Results for 'Adrian Rees'

965 found
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  1.  37
    Amplitude-modulated stimuli reveal auditory-visual interactions in brain activity and brain connectivity.Mark Laing, Adrian Rees & Quoc C. Vuong - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  2.  52
    Nonverbal synchrony and affect in dyadic interactions.Wolfgang Tschacher, Georg M. Rees & Fabian Ramseyer - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
  3.  91
    A specific role for the thalamus in mediating the interaction of attention and arousal in humans.C. Portas, Geraint Rees, A. Howseman, O. Josephs, R. Turner & Christopher D. Frith - 1998 - Journal of Neuroscience 18 (21):8979-8989.
  4.  28
    Neuroimaging of visual awareness in patients and normal subjects.Geraint Rees - 2001 - Current Opinion in Neurobiology 11 (2):150-156.
  5. Hot-Blooded Gluttons: Dependency, Coherence, and Method in the Historical Sciences.Adrian Currie - 2017 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 68 (4):929-952.
    Our epistemic access to the past is infamously patchy: historical information degrades and disappears and bygone eras are often beyond the reach of repeatable experiments. However, historical scientists have been remarkably successful at uncovering and explaining the past. I argue that part of this success is explained by the exploitation of dependencies between historical events, entities, and processes. For instance, if sauropod dinosaurs were hot blooded, they must have been gluttons; the high-energy demands of endothermy restrict sauropod grazing strategies. Understanding (...)
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  6.  21
    Comparative Thinking in Biology.Adrian Currie - 2020 - Cambridge University Press.
    Biologists often study living systems in light of their having evolved, of their being the products of various processes of heredity, adaptation, ancestry, and so on. In their investigations, then, biologists think comparatively: they situate lineages into models of those evolutionary processes, comparing their targets with ancestral relatives and with analogous evolutionary outcomes. This element characterizes this mode of investigation - 'comparative thinking' - and puts it to work in understanding why biological science takes the shape it does. Importantly, comparative (...)
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  7.  27
    Ethics, Money and Sport: This Sporting Mammon.Adrian J. Walsh & Richard Giulianotti - 2006 - Routledge.
    Combining sociological evidence with the analytical tools of philosophy, Ethics, Money and Sport articulates and explores the main concerns about the way money has changed our experience of sports. Clearly written and illustrated by examples from major sports around the world, Ethics, Money and Sport enables students, researchers and policymakers - as well as anyone with an interest in the future of sport - to engage with this crucial debate.
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  8.  62
    Bottled Understanding: The Role of Lab Work in Ecology.Adrian Currie - 2020 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 71 (3):905-932.
    It is often thought that the vindication of experimental work lies in its capacity to be revelatory of natural systems. I challenge this idea by examining laboratory experiments in ecology. A central task of community ecology involves combining mathematical models and observational data to identify trophic interactions in natural systems. But many ecologists are also lab scientists: constructing microcosm or ‘bottle’ experiments, physically realizing the idealized circumstances described in mathematical models. What vindicates such ecological experiments? I argue that ‘extrapolationism’, the (...)
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  9. A Moderate Defence of the Use of Thought Experiments in Applied Ethics.Adrian Walsh - 2011 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 14 (4):467-481.
    Thought experiments have played a pivotal role in many debates within ethics—and in particular within applied ethics—over the past 30 years. Nonetheless, despite their having become a commonly used philosophical tool, there is something odd about the extensive reliance upon thought experiments in areas of philosophy, such as applied ethics, that are so obviously oriented towards practical life. Herein I provide a moderate defence of their use in applied philosophy against those three objections. I do not defend all possible uses (...)
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  10.  89
    Meaningful Work as a Distributive Good.Adrian J. Walsh - 1994 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 32 (2):233-250.
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  11. GOLDSMITHS Research Online.Jan W. De Fockert, Geraint Rees, Christopher D. Frith & Nilli Lavie - 2007 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 33 (3):738-742.
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  12.  57
    An implementation framework for the feedback of individual research results and incidental findings in research.Adrian Thorogood, Yann Joly, Bartha Maria Knoppers, Tommy Nilsson, Peter Metrakos, Anthoula Lazaris & Ayat Salman - 2014 - BMC Medical Ethics 15 (1):88.
    This article outlines procedures for the feedback of individual research data to participants. This feedback framework was developed in the context of a personalized medicine research project in Canada. Researchers in this domain have an ethical obligation to return individual research results and/or material incidental findings that are clinically significant, valid and actionable to participants. Communication of individual research data must proceed in an ethical and efficient manner. Feedback involves three procedural steps: assessing the health relevance of a finding, re-identifying (...)
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  13.  23
    Do seasonal microbiome changes affect infection susceptibility, contributing to seasonal disease outbreaks?Adrian Stencel - 2021 - Bioessays 43 (1):2000148.
    The aim of the present paper is to explore whether seasonal outbreaks of infectious diseases may be linked to changes in host microbiomes. This is a very important issue, because one way to have more control over seasonal outbreaks is to understand the factors that underlie them. In this paper, I will evaluate the relevance of the microbiome as one of such factors. The paper is based on two pillars of reasoning. Firstly, on the idea that microbiomes play an important (...)
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  14.  24
    Breaking the Cybernetic Code: Understanding and Treating the Human Metacognitive Control System to Enhance Mental Health.Adrian Wells - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
  15.  26
    Of Records and Ruins: Metaphors about the Deep Past.Adrian Currie - 2023 - Journal of the Philosophy of History 17 (1):154-175.
    Consideration of evidence and data in historical science is dominated by textual metaphor: we reconstruct the past on the basis of various incomplete records. I suggest that although textual metaphors are often apt, they also lead philosophers and scientists to think about historical evidence in particular ways, and that other perspectives might be fruitful. Towards this, I explore the notion of natural historical evidence being thought of as ‘ruins’. This has several potential benefits. First, the architectural aspect of the metaphor (...)
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  16.  46
    Epistemic Optimism, Speculation, and the Historical Sciences.Adrian Currie - 2019 - Philosophy, Theory, and Practice in Biology 11.
    Here’s something I’m willing to claim we know: Homo sapiens, in particular the Polynesian settlers who first arrived in Aotearoa around the twelfth century, take the lion’s share of causal blame for the extinction of a lineage of enormous flightless birds: the moa. Stretching to three metres at their tallest, moa were a distinctive and remarkable feature of Aotearoa’s primeval forests, playing the main browser and grazer role in this unique bird-based ecosystem. Once humans turned up forests were burned, moa (...)
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  17. The limitations of pluralism.Adrian Cussins - 1992 - In K. Lennon & D. Charles, Reduction, Explanation, and Realism. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 179--224.
     
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  18. Rationality and the Structure of the Self Volume II: A Kantian Conception.Adrian M. S. Piper - 2013 - APRA Foundation.
    Adrian Piper argues that the Humean conception can be made to work only if it is placed in the context of a wider and genuinely universal conception of the self, whose origins are to be found in Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason. This conception comprises the basic canons of classical logic, which provide both a model of motivation and a model of rationality. These supply necessary conditions both for the coherence and integrity of the self and also for unified (...)
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  19.  24
    Recapture, Transparency, Negation and a Logic for the Catuṣkoṭi.Adrian Kreutz - 2019 - Comparative Philosophy 10 (1).
    The recent literature on Nāgārjuna’s catuṣkoṭi centres around Jay Garfield’s and Graham Priest’s interpretation. It is an open discussion to what extent their interpretation is an adequate model of the logic for the catuskoti, and the Mūla-madhyamaka-kārikā. Priest and Garfield try to make sense of the contradictions within the catuskoti by appeal to a series of lattices – orderings of truth-values, supposed to model the path to enlightenment. They use Anderson & Belnaps's framework of First Degree Entailment. Cotnoir has argued (...)
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  20.  22
    Accelerating the Carbon Cycle: the Ethics of Enhanced Weathering.Adrian Currie & Holly Lawford-Smith - 2017 - Biology Letters 13 (4):1-6.
    Enhanced weathering, in comparison to other geoengineering measures, creates the possibility of a reduced cost, reduced impact way of decreasing atmospheric carbon, with positive knock-on effects such as decreased oceanic acidity. We argue that ethical concerns have a place alongside empirical, political and social factors as we consider how to best respond to the critical challenge that anthropogenic climate change poses. We review these concerns, considering the ethical issues that arise (or would arise) in the large-scale deployment of enhanced weathering. (...)
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  21.  14
    Editorial: Metacognitive Therapy: Science and Practice of a Paradigm.Adrian Wells, Lora Capobianco, Gerald Matthews & Hans M. Nordahl - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
  22.  23
    Development and Preliminary Validation of the Salzburg Emotional Eating Scale.Adrian Meule, Julia Reichenberger & Jens Blechert - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  23.  17
    Why the Evolution of Heritable Symbiosis Neither Enhances Nor Diminishes the Fitness of a Symbiont.Adrian Stencel - 2022 - Philosophy, Theory, and Practice in Biology 14 (4).
    One of the current problems in microbiology concerns the understanding of fitness in host-symbiont systems. A great deal of research and conceptual work has analysed how the host benefits from such associations; however, very little of this work has attempted to take the microbial perspective. Nevertheless, some scientists have argued that we should conduct more comparative studies of both microorganisms that interact with a host and their free-living counterparts in order to determine whether or not symbiosis is beneficial for these (...)
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  24. Education Policy-Making in Wales.R. Daugherty, R. Phillips & G. Rees - 2002 - British Journal of Educational Studies 50 (3):399-401.
     
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  25.  31
    Monologues from "Four Intruders Plus Alarm Systems" and "Safe".Adrian Piper - 1995 - In Peg Zeglin Brand Weiser & Carolyn Korsmeyer, Feminism and Tradition in Aesthetics. Pennsylvania State University Press. pp. 235-244.
    Editor's note: Adrian Piper is a conceptual artist whose work from the past twenty-five years has included performances, graphic art, and installation pieces. Always provocative, Piper seeks to challenge viewers' assumptions about the nature of art, aesthetic response, and modes of evaluating by creating art that involves issues of gender and race. Piper uses political art to confront viewers with emotionally charged environments that preclude our maintaining a safe, aesthetically distanced stance toward the subject matter. being forced to confront (...)
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  26.  60
    The morality of the market and the medieval schoolmen.Adrian Walsh - 2004 - Politics, Philosophy and Economics 3 (2):241-259.
    Recently among analytic political philosophers there has been a considerable revival of interest in the normative evaluation of the market and of economic processes more generally. While not rejecting markets in toto , philosophers such as Elizabeth Anderson and Amartya Sen have raised questions about the proper range of the market, explored the role of normative considerations in economic decision-making and raised doubts about the view that normative constraints are never legitimately placed on economic activity. In this article I experience (...)
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  27.  31
    Misaligned education.Adrian Currie - 2021 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 48 (3):332-343.
    Like every Bachelor of Arts program, the University of Exeter provides a set of reasons to undertake a BA in philosophy aimed at prospective students and their parents. Here1 are two such reasons:F...
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  28.  16
    Antoniniana.D. A. Rees - 1950 - Mnemosyne 3 (2):125-126.
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  29.  10
    A Caper Quotation in the Liber Glossarvm.Frances Rees - 1922 - Classical Quarterly 16 (2):106-106.
    In Class. Quart. XV. 193 Dr. Mountford discussed a quotation from the Grammarian Caper in the Liber Glossarum, and referred it to an item culled from Vergil Scholia by the Abstrusa Glossary. Since Keil in his edition of this grammarian did not know of this glossary evidence to Caper's text, it may be worth mention that another Caper quotation appears in Lib. Gloss., s.v. Kaluus. It is taken from the first sentence of p. 100 of Keil's edition, and shows that (...)
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  30.  43
    A Message from the Chesterton Society President.William Rees-Mogg - 1985 - The Chesterton Review 11 (1):111-111.
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  31.  8
    Explaining the universe.Martin Rees - 2004 - In John Cornwell, Explanations: styles of explanation in science. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 39--66.
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  32. George Cadogan Morgan at Oxford.D. Rees - 1982 - Enlightenment and Dissent 1:89-90.
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  33.  49
    Professor Oakeshott on political education.John C. Rees - 1953 - Mind 62 (245):68-74.
  34.  12
    Violent borders, citizenship and the politics of migration.Peter Rees - 2022 - Contemporary Political Theory 21 (S1):1-8.
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  35.  34
    Depression and Identity: Are Self-Constructions Negative or Conflictual?Adrián Montesano, Guillem Feixas, Franz Caspar & David Winter - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8:203182.
    Negative self-views have proved to be a consistent marker of vulnerability for depression. However, recent research has shown that a particular kind of cognitive conflict, implicative dilemma, is highly prevalent in depression. In this study the relevance of these conflicts is assessed as compared to the cognitive model of depression of a negative view of the self. In so doing, 161 patients with major depression and 110 controls were assessed to explore negative self-construing (self-ideal discrepancy) and conflicts (implicative dilemmas), as (...)
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  36.  93
    What is Analytic Philosophy?Adrian Walsh - 2010 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 88 (4):734-737.
    Analytic philosophy is roughly a hundred years old, and it is now the dominant force within Western philosophy. Interest in its historical development is increasing, but there has hitherto been no sustained attempt to elucidate what it currently amounts to, and how it differs from so-called 'continental' philosophy. In this rich and wide-ranging book, Hans Johann Glock argues that analytic philosophy is a loose movement held together both by ties of influence and by various 'family resemblances'. He considers the pros (...)
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  37.  35
    Capitalism in Australia: New histories for a reimagined future.Ben Huf, Yves Rees, Michael Beggs, Nicholas Brown, Frances Flanagan, Shannyn Palmer & Simon Ville - 2020 - Thesis Eleven 160 (1):95-120.
    Capitalism is back. Three decades ago, when all alternatives to liberal democracy and free markets appeared discredited, talk of capitalism seemed passé. Now, after a decade of political and economic turmoil, capitalism and its temporal critique of progress and decline again seems an indispensable category to understanding a world in flux. Among the social sciences, historians have led both the embrace and critique of this ‘re-emergent’ concept. This roundtable discussion between leading and emerging Australian scholars working across histories of economy, (...)
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  38. Ethical Aesthetics: Schiller and Nietzsche as Critics of the Eighteenth Century.Adrian Del Caro - 1980 - The Germanic Review 55 (2):53-63.
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  39.  72
    Commentary on Simon Rippon, 'Imposing options on people in poverty: the harm of a live donor organ market'.Adrian Walsh - 2014 - Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (3):153-154.
    In debates over the legitimacy of markets for live human organs, much hinges on the moral standing of desperate exchanges. Can people in desperate circumstances genuinely choose to sell their organs? Alternatively if they do choose to sell, then surely is it their choice? While sales are banned in most of the Western world due to fears that the poor will be exploited, advocates of these markets find such prohibition unconscionably paternalistic; and from the standpoint of contemporary liberal theory, paternalism (...)
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  40.  49
    Meaningful Work Is Indeed a Matter of Distributive Justice.Adrian Walsh - 2019 - American Journal of Bioethics 19 (9):52-54.
    Volume 19, Issue 9, September 2019, Page 52-54.
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  41.  1
    Nietzsche and Romanticism: Goethe, Hölderlin, and Wagner.Adrian Del Caro - 2013 - In Ken Gemes & John Richardson, The Oxford Handbook of Nietzsche. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 108-133.
    This article examines Nietzsche’s engagement with romanticism. It contrasts his early romantic period, and the influence of Goethe, Hölderlin, and Richard Wagner, with his later attempts to “cure himself” of all romanticism. It considers the extent to which Nietzsche shared Goethe’s famous equation of the classical with health and the romantic with sickness—which Nietzsche most often calls decadence. It argues that there are deep programmatic and even textual affinities between Nietzsche’s Zarathustra and Hölderlin’s Hyperion. It was fundamentally through his engagement (...)
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  42.  12
    Células miradas con amor: poemas de Robin Myers.Adrián Chávez - 2022 - Estudios filosofía historia letras 20 (142):125.
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  43.  12
    En memoria de Javier Raya.Adrián Chávez - 2022 - Estudios filosofía historia letras 20 (143):125.
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  44.  20
    News of the Wold.Adrian Clarke - 2000 - Angelaki 5 (1):79 – 80.
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  45.  20
    A basis of opinion.Adrian Coates - 1938 - London,: Macmillan & co..
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  46.  2
    Hermeneutica facticității: Un bilanț.Adrian Costache - 2022 - Steaua 73 (1):48-49. Translated by Adrian Costache.
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  47. On the Uses and Abuses of Dialogue in Education.Adrian Costache - 2011 - Journal of Didactics 2 (2):147-156. Translated by Adrian Costache.
     
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  48.  90
    The Relevance of Wittgenstein’s Thought for Philosophical Hermeneutics.Adrian Costache - 2011 - Journal for Communication and Culture 1 (1):44-54.
    The present paper aims to bring to light the relevance of Wittgenstein‘s thought for philosophical hermeneutics. In this sense it offers a thorough discussion of the Austrian philosopher‘s understanding of the concept of translation through a detailed examination of its development from its first formulation in the context of the picture theory of meaning in the Tractatus to its reformulation as "language game" and "form of life" within the use theory put forth in Philosophical Investigations. The paper argues that the (...)
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  49.  61
    Commercial medicine and the ethics of the profit motive.Adrian J. Walsh - 2006 - Journal of Value Inquiry 40 (2-3):341-357.
  50.  19
    On Not Sparing Others the Trouble of Thinking: Wittgenstein and Education.Adrian Skilbeck & Paul Standish - 2019 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 53 (4):665-668.
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