Results for 'Abigail Bruxvoort'

325 found
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  1.  17
    Resolution and Resolve.Abigail Bruxvoort - 2023 - Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 26 (2).
    Folk psychology holds that resolving to do something is effective in resisting temptation. What is a resolution? Resolutions are often understood as two-tier intentions or an intention-desire pair. However, both accounts of resolution are subject to a problem. Why should we expect the second-order aspect of resolutions to resist temptation? Even if we posit that we have additional or independent reasons for the second-order intention or desire, these reasons will be insufficient in the face of temptation, because temptation makes one’s (...)
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  2.  12
    Abigail Levin replies.Abigail Levin - 2024 - Hastings Center Report 54 (3):61-62.
    This letter responds to the letter “The Open Donor View and Procreative Beneficence,” by Daniel Groll, in the same, May‐June 2024, issue of the Hastings Center Report.
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  3. .Abigail Gillman - unknown
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  4.  10
    Darwinian Heresies.Abigail Lustig, Robert J. Richards & Michael Ruse (eds.) - 2004 - Cambridge University Press.
    In Darwinian Heresies, which was originally published in 2004, prominent historians and philosophers of science trace the history of evolutionary thought, and challenge many of the assumptions that have built up over the years. Covering a wide range of issues starting in the eighteenth century, Darwinian Heresies brings us through the time of Charles Darwin and the Origin, and then through the twentieth century to the present. It is suggested that Darwin's true roots lie in Germany, not his native England, (...)
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  5.  72
    Why Slaughter? The cultural dimensions of Britain's foot and mouth disease control policy, 1892–2001.Abigail Woods - 2004 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 17 (4-5):341-362.
    In 1892, the British agricultural authorities introduced a policy of slaughtering animals infected with foot and mouth disease (FMD). This measure endured throughout the 20th century and formed a base line upon which officials superimposed the controversial "contiguous cull" policy during the devastating 2001 epidemic. Proponents of the slaughter frequently emphasized its capacity to eliminate FMD from Britain, and claimed that it was both cheaper and more effective than the alternative policies of isolation and vaccination. However, their discussions reveal that (...)
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  6.  28
    Quantifying flexibility in thought: The resiliency of semantic networks differs across the lifespan.Abigail L. Cosgrove, Yoed N. Kenett, Roger E. Beaty & Michele T. Diaz - 2021 - Cognition 211 (C):104631.
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  7. Mental Illness Stigma and Epistemic Credibility.Abigail Gosselin - 2018 - Social Philosophy Today 34:77-94.
    In this paper I explore the way that mental illness stigma impacts epistemic credibility in people who have mental illness. While any kind of stigma has the potential to discredit a person’s epistemic agency, in the case of mental illness the basis for discrediting is in some cases and to some extent justifiable, for impairments in rationality, control, and reality perception can indeed be obstacles to participating appropriately in epistemic activities such as normal conversation and public discourse. People with mental (...)
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  8.  35
    The Women Are Up to Something: How Elizabeth Anscombe, Philippa Foot, Mary Midgley, and Iris Murdoch Revolutionized Ethics.Benjamin J. Bruxvoort Lipscomb - 2021 - Oxford University Press.
    Résumé éditeur : This book tells two intertwined stories, centered on twentieth-century moral philosophers Elizabeth Anscombe, Mary Midgley, Philippa Foot, and Iris Murdoch. The first is the story of four friends who came up to Oxford together just before WWII. It is the story of their lives, loves, and intellectual preoccupations; it is a story about women trying to find a place in a man's world of academic philosophy. The second story is about these friends' shared philosophical project and their (...)
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  9.  93
    Addiction Narratives.Abigail Gosselin - 2012 - Social Philosophy Today 28:47-66.
    The predominant narratives of addiction—Disease and Choice narratives—frame addiction as a personal problem to be addressed by controlling an individual’s behavior. By analyzing the epistemic function of narratives of addiction, this paper shows that these narratives construct a story about the nature of addiction by assuming simplistic views about human agency, leading to drug policies that narrowly focus on individual behavior. Assumptions embedded within narratives must be made transparent so that the partial, perspectival, and situated nature of the knowledge that (...)
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  10. Critiquing Strawsonian selves.Klassen Abigail - 2015 - Appraisal: The Journal of the British Personalist Forum 10 (3):27-34.
  11.  11
    Overcoming Cultural Mismatch: Reaching and Teaching Diverse Children.Abigail L. Fuller - 2021 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    This book provides actionable steps for educators to commit to inclusion of diversity immediately, working toward culturally responsive teaching.
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  12.  11
    Unsettling experiences: A qualitative inquiry into young peoples’ narratives of diagnosis for common skin conditions in the United Kingdom.Abigail McNiven & Sara Ryan - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    Skin conditions such as eczema and psoriasis are relatively prevalent health concerns in children, adolescents and young adults. Experiences of these dermatology diagnoses in adolescence have hitherto not been the focus of research, perhaps owing to assumptions that these diagnoses are not particularly impactful or intricate processes, events or labels. We draw on a thematic secondary analysis of in-depth interviews with 42 adolescents and young people living in the United Kingdom and, influenced by the sociologies of diagnosis and time, highlight (...)
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  13.  52
    ‘Partnership’ in Action: Contagious Abortion and the Governance of Livestock Disease in Britain, 1885–1921.Abigail Woods - 2009 - Minerva 47 (2):195-216.
    Most histories of livestock disease in Britain treat the development of control policy as a government responsibility, to which farmers made little constructive contribution. Similarly, farmers rarely appear in accounts of disease research. This paper uses the example of contagious abortion at the turn of the twentieth century to reveal that state-farming collaboration in research and policy did in fact occur, and that it operated in various ways, with often unexpected outcomes. The collaborative approach to contagious abortion is partly attributed (...)
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  14.  78
    Understanding Pharmaceutical Research Manipulation in the Context of Accounting Manipulation.Abigail Brown - 2013 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 41 (3):611-619.
    Good decision-making requires reliable information. In medicine, relevant information comes from clinical trials and other forms of scientific research. In business, one source is in corporate annual financial statements. As for-profit, publicly traded companies whose business is discovering, manufacturing, and marketing drugs, pharmaceutical companies sit at the nexus of these two fields. Determining the safety and efficacy of a pharmaceutical product and determining the profitability of a complex enterprise are similarly difficult tasks: each is fraught with deeply ambiguous information that (...)
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  15. The Cost of Free Speech: Pornography, Hate Speech, and Their Challenge to Liberalism.Abigail Levin - 2010 - Palgrave-Macmillan.
    The distinctly contemporary proliferation of pornography and hate speech poses a challenge to liberalism's traditional ideal of a 'marketplace of ideas' facilitated by state neutrality about the content of speech. This new study argues that the liberal state ought to depart from neutrality to meet this challenge.
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  16.  36
    Dodging Monsters and Dancing with Dreams: Success and Failure at Different Levels of Approach and Avoidance.Abigail A. Scholer & E. Tory Higgins - 2013 - Emotion Review 5 (3):254-258.
    Many models of motivation suggest that goals can be arranged in a hierarchy, ranging from higher-level goals that represent desired end-states to lower-level means that operate in the service of those goals. We present a hierarchical model that distinguishes between three levels—goals, strategies, and tactics—and between approach/avoidance and regulatory focus motivations at different levels. We focus our discussion on how this hierarchical framework sheds light on the different ways that success and failure are defined within the promotion and prevention systems (...)
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  17.  70
    Towards a holistic definition of death: the biological, philosophical and social deficiencies of brain stem death criteria.Abigail Maguire - 2019 - The New Bioethics 25 (2):172-184.
    With no statutory definition of death, the accepted medical definition relies on brain stem death criteria as a definitive measure of diagnosing death. However, the use of brain stem death criteria in this way is precarious and causes widespread confusion amongst both medical and lay communities. Through critical analysis, this paper considers the insufficiencies of brain stem death. It concludes that brain stem death cannot be successfully equated with either biological death or the loss of integrated bodily function. The overemphasis (...)
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  18.  26
    Comment: Getting Our Affect Together: Shared Representations as the Core of Empathy.Abigail A. Marsh - 2022 - Emotion Review 14 (3):184-187.
    Empathy is a construct that is notoriously difficult to define. Murphy and colleagues ( 2022 ) argue for leaning into the construct's inherent fuzziness and reverting to what they term a classical definition informed by the observations of philosophers and clinicians: as a dynamic, “unfolding process of imaginatively experiencing the subjective consciousness of another person, sensing, understanding, and structuring the world as if one were that person.” Although consistent with some historical conceptualizations, this definition risks incorporating so many processes it (...)
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  19. Zoo Animals as Specimens, Zoo Animals as Friends.Abigail Levin - 2015 - Environmental Philosophy 12 (1):21-44.
    The international protest surrounding the Copenhagen Zoo’s recent decision to kill a healthy giraffe in the name of population management reveals a deep moral tension between contemporary zoological display practices—which induce zoo-goers to view certain animals as individuals, quasi-persons, or friends—and the traditional objectives of zoos, which ask us only to view animals as specimens. I argue that these zoological display practices give rise to moral obligations on the part of zoos to their visitors, and thus ground indirect duties on (...)
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  20. The Perceptual Present.Abigail Connor & Joel Smith - 2019 - Philosophical Quarterly (277):1-21.
    Phenomenologically speaking, we perceive the present, recall the past, and anticipate the future. We offer an account of the temporal content of the perceptual present that distinguishes it from the recalled past and the anticipated future. We distinguish two views: the Token Reflexive Account and the Minimal Account. We offer reasons to reject the Token Reflexive Account, and defend the Minimal Account, according to which the temporal content of the perceptual present is exhausted by its direct reference to the interval (...)
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  21.  67
    The influence of the fear facial expression on prosocial responding.Abigail A. Marsh & Nalini Ambady - 2007 - Cognition and Emotion 21 (2):225-247.
  22.  40
    Strawberries and Cream: The Relationship Between Food Rejection and Thematic Knowledge of Food in Young Children.Abigail Pickard, Jean-Pierre Thibaut & Jérémie Lafraire - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12:626701.
    Establishing healthy dietary habits in childhood is crucial in preventing long-term repercussions, as a lack of dietary variety in childhood leads to enduring impacts on both physical and cognitive health. Poor conceptual knowledge about food has recently been shown to be a driving factor of food rejection. The majority of studies that have investigated the development of food knowledge along with food rejection have mainly focused on one subtype of conceptual knowledge about food, namely taxonomic categories (e.g., vegetables or meat). (...)
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  23.  19
    Built for Two.Abigail G. H. Manzella - 2019 - Feminist Studies 45 (1):234-234.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:234 Feminist Studies 45, no. 1. © 2019 by Abigail G. H. Manzella Built for Two Abigail G. H. Manzella Arabesque, darling, arabesque. Then my grandmother would guffaw as my six-year-old leg lifted, pose unsteady Twisting, shifting in my first artistic throes still buoyant and raw. She could be brusque, Not grasping what could hurt a child’s heart, But her laughter was infectious Her eyes like mine—a (...)
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  24.  24
    Dream lucidity is associated with positive waking mood.Abigail Stocks, Michelle Carr, Remington Mallett, Karen Konkoly, Alisha Hicks, Megan Crawford, Michael Schredl & Ceri Bradshaw - 2020 - Consciousness and Cognition 83 (C):102971.
  25.  43
    Gendered Homophobia and the Contradictions of Workplace Discrimination for Women in the Building Trades.Abigail C. Saguy & Amy M. Denissen - 2014 - Gender and Society 28 (3):381-403.
    Drawing on 63 interviews with a diverse sample of tradeswomen, this article examines how the cultural meanings of sexual orientation—as well as gender presentation, race, and body size—shapes the constraints that women face in the construction industry and the specific resistance strategies they develop. We argue that women’s presence in these male-dominated jobs threatens notions of the work as inherently masculine and a gender order that presumes the sexual subordination of women. Tradesmen neutralize the first threat by labeling tradeswomen as (...)
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  26.  30
    The Filial Art.Abigail L. Rosenthal - 1985 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 2 (1):19-29.
    ABSTRACT Psychological or political criticism of the parent‐child relation presupposes a normative account of that relation. Such an account is here provided. The normative account can shed most light when the parent‐child relation is presented recognizably, not in Utopian disguise. The purposes of reasonable people partly depend on their interpretations of those of their parents. This is so whether such people accept or reject any particular parental purposes. The filial art sticks to the project of working out the enacted interpretation—until (...)
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  27.  13
    The Life and Death of Freya the Walrus: Human and Wild Animal Interactions in the Anthropocene Era.Abigail Levin & Sarah Vincent - 2023 - Animals 13 (17).
    This paper addresses the killing of Freya the Walrus by the Norwegian fishing authorities in August 2022. Freya became famous for sunbathing on boats in the marina in the Oslo fjord, but she was soon euthanized in the name of public safety. Her death caused international outrage, and the aim of our paper is to demonstrate using philosophical argument why her death was unjust. We examine her plight through frameworks developed by animal ethicists involving co-sovereignty, capability, and individuality, concluding that (...)
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  28. Becoming human within the ecological community : encountering life on the farm with Thomas Berry and Edward Schillebeeckx.Abigail Lofte - 2018 - In Trevor George Hunsberger Bechtel, Matthew Eaton & Timothy Harvie (eds.), Encountering earth: thinking theologically with a more-than-human world. Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books.
     
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  29.  18
    Signs and Their Temporality: The Performative Power of Interpretation in the Supreme Court.Abigail Cary Moore - forthcoming - Sociological Theory:073527512211102.
    Building on pragmatist uses of semiotics as a heuristic for understanding social interaction, this article argues that temporality is a significant and undertheorized component of signs and their interpretation. Using transcripts from the oral argumentation of a Supreme Court case, I examine how different interpretations of the same sign rely not only on differing understandings of the sign’s object and how that object is signified but also, more specifically, differing understandings of the sign’s relationship to the past, present, and future.
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  30.  26
    A Hegelian key to Hegel's method.Abigail L. Rosenthal - 1971 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 9 (2):205-212.
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  31.  24
    The intelligibility of history.Abigail L. Rosenthal - 1977 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 15 (1):55-70.
  32.  27
    The poetry of the un-enlightened: politics and literary enthusiasm in the early eighteenth century.Abigail Williams - 2005 - History of European Ideas 31 (2):299-311.
    This paper will explore the notion of ‘poetic enthusiasm’ in early 18th-century verse. The representation of poetic enthusiasm—the claim to false inspiration, and the fanaticism that was perceived to accompany it—was frequently politicized in this period. Through a conflation of religious and literary discourses, poetic enthusiasm was seen to represent the sae kind of anarchy in the realm of literature that the religious enthusiasm associated with Dissent did in the context of the established church. This paper will establish first of (...)
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  33.  22
    Accessus ad Alexandrum: The Prefatio to the Postilla in Iohannis Euangelium of Alexander of Hales (1186?-1245).Abigail Ann Young - 1990 - Mediaeval Studies 52 (1):1-23.
  34.  32
    The Blood of Strangers.Abigail Zuger, Jeffrey Borkan, Shmuel Reis, Dov Steinmetz, Jack H. Medalie & Frank Huyler - 2000 - Hastings Center Report 30 (3):48.
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  35. Ants and the Nature of Nature in Auguste Forel, Erich Wasmann, and William Morton Wheeler.Abigail J. Lustig - 2004 - In Lorraine Daston & Fernando Vidal (eds.), The moral authority of nature. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 282--307.
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  36.  11
    Conversions: A Philosophic Memoir.Abigail L. Rosenthal - 1994 - Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
    Conversions: A Philosophic Memoir belongs to the tradition of Augustine and Rousseau: the "confession" of a life that is a quest for truth. It is in large part the story of two major episodes from Abigail Rosenthal's early adulthood, bought putting personal identity dramatically at risk. As a young Fulbright scholar in Paris, Rosenthal met and entered reluctantly into a love affair with a young Greek communist philosopher who believed (along with many Parisian intellectuals of that era) that force (...)
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  37.  89
    Critical University Studies and the Crisis Consensus.Abigail Boggs & Nick Mitchell - 2018 - Feminist Studies 44 (2):432.
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  38.  69
    Feminism Without Contradictions.Abigail L. Rosenthal - 1973 - The Monist 57 (1):28-42.
  39.  27
    Multi-functional landscapes from the grassroots? The role of rural producer movements.Abigail K. Hart, Philip McMichael, Jeffrey C. Milder & Sara J. Scherr - 2016 - Agriculture and Human Values 33 (2):305-322.
    Around the world, agricultural landscapes are increasingly seen as “multi-functional” spaces, expected to deliver food supplies while improving rural livelihoods and protecting and restoring healthy ecosystems. To support this array of functions and benefits, governments and civil society in many regions are now promoting integrated farm- and landscape-scale management strategies, in lieu of fragmented management strategies. While rural producers are fundamental to achieving multi-functional landscapes, they are frequently viewed as targets of, or barriers to, landscape-oriented initiatives, rather than as leading (...)
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  40.  86
    The farm as clinic: veterinary expertise and the transformation of dairy farming, 1930–1950.Abigail Woods - 2005 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 38 (2):462-487.
    This paper explores the wartime creation of veterinary expertise in cattle breeding, and its contribution to the transition between two very different types of agriculture. During the interwar period, falling prices and steep competition from imports caused farmers to adopt a ‘low input, low output’ approach. To cut costs, they usually butchered, marketed or doctored diseased cows in preference to seeking veterinary aid. World War II forced a greater dependence on domestic food production, and inspired wide-ranging state-directed attempts to increase (...)
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  41.  31
    Revisiting, Synthesizing, and Critiquing Searle on Social Construction.Abigail Klassen - 2023 - Axiomathes 33 (4):1-32.
    The main goal of this paper is to revisit, synthesize, and critique John R. Searle’s thinking over time concerning social ontology and what it means for something to be a social construction. Primarily, I undertake this task by elucidating and problematizing aspects of John R. Searle’s _The Construction of Social Reality_ (herein, _CSR_) (1995), though attention is paid to his later and corollary works. Certainly, there are many other philosophers who attend to analyzing the very meaning of social ontology or (...)
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  42.  28
    What Do Prospective Parents Owe to Their Children?Abigail Levin - 2024 - Hastings Center Report 54 (2):34-43.
    I consider the question of what moral obligations prospective parents owe to their future children. It is taken as an almost axiomatic premise of a wide range of philosophical arguments that prospective parents have a moral obligation to take such steps as ensuring their own financial stability or waiting until they are emotionally mature before conceiving. This is because it is assumed that parents have a moral obligation to lay the groundwork for their children's lives to go well. While at (...)
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  43.  10
    Returning home to our bodies: eimagining the relationship between our bodies and the world, practices for connecting somatics, nature, and social change.Abigail Rose Clarke - 2023 - Berkeley, California: North Atlantic Books.
    A body-based healing model that interrogates what we've been taught about unfair hierarchies of the body-and pushes back against the white supremacy, colonialism, patriarchy, and capitalism embedded in modern embodiment practices.
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  44. Music and the Puzzle of Temporal Experience.Abigail Connor & Joel Smith - 2022 - In Michelle Phillips & Matthew Sergeant (eds.), Music and Time: Psychology, Philosophy, Practice. Boydell Press. pp. 55-70.
  45.  29
    (1 other version)Science, Politics and the Production of Biological Knowledge: New Trends and Old Challenges.Abigail Nieves Delgado - 2018 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 49 (3):467-473.
    In the history of biology, knowledge about human differences often has been produced through an interaction with politics and values assumed to be external to science. Two recent books—Jonathan Marks’ Is Science Racist? and Maurizio Meloni’s Political Biology—shed new light on this interplay. While Marks looks into the field of anthropology, Meloni offers a historiographical view on the soft-hard heredity debate. Based on these new contributions, this essay addresses a number of current ways in which society and science conceptualize human (...)
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  46.  11
    Emergence, Equilibrium, and Agent-Based Modeling: Updating James Buchanan’s Democratic Political Economy.Abigail N. Devereaux & Richard E. Wagner - 2018 - In Richard E. Wagner (ed.), James M. Buchanan: A Theorist of Political Economy and Social Philosophy. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 109-129.
    Nicholas Vriend asked whether F.A. Hayek was an “ace,” and answered affirmatively. By “ace,” Vriend meant someone who worked with agent-based modeling. To be sure, Hayek could not have worked with agent-based models because that platform did not exist when Hayek was developing his ideas about the distribution and use of knowledge in society. All the same, Vriend explained convincingly that Hayek could have made good use of the agent-based platform had it been available in the 1930s. To similar effect, (...)
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  47.  36
    The Sword, the Cross, and the Pen.Abigail Gosselin - 2007 - International Studies in Philosophy 39 (4):35-50.
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  48.  9
    The Chinese Reforms and the Rationalization of Environmental Dispute Resolution.Abigail R. Jahiel - 1995 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 15 (4):215-223.
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  49. Gender Differences and the Teaching of Mathematics.Abigail Norfleet James - 2007 - Inquiry (ERIC) 12 (1):14-25.
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  50.  72
    Katherine Thomson-Jones (2008) Aesthetics and Film.Abigail Keating - 2010 - Film-Philosophy 14 (1):468-474.
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