Results for 'Anne Lovering Rounds'

965 found
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  1.  25
    Anthology and Absence: The Post-9/11 Anthologizing Impulse.Anne Lovering Rounds - 2015 - Text Matters - a Journal of Literature, Theory and Culture 5 (1):41-50.
    The decade after the attacks of 9/11 and the fall of the World Trade Center saw a proliferation of New York-themed literary anthologies from a wide range of publishers. With titles like Poetry After 9/11, Manhattan Sonnet, Poems of New York, Writing New York, and I Speak of the City, these texts variously reflect upon their own post-9/11 plurivocality as preservative, regenerative, and reconstructive. However, the work of such anthologies is more complex than filling with plurivocality the physical and emotional (...)
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  2. Mary Anne Warren on “Full” Moral Status.Robert P. Lovering - 2004 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 42 (4):509-30.
    In the contemporary debate on moral status, it is not uncommon to find philosophers who embrace the the Principle of Full Moral Status, according to which the degree to which an entity E possesses moral status is proportional to the degree to which E possesses morally relevant properties until a threshold degree of morally relevant properties possession is reached, whereupon the degree to which E possesses morally relevant properties may continue to increase, but the degree to which E possesses moral (...)
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  3.  9
    Love & its Lover.Anne Kawala - 2015 - Multitudes 57 (3):145-155.
    À tour de bras, elle apprend à prendre la loi par-dessus la jambe. Sur le bout des doigts, elle apprend à mettre sur sa langue la langue aux hommes jusqu’alors légalement réservée. Elle apprend la finance, la politique, le name-dropping, les portefeuilles, les influences, le marchandage, le chantage et les combines. (Suspending gems dripping :) Elle divorce.
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  4.  22
    Femininity revisited – A round table.Shirley-Anne Tate, Clare Hemmings, Gayatri Gopinath, Laura Martínez-Jiménez, Lina Gálvez-Muñoz, Jenny Sundén, Madeleine Kennedy-Macfoy & Ulrika Dahl - 2018 - European Journal of Women's Studies 25 (3):384-393.
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  5.  26
    Mapping civic experiences in Estonia.Anne Kaun - 2012 - Communications 37 (3):253-274.
    The article concerns civic experiences beyond or prior to civic action. Approaching questions of civic culture and democracy by way of the rather broad notion of civic experience, the author suggests that democratic values and processes involving citizens’ participation should be understood as deeply anchored in the lifeworld. The article establishes a view in which civic culture is understood from a holistic perspective as an experience. At the same time, the author is interested in the ways in which media are (...)
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  6.  39
    The Cool Brand, Affective Activism and Japanese Youth.Anne Allison - 2009 - Theory, Culture and Society 26 (2-3):89-111.
    Japanese youth goods have become globally popular over the past 15 years. Referred to as `cool', their contribution to the national economy has been much hyped under the catchword Japan's `GNC' (gross national cool). While this new national brand is indebted to youth — youth are the intended consumers for such products and sometimes the creators — young Japanese today are also chastised for not working hard, failing at school and work, and being insufficiently productive or reproductive. Using the concept (...)
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  7.  6
    Hannah Arendt: a life in dark times.Anne Conover Heller - 2015 - Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
    Hannah Arendt, one of the most gifted and provocative voices of her era, was a polarizing cultural theorist—extolled by her peers as a visionary and denounced by others as a fraud. Born in Prussia to assimilated Jewish parents, she escaped from Hitler's Germany in 1933 and became best known for her critique of the world's response to the evils of World War II. A woman of many contradictions, Arendt learned to write in English only at the age of thirty-six, and (...)
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  8.  13
    Enlightenment Thought: An Anthology of Sources.Margaret L. King - 2019 - Hackett Publishing Company.
    "Margaret L. King has put together a highly representative selection of readings from most of the more significant—but by no means the most obvious—texts by the authors who made up the movement we have come to call the 'Enlightenment.' They range across much of Europe and the Americas, and from the early seventeenth century until the end of the eighteenth. In the originality of the choice of texts, in its range and depth, this collection offers both wide coverage and striking (...)
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  9.  26
    Feminism and Class Politics: A Round-Table Discussion.Elizabeth Wilson, Angela Weir, Anne Phillips, Beatrix Campbell, Michèle Barrett, Lynne Segal & Clara Connolly - 1986 - Feminist Review 23 (1):13-30.
    In December 1984 Angela Weir and Elizabeth Wilson, two founding members of Feminist Review, published an article assessing contemporary British feminism and its relationship to the left and to class struggle. They suggested that the women's movement in general, and socialist-feminism in particular, had lost its former political sharpness. The academic focus of socialist-feminism has proved more interested in theorizing the ideological basis of sexual difference than the economic contradictions of capitalism. Meanwhile the conditions of working-class and black women have (...)
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  10.  35
    Plato and the Hero: Courage, Manliness, and the Impersonal Good (review).Ann N. Michelini - 2002 - American Journal of Philology 123 (2):293-297.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:American Journal of Philology 123.2 (2002) 293-297 [Access article in PDF] Angela Hobbs. Plato and the Hero: Courage, Manliness, and the Impersonal Good. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000. xviii + 280 pp. Cloth, $59.95. Hobbs directs this stimulating but rather unfocused study to a question of considerable interest and centrality in Platonic studies: the engagement of Platonic texts with the traditional Greek ethic of heroic endeavor. As she is (...)
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  11.  45
    Findings from a Delphi exercise regarding conflicts of interests, general practitioners and safeguarding children: 'Listen carefully, judge slowly'.Ann Gallagher, Paul Wainwright, Hilary Tompsett & Christine Atkins - 2012 - Journal of Medical Ethics 38 (2):87-92.
    General practitioners (GPs) have to negotiate a range of challenges when they suspect child abuse or neglect. This article details findings from a Delphi exercise that was part of a larger study exploring the conflicts of interest that arise for UK GPs in safeguarding children. The specific objectives of the Delphi exercise were to understand how these conflicts of interest are seen from the perspectives of an expert panel, and to identify best practice for GPs. The Delphi exercise involved four (...)
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  12.  29
    Kaśmir to Prussia, Round Trip: Monistic Śaivism and Hegel.J. M. Fritzman, Sarah Ann Lowenstein & Meredith Margaret Nelson - 2016 - Philosophy East and West 66 (2):371-393.
    We offer obeisances to Lord Śiva, guru of knowledge, lord of the dance, who purifies by the very utterance of his name, who transcends all dualities. May he grant us permission to argue with his devotees. May he also give us his blessings to convince them.Properly speaking, comparative philosophy does not lead toward the creation of a synthesis of philosophical traditions. What is being created is not a new theory but a different sort of philosopher. The goal of comparative philosophy (...)
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  13.  58
    Literature in Mind: H. G. Wells and the Evolution of the Mad Scientist.Anne Stiles - 2009 - Journal of the History of Ideas 70 (2):317-339.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Literature in MindH. G. Wells and the Evolution of the Mad ScientistAnne StilesIn 1893, H. G. Wells's article "Man of the Year Million" dramatically predicted the distant evolutionary future of mankind:The descendents of man will nourish themselves by immersion in nutritive fluid. They will have enormous brains, liquid, soulful eyes, and large hands, on which they will hop. No craggy nose will they have, no vestigial ears; their mouths (...)
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  14.  15
    The Teacher.Jennifer Anne Moses - 2018 - Feminist Studies 44 (2):491.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 44, no. 2. © 2018 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 491 Jennifer Anne Moses The Teacher It didn’t start percolating out until years—decades—later, and by that time even the youngest of what we’d soon be calling “the victims ” were in their early fifties, with husbands and children and grandchildren of their own, or not, with houses, careers, garages stuffed to the gills with lifetimes’ worth of (...)
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  15.  7
    Facing North: Portraits of Ely, Minnesota.Andrew Goldman, Ann Goldman & Jim Brandenburg - 2008 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    “Thank you Andrew and Ann Goldman for the persistence that it took to achieve the portraits in Facing North. It is a historic document for Ely, Minnesota that has worldwide interest as a snapshot of a unique northern community. You so accurately captured my friends and neighbors and I will always cherish this book.” —Will Steger “My work as a photojournalist has involved assignments about people and faraway cultures as often as about raw nature. Alas, I always felt there were (...)
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  16.  6
    Undoing art.Mary Ann Caws - 2017 - Macerata: Quodlibet. Edited by Michel Delville.
    Here is, we think, the point. It doesn't matter for what reason the writer or painter or lover destroys the creation: the real point is that destruction itself, like a gigantic statement. It is, in fact, something of an excitation, a stimulation to further thought: what is this ACTION about?' What do Stéphane Mallarmé, Antonin Artaud, Meret Oppenheim, Asger Jorn, Yoko Ono, Tom Phillips and Martin Arnold have in common? Whereas a wealth of critics have diagnosed contemporary art's preoccupations with (...)
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  17.  17
    Introduction.Daniel Boyarin, Anne Marie Wolf & Lilith Acadia - 2020 - Common Knowledge 26 (3):373-384.
    Responding to doubts expressed by contributors to the Common Knowledge symposium on xenophilia, this introduction to the seventh and final installment seeks to explain the critics’ methodological concerns in a case study of strong affect in the Babylonian Talmud. Examining the story of Rav Rehumi and his wife in Ketubot 62b, the author inquires whether differences of culture and the passage of time make it impossible for us to determine whether love is the affect involved. The case is especially difficult (...)
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  18.  9
    Lovers in the Round: In Memory of M.S. Merwin and a Lost Planet.David Jones - 2019 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 11 (3):217-220.
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  19. (2 other versions)The Later Works of John Dewey, Volume 9, 1925 - 1953: 1933-1934, Essays, Reviews, Miscellany, and a Common Faith.Jo Ann Boydston (ed.) - 1986 - Southern Illinois University Press.
    This ninth volume in The Later Works of John Dewey, 1925—1953, brings together sixty items from 1933 and 1934, including Dewey’s Terry Lec­tures at Yale University, published as _A Common Faith._ In his introduction, Milton R. Konvitz concludes that _A_ _Common Faith _remains a provocative book, an intellectual ‘teaser,’ an essay at religious philoso­phy which no philosopher can wholly bypass.” Dewey concentrated much of his writing in 1933 and 1934 on issues arising from the economic crises of the Great Depression. (...)
     
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  20.  30
    Thomas Berry and the new cosmology.Thomas Berry, Anne Lonergan, Caroline Richards & Gregory Baum (eds.) - 1987 - Mystic, Conn.: Twenty-Third Publications.
    Thomas Berry presents his vision of cosmology and the relationships in creation. Responses from Donald Senior, Gregory Baum, Margaret Brennan, Stephen Dunn, James Farris, and Brian Swimme round out the insights and create magnetic reading.
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  21.  12
    The Handbook of Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy: Psychoanalytic Approaches.Monica Lanyado & Ann Horne (eds.) - 1999 - Routledge.
    This _Handbook_ provides a comprehensive guide to the practice and principles of child and adolescent psychotherapy around the world. Contents include: * a brief introduction to the child psychotherapy profession, its history and development * a review of the theory underlying therapeutic practice * an overview of the varied settings in which child psychotherapists work * analysis of the growth of the profession internationally * an examination of areas of expertise around the world * a summary of current research Contributors (...)
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  22.  29
    A gap between the philosophy and the practice of palliative healthcare: sociological perspectives on the practice of nurses in specialised palliative homecare.Stinne Glasdam, Frida Ekström, Maria Rosberg & Ann-Margrethe van der Schaaf - 2020 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 23 (1):141-152.
    Palliative care philosophy is based on a holistic approach to patients, but research shows that possibilities for living up to this philosophy seem limited by historical and administrative structures. From the nurse perspective, this article aims to explore nursing practice in specialised palliative homecare, and how it is influenced by organisational and cultural structures. Qualitative, semi-structured interviews with nine nurses were conducted, inspired by Bourdieu. The findings showed that nurses consolidate the doxa of medicine, including medical-professional values that configure a (...)
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  23.  20
    Human rights and nutritional care in nurse education: lessons learned.Elisabeth Irene Karlsen Dogan, Laura Terragni & Anne Raustøl - 2022 - Nursing Ethics 29 (4):915-926.
    Background: Food is an important part of nursing care and recognized as a basic need and a human right. Nutritional care for older adults in institutions represents a particularly important area to address in nursing education and practice, as the right to food can be at risk and health personnel experience ethical challenges related to food and nutrition. Objective: The present study investigates the development of coursework on nutritional care with a human rights perspective in a nursing programme for first-year (...)
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  24.  21
    A gap between the philosophy and the practice of palliative healthcare: sociological perspectives on the practice of nurses in specialised palliative homecare.Stinne Glasdam, Frida Ekstrand, Maria Rosberg & Ann-Margrethe van der Schaaf - 2020 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 23 (1):141-152.
    Palliative care philosophy is based on a holistic approach to patients, but research shows that possibilities for living up to this philosophy seem limited by historical and administrative structures. From the nurse perspective, this article aims to explore nursing practice in specialised palliative homecare, and how it is influenced by organisational and cultural structures. Qualitative, semi-structured interviews with nine nurses were conducted, inspired by Bourdieu. The findings showed that nurses consolidate the doxa of medicine, including medical-professional values that configure a (...)
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  25.  39
    The development of ethical guidelines for nurses’ collegiality using the Delphi method.Mari Kangasniemi, Katariina Arala, Eve Becker, Anna Suutarla, Toni Haapa & Anne Korhonen - 2017 - Nursing Ethics 24 (5):538-555.
    Background: Nurses’ collegiality is topical because patient care is complicated, requiring shared knowledge and working methods. Nurses’ collaboration has been supported by a number of different working models, but there has been less focus on ethics. Aim: This study aimed to develop nurses’ collegiality guidelines using the Delphi method. Method: Two online panels of Finnish experts, with 35 and 40 members, used the four-step Delphi method in December 2013 and January 2014. They reformulated the items of nurses’ collegiality identified by (...)
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  26.  62
    Calculating and understanding the value of any type of match evidence when there are potential testing errors.Norman Fenton, Martin Neil & Anne Hsu - 2014 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 22 (1):1-28.
    It is well known that Bayes’ theorem (with likelihood ratios) can be used to calculate the impact of evidence, such as a ‘match’ of some feature of a person. Typically the feature of interest is the DNA profile, but the method applies in principle to any feature of a person or object, including not just DNA, fingerprints, or footprints, but also more basic features such as skin colour, height, hair colour or even name. Notwithstanding concerns about the extensiveness of databases (...)
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  27. Ann Sharp's Contribution: A Conversation With Matthew Lipman.David Kennedy - 2010 - Childhood and Philosophy 6 (12):11-19.
    The recent passing of Ann Sharp, Co-Founder and Associate Director of the Institute for the Advancement of Philosophy for Children, at the age of 68, has left many of us involved in the movement of philosophy for/with children bereft, no doubt in many different ways. The warmth and intensity of her personal and professional focus, the simple clarity of her thinking, and her boundless energy in the work of international dissemination of the concept and practice of philosophizing with children, resonate (...)
     
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  28.  72
    Metamathematical investigation of intuitionistic arithmetic and analysis.Anne S. Troelstra - 1973 - New York,: Springer.
  29.  51
    Choice sequences: a chapter of intuitionistic mathematics.Anne Sjerp Troelstra - 1977 - Oxford [Eng.]: Clarendon Press.
  30.  51
    Style and the Mole: Domestic aesthetics in the wind in the willows.Seth Lerer - 2009 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 43 (2):pp. 51-63.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Style and the Mole: Domestic Aesthetics in The Wind in the WillowsSeth Lerer (bio)Writing to her husband’s first illustrator, Graham Robertson, in 1931, Elspeth Grahame thanked him for the gift of his recently published memoirs. She called them “entrancing” and goes on to note: “The touch is so light yet so sure that whatever the subject the reading of it would be full of pleasure to any lover of (...)
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  31.  51
    Ethical Sensibilities for Practicing Care in Management and Organization Research.Anne Antoni & Haley Beer - 2024 - Journal of Business Ethics 190 (2):279-294.
    Management and organization researchers are being called to conduct research that is more caring, yet the concept of care and how to practice it within the profession is undertheorized. Adopting a feminist epistemology and methodology, we develop the concept of care by weaving the personal, ethical, and political into the research process. First, we reflect critically on how aspects of care—attentiveness, responsibility, competence, and responsiveness (Tronto, Moral boundaries: a political argument for an ethic of care, Routledge, 1993; Tronto, Caring democracy: (...)
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  32.  95
    The logic of unification in grammar.Robert T. Kasper & William C. Rounds - 1990 - Linguistics and Philosophy 13 (1):35 - 58.
  33.  79
    (1 other version)Evolutionary biology and the concept of disease.Anne Gammelgaard - 2000 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 3 (2):109-116.
    In recent years, an increasing number of medical books and papers attempting to analyse the concepts of health and disease from the perspective of evolutionary biology have been published.This paper introduces the evolutionary approach to health and disease in an attempt to illuminate the premisses and the framework of Darwinian medicine. My primary aim is to analyse to what extent evolutionary theory provides for a biological definition of the concept of disease. This analysis reveals some important differences between functional explanations (...)
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  34. Emergent features, attention, and object perception.Anne Treisman & R. Paterson - 1984 - J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform 10 (1):12-31.
  35. Issues in robot ethics seen through the lens of a moral Turing test.Anne Gerdes & Peter Øhrstrøm - 2015 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 13 (2):98-109.
    Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore artificial moral agency by reflecting upon the possibility of a Moral Turing Test and whether its lack of focus on interiority, i.e. its behaviouristic foundation, counts as an obstacle to establishing such a test to judge the performance of an Artificial Moral Agent. Subsequently, to investigate whether an MTT could serve as a useful framework for the understanding, designing and engineering of AMAs, we set out to address fundamental challenges within (...)
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  36.  30
    Accepting the Romantics as Philosophers.Michael Fischer - 1988 - Philosophy and Literature 12 (2):179-189.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Michael Fischer ACCEPTING THE ROMANTICS AS PHILOSOPHERS The romanticsarenot widely regarded as philosophers, at least not in philosophy departments, where they are seldom taught.1 Some of the reasons behind this exclusion of the Romantics involve a general disdain for literature; other reasons suggest a more specific uneasiness with Romanticism itself—with its apparent interest in animism, its selfindulgence, its coolness toward reason, and, perhaps above all, its refusal to abide (...)
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  37.  54
    Varieties of developmental dyslexia.Anne Castles & Max Coltheart - 1993 - Cognition 47 (2):149-180.
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  38.  67
    Reworking Autonomy: Toward a Feminist Perspective.Anne Donchin - 1995 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 4 (1):44.
    The principled approach to theory building that has been a conspicuous mark of bioethical theory for the past generation has in recent years fallen under considerable critical scrutiny. Although some critics have confined themselves to reordering the dominant principles, others have rejected a principled approach entirely and turned to alternative paradigms. Prominent among critics are antiprin-ciplists, who want to jettison the principle-based approach altogether and adopt a casuistic model, and communitarians, who favor an eclectic model combining features of both the (...)
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  39.  82
    Pleasure, freedom and grace: Schiller's “completion” of Kant's ethics.Anne Margaret Baxley - 2008 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 51 (1):1 – 15.
  40.  22
    Pantomime and imitation in great apes.Anne E. Russon - 2018 - Interaction Studies 19 (1-2):200-215.
    This paper assesses great apes’ abilities for pantomime and action imitation, two communicative abilities proposed as key contributors to language evolution. Modern great apes, the only surviving nonhuman hominids, are important living models of the communicative platform upon which language evolved. This assessment is based on 62 great ape pantomimes identified via data mining plus published reports of great ape action imitation. Most pantomimes were simple, imperative, and scaffolded by partners’ relationship and scripts; some resemble declaratives, some were sequences of (...)
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  41.  24
    Pandemica Panoptica: Biopolitical Management of Viral Spread in the Age of Covid-19.Anne Wagner, Aleksandra Matulewska & Sarah Marusek - 2021 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 35 (3):1081-1117.
    The current pandemic period has triggered a series of changes in society, at both individual and collective behavioral levels. These changes were perceived as either positive or negative by the impacted bodies, leading to both social change and positive interactions in a tense context. In this paper, the authors will deal with Pandemica Panotpica, subjugation infiltrating all levels of society, and the approach adopted by several countries in trying to find countermeasures to combat the virus' proliferation. Our research scope began (...)
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  42.  50
    A critique of the 'fetus as patient'.Anne Drapkin Lyerly, Margaret Olivia Little & Ruth R. Faden - 2008 - American Journal of Bioethics 8 (7):42 – 44.
  43. Dealing With Difference: A Politics of Ideas Or A Politics of Presence?Anne Phillips - 1994 - Constellations 1 (1):88-91.
  44. Le syncrétisme ésotérique de Meyrink. Le Golem et l'Ange à la fenêtre d'Occident.Anne-Marie Baranowski - 2001 - Iris 22:135-158.
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  45. Transformation of medical care through gene therapy and human rights to life and health -balancing risks and benefits.Anne Kjersti Befring - 2023 - In Santa Slokenberga, Timo Minssen & Ana Nordberg (eds.), Governing, protecting, and regulating the future of genome editing: the significance of ELSPI perspectives. Boston: Brill/Nijhoff.
  46.  76
    Pragmatics and Singular Reference.Anne Bezuidenhout - 1996 - Mind and Language 11 (2):133-159.
    :I present arguments in favour of the view that the propositions expressed by utterances containing singularly referring terms have modes of presentation of the objects referred to by those terms as constituents. I rely on recent work by Sperber and Wilson, Recanati and other pragmatists, and claim that a Fregean account of singular reference is supported by this work. This is in opposition to Recanati himself, who in his book Direct Reference has argued for a view which is closer to (...)
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  47.  23
    Gadamer, Beauty, and Musical Improvisation.Babette Babich - 2023 - In Sam McAuliffe (ed.), Gadamer, Music, and Philosophical Hermeneutics. Springer Verlag. pp. 203-240.
    Gadamer’s On the Relevance of the Beautiful makes telling reference to musical improvisation and the importance of musical listening in addition to foregrounding the need for justification (here including reference to musicological readings of Plato). Situating this discussion via Goethe and Plato along with Adorno’s late 1950s lectures on Aesthetics together with a discussion of Nietzsche and antiquity, what is at stake is attunement and a tension which invites a discussion of Anne Carson on the lover’s arrest and Heidegger (...)
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  48.  41
    Communication and culture mediation techniques in jurilinguistics.Anne Wagner & Jean-Claude Gémar - 2014 - Semiotica 2014 (201):1-15.
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  49.  15
    Qualitative Research, Appropriation of the ‘Other’ and Empowerment.Anne Opie - 1992 - Feminist Review 40 (1):52-69.
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  50.  15
    Why Mum's listening to St John of the Cross and not the Vatican.Anne Henderson - 1995 - The Australasian Catholic Record 72 (2):173.
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