notwithstanding the growing proportion of preference votes, only thosecandidates who are placed within the «necessary sequence» of the lists get actually elected. Consequently, the Belgian voter does not appointthe mandataries, hut only the number of mandates due to the several parties.The statutes of the three major Belgian parties, provide large participative opportunities for their members, through the so-called general (...)
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  16.  39
    Which words are most iconic?Bodo Winter, Marcus Perlman, Lynn K. Perry & Gary Lupyan - 2017 - Interaction Studies 18 (3):443-464.
    Some spoken words are iconic, exhibiting a resemblance between form and meaning. We used native speaker ratings to assess the iconicity of 3001 English words, analyzing their iconicity in relation to part-of-speech differences and differences between the sensory domain they relate to. First, we replicated previous findings showing that onomatopoeia and interjections were highest in iconicity, followed by verbs and adjectives, and then nouns and grammatical words. We further show that words with meanings related to the senses are more iconic (...)
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  17.  14
    Early visual deprivation does not prevent the emergence of basic numerical abilities in blind children.Virginie Crollen, Hélène Warusfel, Marie-Pascale Noël & Olivier Collignon - 2021 - Cognition 210 (C):104586.
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  18.  14
    Students’ Learning Characteristics, Perceptions of Small-Group University Teaching, and Understanding Through a “Meeting of Minds”.Evangelia Karagiannopoulou & Noel Entwistle - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10:445551.
    Previous research has described some of the main characteristics of university teachers who teach in different ways, using a variety of methods and conceptions. What is generally missing from previous research is the impact of contrasting teaching approaches on students with different learning characteristics. The present investigation builds on a previous case study that identified the potential influence of a ‘meeting of minds’ between tutors and students in developing personal understanding, and also suggested contrasting perceptions of differing forms of teaching. (...)
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  19.  23
    Which words are most iconic?Bodo Winter, Marcus Perlman, Lynn K. Perry & Gary Lupyan - 2017 - Interaction Studies. Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systemsinteraction Studies / Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systemsinteraction Studies 18 (3):443-464.
    Some spoken words are iconic, exhibiting a resemblance between form and meaning. We used native speaker ratings to assess the iconicity of 3001 English words, analyzing their iconicity in relation to part-of-speech differences and differences between the sensory domain they relate to. First, we replicated previous findings showing that onomatopoeia and interjections were highest in iconicity, followed by verbs and adjectives, and then nouns and grammatical words. We further show that words with meanings related to the senses are more iconic (...)
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  20. Distributivity and Dependency.Yoad Winter - 2000 - Natural Language Semantics 8 (1):27-69.
    Sentences with multiple occurrences of plural definites give rise to certain effects suggesting that distributivity should be modeled by polyadic operations. Yet in this paper it is argued that the simpler treatment of distributivity using unary universal quantification should be retained. Seemingly polyadic effects are claimed to be restricted to definite NPs. This fact is accounted for by the special anaphoric (dependent) use of definites. Further evidence concerning various plurals, island constraints, and cumulative quantification is shown to support this claim. (...)
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  21.  5
    De samenstelling van de kandidatenlijsten in de Vlaamse partijen.Jan Ceuleers & Lieven De Winter - 1986 - Res Publica 28 (2):197-212.
    This paper describes the common techniques used in the constitution of candidates-lists for parliamentary elections. A common feature of these techniques is the consultation of party members. But the way in which this is done differs among the parties. AGALEV, the ecologist party, offers every member the possibility to have his say about every candidate. The socialist party uses this system in two constituencies ; in the other constituencies a special congress decides. The christiandemocrats, the liberals and the Flemish nationalists (...)
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  22.  30
    The Co‐evolution of Speech and the Lexicon: The Interaction of Functional Pressures, Redundancy, and Category Variation.Bodo Winter & Andrew Wedel - 2016 - Topics in Cognitive Science 8 (2):503-513.
    The sound system of a language must be able to support a perceptual contrast between different words in order to signal communicatively relevant meaning distinctions. In this paper, we use a simple agent-based exemplar model in which the evolution of sound-category systems is understood as a co-evolutionary process, where the range of variation within sound categories is constrained by functional pressure to keep different words perceptually distinct. We show that this model can reproduce several observed effects on the range of (...)
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  23.  80
    Plural Predication and the Strongest Meaning Hypothesis.Yoad Winter - 2001 - Journal of Semantics 18 (4):333-365.
    The Strongest Meaning Hypothesis of Dalrymple et al (1994,1998), which was originally proposed as a principle for the interpretation of reciprocals, is extended in this paper into a general principle of plural predication. This principle applies to complex predicates that are composed of lexical predicates that hold of atomic entities, and determines the pluralities in the extension of the predicate. The meaning of such a complex predicate is claimed to be the truth-conditionally strongest meaning that does not contradict lexical properties (...)
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  24.  16
    Beyond Cognition: Psychological and Social Transformations in People Living with Dementia and Relevance for Decision-Making Capacity and Opportunity.John Noel Viaña, Fran McInerney & Henry Brodaty - 2020 - American Journal of Bioethics 20 (8):101-104.
    Volume 20, Issue 8, August 2020, Page 101-104.
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  25.  68
    Against posthumous rights.Stephen Winter - 2010 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 27 (2):186-199.
    A number of prominent nonconsequentialists support the thesis that we can wrong the dead by violating their moral claims. In contrast, this study suggests that the arguments offered by Thomson, Scanlon, Dworkin, Feinberg and others do not warrant posthumous rights because having claim-grounding interests requires an entity to have the capacity to experience significance. If dead people don't have this capacity, there is no reason to attribute claims to them. Raising doubts about prominent hypothetical examples of ‘no-effect injury’, the study (...)
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  26.  14
    Spoken language achieves robustness and evolvability by exploiting degeneracy and neutrality.Bodo Winter - 2014 - Bioessays 36 (10):960-967.
    As with biological systems, spoken languages are strikingly robust against perturbations. This paper shows that languages achieve robustness in a way that is highly similar to many biological systems. For example, speech sounds are encoded via multiple acoustically diverse, temporally distributed and functionally redundant cues, characteristics that bear similarities to what biologists call “degeneracy”. Speech is furthermore adequately characterized by neutrality, with many different tongue configurations leading to similar acoustic outputs, and different acoustic variants understood as the same by recipients. (...)
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  27.  40
    Uncertain justice: History and reparations.Stephen Winter - 2006 - Journal of Social Philosophy 37 (3):342–359.
  28.  15
    From Paternalism to Engagement: Bioethics Needs a Paradigm Shift to Address Racial Injustice During COVID-19.John Noel Viaña, Sujatha Raman & Marcus Barber - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (2):96-98.
    COVID-19 has disproportionately affected ethnic minorities and migrants, not only through an increased risk of infection and death (Pan et al. 2020), but also through experiences of harassment, mar...
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  29. .Stefan Winter & Mafalda Ade - 2019
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  30.  55
    Strong Reciprocity in Consumer Boycotts.Tobias Hahn & Noël Albert - 2017 - Journal of Business Ethics 145 (3):509-524.
    Boycotts are among the most frequent forms of consumer expression against unethical or egregious acts by firms. Most current research explains consumers’ decisions to participate in a boycott using a universal cost-benefit model that mixes instrumental and expressive motives. To date, no conceptual framework accounts for the distinct behavioral motives for boycotting though. This article focuses on motivational heterogeneity among consumers. By distinguishing two stable behavioral models—a self-regarding type and a strongly reciprocal type—we introduce the notion of strong reciprocity to (...)
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  31.  5
    Bootstrapping U-statistics with estimated parameters.Paul Janssen & Noël Veraverbeke - 1992 - History and Philosophy of Logic 21 (6):1585-1603.
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  32.  46
    Philosophie de la danse.Beauquel Julia, Carroll Noel, Elgin Catherine Z., Karlsson Mikael M., Kintzler Catherine, Louis Fabrice, McFee Graham, Moore Margaret, Pouillaude Frédéric, Pouivet Roger & Van Camp Julie (eds.) - 2010 - Aesthetica, Presses Universitaires de Rennes.
    En posant avec clarté des questions de philosophie de l’esprit, d’ontologie et d’épistémologie, ce livre témoigne à la fois de l’intérêt réel de la danse comme objet philosophique et du rôle unique que peut jouer la philosophie dans une meilleure compréhension de cet art. Qu’est-ce que danser ? Que nous apprend le mouvement dansé sur la nature humaine et la relation entre le corps et l’esprit ? À quelles conditions une œuvre est-elle correctement interprétée par les danseurs et bien identifiée (...)
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  33. Speaking about Drawing. An exploration of representation in recent landscape architecture.Noël Van Dooren - 2012 - Topos: European Landscape Magazine 80:43.
     
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  34.  18
    A positive correlation between action decrement and learning.Edward L. Walker & Noel Paradise - 1958 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 56 (1):45.
  35.  27
    An Essay on Global Economic Prospects.Pierre-Noël Giraud - 2007 - Constellations 14 (1):31-46.
  36.  34
    Metaphor and the Philosophical Implications of Embodied Mathematics.Bodo Winter & Jeff Yoshimi - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Embodied approaches to cognition see abstract thought and language as grounded in interactions between mind, body, and world. A particularly important challenge for embodied approaches to cognition is mathematics, perhaps the most abstract domain of human knowledge. Conceptual metaphor theory, a branch of cognitive linguistics, describes how abstract mathematical concepts are grounded in concrete physical representations. In this paper, we consider the implications of this research for the metaphysics and epistemology of mathematics. In the case of metaphysics, we argue that (...)
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  37.  12
    La profondeur du négatif.Jean-Noël Cueille - 2000 - Chiasmi International 2:301-334.
  38.  6
    Le Silence du Sensible.Jean-Noël Cueille - 2002 - Chiasmi International 4:119-155.
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  39.  5
    Is Life Worth Living?Noel E. Boulting - 2009 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 16 (1):89-104.
    James offers ways for escaping pessimism: i) leaving "the bare facts by themselves" - in construing the scientific order of nature - or permitting ii) a "religious reading to go on" by postulating "supplementary facts which may be discovered" or iii) "believed in". Adopting ii), we can trust the idea that "a still wider world may be there" as a "maybe" and then act as if the invisible world thereby suggested was real, enabling us "to live in the light of (...)
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  40. The Challenges of Artificial Judicial Decision-Making for Liberal Democracy.Christoph Winter - 2022 - In P. Bystranowski, Bartosz Janik & M. Prochnicki (eds.), Judicial Decision-Making: Integrating Empirical and Theoretical Perspectives. Springer Nature. pp. 179-204.
    The application of artificial intelligence (AI) to judicial decision-making has already begun in many jurisdictions around the world. While AI seems to promise greater fairness, access to justice, and legal certainty, issues of discrimination and transparency have emerged and put liberal democratic principles under pressure, most notably in the context of bail decisions. Despite this, there has been no systematic analysis of the risks to liberal democratic values from implementing AI into judicial decision-making. This article sets out to fill this (...)
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  41.  11
    Planetary Distances and Sizes in an Anonymous Arabic Treatise Preserved in Bodleian Ms. Marsh 621.Bernard R. Goldstein & Noel Swerdlow - 1971 - Centaurus 15 (2):135-170.
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  42.  19
    Taking the Historical-Social Dimension Seriously: A Reply to Bandini et al.: E. Bandini, J. S. Reeves, W. D. Snyder, C. Tennie: Clarifying Misconceptions of the Zone of Latent Solutions Hypothesis: A Response to Haidle and Schlaudt.Miriam Noël Haidle & Oliver Schlaudt - 2021 - Biological Theory 16 (2):83-89.
    In our recent article, "Where Does Cumulative Culture Begin? A Plea for a Sociologically Informed Perspective" we commented on a fundamental notion in current approaches to cultural evolution, the “zones of latent solutions”, and proposed a modification of it, namely a social and dynamic interpretation of the latent solutions which were originally introduced within an individualistic framework and as static, genetically fixed entities. This modification seemed, and still seems, relevant to us and, in particular, more adequate for coping with the (...)
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  43. The Twilight Zone and Philosophy.Lester Hunt & Noel Carroll (eds.) - 2008 - Blackwell.
     
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  44.  16
    The optical researches of Ibn al-haitham.H. J. J. Winter - 1953 - Centaurus 3 (1):190-210.
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  45. Elements for a social ethic.Gibson Winter - 1966 - New York,: Macmillan.
  46.  43
    Enframing geography: subject, curriculum, knowledge, responsibility.Christine Winter - 2012 - Ethics and Education 7 (3):277-290.
    . Enframing geography: subject, curriculum, knowledge, responsibility. Ethics and Education: Vol. 7, Creating spaces, pp. 277-290. doi: 10.1080/17449642.2013.767004.
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  47.  4
    Overcoming Uncertainty in Ancient Greek Political Philosophy.J. Noel Hubler - 2021 - Springer Verlag.
    Overcoming Uncertainty in Ancient Greek Political Philosophy makes an historical and theoretical contribution by explaining the role of opinion in ancient Greek political philosophy, showing its importance for Aristotle’s theory of deliberation, and indicating a new model for a deliberative republic. Currently, there are no studies of opinion in ancient Greek political theory and so the book breaks new historical ground. The book establishes that opinion is key for the political theories of Plato, Aristotle, and the Stoics because each sees (...)
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  48. The Mentality of Apes.Ella Winter - 1925 - Mind 34 (135):369-372.
     
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  49. The Golden House of Nero.J. G. Winter - 1913 - Classical Weekly 7:163-164.
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  50. The Influence of TV on Religion.David Winter - 1992 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 9 (4):17-18.
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