Results for 'Barbara Belhalfaoui'

971 found
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  1.  62
    The Idea of an Exact Number: Children's Understanding of Cardinality and Equinumerosity.Barbara W. Sarnecka & Charles E. Wright - 2013 - Cognitive Science 37 (8):1493-1506.
    Understanding what numbers are means knowing several things. It means knowing how counting relates to numbers (called the cardinal principle or cardinality); it means knowing that each number is generated by adding one to the previous number (called the successor function or succession), and it means knowing that all and only sets whose members can be placed in one-to-one correspondence have the same number of items (called exact equality or equinumerosity). A previous study (Sarnecka & Carey, 2008) linked children's understanding (...)
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  2.  37
    The “We” in the “Me”: Solidarity and Health Care in the Era of Personalized Medicine.Barbara Prainsack - 2018 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 43 (1):21-44.
    This article challenges a key tacit assumption underpinning legal and ethical instruments in health care, namely, that people are ideally bounded, independent, and often also strategically rational individuals. Such an understanding of personhood has been criticized within feminist and other critical scholarship as being unfit to capture the deeply relational nature of human beings. In the field of medicine, however, it also causes tangible problems. I propose that a solidarity-based perspective entails a relational approach and as such helps to formulate (...)
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  3. O tożsamości europejskiej rozważania w nastroju melancholijnym.Barbara A. Markiewicz - 2006 - Civitas 9 (9).
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  4. Po-witanie u Emmanuela Lévinasa i prawo wro-gościnności Jacquesa Derridy: jak możliwy jest podmiot poza dialektyką heglowską?Barbara Markowska - 2011 - Sztuka I Filozofia (Art and Philosophy) 38.
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  5. Matka Polka wiecznie żywa.Warianty kobiecości w serialu M jak miłość.Barbara Smoczyńska - 2008 - Colloquia Communia 84 (1-2):218-238.
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  6. Niearbitralne uwagi o Arbitralności filozofii Józefa Niżnika.Barbara Tuchańska - 2000 - Przeglad Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria 34 (2):207-210.
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  7.  30
    The Idea of Rationality of Human Actions in Marxism.Barbara Tuchańska - 1984 - Dialectics and Humanism 11 (2):373-379.
  8.  72
    Justice by lottery.Barbara Goodwin - 1992 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    In this imaginative and provocative book, Barbara Goodwin explores the question of how lottery systems can achieve egalitarian social justice in societies with seemingly ineradicable inequalities. She begins with the utopian fable of Aleatoria, a country not unlike our own in the not-too-distant-future, where most goods are distributed by lottery--even the right to have children. She then analyzes the philosophical arguments for and against lottery distribution and a comparison of "justice by lottery" with other contemporary theories of justice. Goodwin (...)
  9.  29
    Attitudes and the Stalled Gender Revolution: Egalitarianism, Traditionalism, and Ambivalence from 1977 through 2016.Barbara Risman, Ray Sin & William J. Scarborough - 2019 - Gender and Society 33 (2):173-200.
    Empirical studies show that though there is more room for improvement, much progress has been made toward gender equality since the second wave of feminism. Evidence also suggests that women’s advancements have been more dramatic in the public sphere of work and politics than in the private sphere of family life. We argue that this lopsided gender progress may be traced to uneven changes in gender attitudes. Using data from more than 27,000 respondents who participated in the General Social Survey (...)
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  10. Forever Functional: Sexual Fitness and the Ageing Male Body.Barbara L. Marshall & Stephen Katz - 2002 - Body and Society 8 (4):43-70.
    Historically, male sexual fitness was framed by a patriarchal politics of life centred on regeneration, population and nation. In the later 20th century, as successful ageing became promoted by the lifestyle practices of an idealized healthy and active senior citizenry, traditional gerontocratic power over the sexual risks of youth gave way to a medical sexology concerned with sexual functionality across the lifecourse; in particular, erectility. Recently, erectile dysfunction has expanded to become a population-wide health problem with increasingly refined diagnoses based (...)
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  11.  47
    Darwin and divergence: The Wallace connection.Barbara G. Beddall - 1988 - Journal of the History of Biology 21 (1):1-68.
    Wallace's contributions to biological thought tend to be overlooked or overly praised, neither of which produces a satisfactory assessment. Examples of the latter tendency are the recent expositions by Brackman and Brooks; although both books contain much worthwhile material, both are flawed. At critical points their theories fail to measure up, Brackman's because of his misinterpretations of events in the month of June 1858, and Brooks's Darwin's September 5 letter to Gray could, and probably did, represent an ordering of his (...)
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  12.  64
    Disability, Connectivity and Transgressing the Autonomous Body.Barbara E. Gibson - 2006 - Journal of Medical Humanities 27 (3):187-196.
    This paper explores the interconnectedness of persons with disabilities, technologies and the environment by problematizing Western notions of the independent, autonomous subject. Drawing from Deleuze and Guattari’s reconfiguration of the static subject as active becoming, prevailing discourses valorizing independence are critiqued as contributing to the marginalization of bodies marked as disabled. Three examples of disability “dependencies”—man-dog, man-machine, and woman-woman connectivities—are used to illustrate that subjectivity is partial and transitory. Disability connectivity thus serves a signpost for an expanded understanding of subjectivity (...)
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  13.  36
    Rescuing Womanly Virtues: Some Dangers of Moral Reclamation.Barbara Houston - 1987 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 13:237-262.
    Kathryn Morgan has introduced us to a typology of ‘the ways in which women’s moral voice and her sense of moral integrity are twisted and destroyed by patriarchal ideology and lived experience.’ She claims that this experience can induce in women ‘a sense of confusion and genuine moral madness.’I am in agreement with much of what Morgan says. However, I suspect that some others might find her case less convincing than I for the reason that she supports her claims by (...)
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  14.  22
    Reflections on the relational ontology of medical assistance in dying.Barbara Pesut & Sally Thorne - 2023 - Nursing Philosophy 24 (4):e12438.
    Canadian nursing practice has been profoundly influenced by the legalization of medical assistance in dying in 2016, requiring that nurses navigate new and sometimes highly challenging experiences. Findings from our longitudinal studies of nurses' experiences suggest that these include deep emotional responses to medical assistance in dying, an urgency in orchestrating the perfect death, and a high degree of relational impact, both professionally and personally. Here we propose a theoretical explanation for these experiences based upon a relational ontology. Drawing upon (...)
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  15.  60
    Philosophy of mind: a very short introduction.Barbara Gail Montero - 2022 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Is the neurophysiology of pain all there is to pain? How do words and mental pictures come to represent things in the world? Do computers think, and if so, are their thought processes significantly similar to our thought processes? Or is there something distinctive about human thought thatprecludes replication in a computer? These are some of the puzzles that motivate the philosophical discipline called "philosophy of mind," a central area of philosophy.This Very Short Introduction introduces the philosophy of mind, and (...)
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  16.  18
    Twelve-month-olds disambiguate new words using mutual-exclusivity inferences.Barbara Pomiechowska, Gábor Bródy, Gergely Csibra & Teodora Gliga - 2021 - Cognition 213 (C):104691.
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  17.  47
    The effects of spatial language on spatial representation: Setting some boundaries.Edward Munnich & Barbara Landau - 2003 - In Dedre Gentner & Susan Goldin-Meadow (eds.), Language in Mind: Advances in the Study of Language and Thought. MIT Press. pp. 113--155.
  18. Scientizing the humanities.Barbara Herrnstein Smith - 2016 - Common Knowledge 22 (3):353-372.
    Advocates of literary Darwinism, cognitive cultural studies, neuroaesthetics, digital humanities, and other such hybrid fields now seek explicitly to make the aims and methods of one or another humanities discipline approximate more closely the aims and methods of science, and at their most visionary, they urge as well the overall integration of the humanities and natural sciences. This essay indicates some major considerations—historical, conceptual, and pragmatic—that may be useful for assessing these efforts and predicting their future. Arguments promoting integration often (...)
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  19.  38
    The riddle of the world: a reconsideration of Schopenhauer's philosophy.Barbara Hannan - 2009 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This book is an introduction to the philosophy of Arthur Schopenhauer, written in a lively, personal style.
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  20.  17
    Life in its fullness: Ecology, eschatology and ecodomy in a time of climate change.Barbara R. Rossing & Johan Buitendag - 2020 - HTS Theological Studies 76 (1).
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  21.  24
    Nurses, nannies and caring work: importation, visibility and marketability.Barbara L. Brush & Rukmini Vasupuram - 2006 - Nursing Inquiry 13 (3):181-185.
    This paper examines nurses’ international migration within the broader context of female migration, particularly against more studied groups of women who have migrated for employment in care‐giving roles. We analyze the similarities and differences between skilled professional female migrants (nurses) and domestic workers (nannies and in‐home caretakers) and how societal expectations, meanings, and values of care and ‘women's work’, together with myriad social, cultural, economic and political processes, construct the female migrant care‐giver experience. We argue that, as the recruitment of (...)
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  22.  43
    Jurgen Habermas: Key Concepts.Barbara Fultner - 2011 - Routledge.
    A rare systematic thinker, Habermas has furthered our understanding of modernity, social interaction and linguistic practice, societal institutions, rationality, morality, the law, globalization, and the role of religion in multicultural societies. He has helped shape discussions of truth, objectivity, normativity, and the relationship between the human and the natural sciences. This volume provides an accessible and comprehensive conceptual map of Habermas' theoretical framework and its key concepts, including the theory of communicative action, discourse ethics, his social-political philosophy and their applications (...)
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  23.  34
    Should We Say Goodbye to Latent Constructs to Overcome Replication Crisis or Should We Take Into Account Epistemological Considerations?Barbara Hanfstingl - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  24.  18
    Intimate relationships from a microstructural perspective:: Men who mother.Barbara J. Risman - 1987 - Gender and Society 1 (1):6-32.
    This article argues that individuals paradigms have predominated social scientific explanations for gendered behavior in intimate relationships but that a microstructural paradigm adds necessary additional information. The results of a study designed to test the relative strengths of individualist and microstructural explanations for “mothering behavior” are presented. The microstructural hypothesis is that single fathers will adopt parental behavior that more closely resembles that of women who mother than that of married fathers. Parenting behaviors of single fathers, single mothers, married parents (...)
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  25.  31
    Degrees of categoricity on a Cone via η-systems.Barbara F. Csima & Matthew Harrison-Trainor - 2017 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 82 (1):325-346.
    We investigate the complexity of isomorphisms of computable structures on cones in the Turing degrees. We show that, on a cone, every structure has a strong degree of categoricity, and that degree of categoricity is${\rm{\Delta }}_\alpha ^0 $-complete for someα. To prove this, we extend Montalbán’sη-system framework to deal with limit ordinals in a more general way. We also show that, for any fixed computable structure, there is an ordinalαand a cone in the Turing degrees such that the exact complexity (...)
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  26.  29
    Worlding Disability: Categorizations, Labels, and the Making of People.Barbara E. Gibson - 2019 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 10 (2):85-87.
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  27.  51
    Persons and things.Barbara Johnson - 2008 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    Moving effortlessly between symbolist poetry and Barbie dolls, artificial intelligence and Kleist, Kant, and Winnicott, Barbara Johnson not only clarifies ...
  28. Uncertainty in Pharmacology.Barbara Osimani & Adam La Caze (eds.) - 2020
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  29.  15
    Neuroticism and Fear of COVID-19. The Interplay Between Boredom, Fantasy Engagement, and Perceived Control Over Time.Barbara Caci, Silvana Miceli, Fabrizio Scrima & Maurizio Cardaci - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  30.  25
    Effects of Infant Carrying Practices on Rhythm in Music.Barbara Ayres - 1973 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 1 (4):387-404.
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  31.  32
    To describe or prescribe: assumptions underlying a prescriptive nursing process approach to spiritual care.Barbara Pesut & Rick Sawatzky - 2006 - Nursing Inquiry 13 (2):127-134.
    Increasing attention is being paid to spirituality in nursing practice. Much of the literature on spiritual care uses the nursing process to describe this aspect of care. However, the use of the nursing process in the area of spirituality may be problematic, depending upon the understandings of the nature and intent of this process. Is it primarily a descriptive process meant to make visible the nursing actions to provide spiritual support, or is it a prescriptive process meant to guide nursing (...)
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  32.  14
    When Advisors’ True Intentions Are in Question. How Do Bank Customers Cope with Uncertainty in Financial Consultancies?Barbara Mackinger, Eva Jonas & Christina Mühlberger - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  33.  18
    Chained Activation of the Motor System during Language Understanding.Barbara F. Marino, Anna M. Borghi, Giovanni Buccino & Lucia Riggio - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
  34.  16
    Edward Gresham’s Astrostereon, or A Discourse of the Falling of the Planet (1603), the Copernican paradox, and the construction of early modern proto-scientific discourse.Barbara Bienias - 2020 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 82:44-56.
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  35.  13
    Reverse engineering cash: Coin designs mark out high value differentials and coin sizes track values logarithmically.Barbara Pavlek, James Winters & Olivier Morin - 2020 - Cognition 198 (C):104182.
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  36.  15
    Authority hierarchies at work:: The impacts of race and sex.Barbara F. Reskin & Gail M. Mcguire - 1993 - Gender and Society 7 (4):487-506.
    This study investigates whether and how sex and race affect access to and rewards for job authority, using 1980 survey data for 1,216 employed workers. The authors examine whether, net of human-capital characteristics, sex and race affect access to and compensation for job authority. In addition, the authors examine whether the translation of credentials into authority and earnings varies depending on workers' sex or race.
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  37.  17
    Changing auditory time with prismatic goggles.Barbara Magnani, Francesco Pavani & Francesca Frassinetti - 2012 - Cognition 125 (2):233-243.
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  38.  46
    He or she who glimpses, desires, is wounded: A dialogue in the interspace (zwischenraum) between aby warburg and Georges didi-huberman.Barbara Baert - 2018 - Angelaki 23 (4):47-79.
    This article was inspired by Georges Didi-Huberman’s keynote lecture “Que ce qui apparaît seulement s’aperçoit” delivered in 2015 at Charles University in Prague during the “Dis/appearing” conference organized by the Internationales Kolleg für Kulturtechnikforschung und Medienphilosophie. Didi-Huberman’s lecture consisted of various reflections concerning the meaning of the image as instances of flaring up and fading away. During his talk, Didi-Huberman used evocative images – recollections – which he had collected over the years; impressions while walking in the streets, melancholic musings (...)
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  39. Women in German churches and society.Barbara Bagorski - 2004 - Journal of Dharma 29 (2):201-208.
     
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  40.  12
    (1 other version)¿Fue John Stuart Mill un auténtico demócrata?Bárbara Baldi - 2016 - Revista de Filosofía 72:91-108.
    Los conceptos de democracia y de gobierno representativo están inevitablemente conectados y vinculados entre ellos, y uno de los principios fundamentales de la democracia representativa es el principio de mayoría. Este articulo es una aproximación a la teoría de John Stuart Mill sobre el gobierno representativo en relación con el principio de mayoría y bajo su perspectiva elitista. Mill consideró el sistema representativo el modelo político más eficaz, aunque quiso subrayar los puntos críticos y los posibles desvíos negativos de la (...)
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  41.  89
    Stefan Collini, Virginia Woolf, and the Question of Intellectuals in Britain.Barbara Caine - 2007 - Journal of the History of Ideas 68 (3):369-373.
    This essay raises the question of gender in relation to the question of intellectuals in Britain, commenting on the gender blindness that made their exclusion so automatic in Collini's study. It looks at some women who might have been included, focussing particularly on Virginia Woolf as one who was not only a very significant public intellectual, but who in her essays entitled 'The Common Reader' also provided a definition and analysis of the role of an intellectual which is very different (...)
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  42.  12
    Medienphilosophie der nahsinne.Barbara Becker - 2005 - In Mike Sandbothe & Ludwig Nagl (eds.), Systematische Medienphilosophie. De Gruyter. pp. 65-80.
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  43.  97
    …You have to bear to be measure.Barbara Cassin, Vsevolod Khoma, Amina Kkhelufi, Daria-Aseniia Kolomiiets & Olha Simoroz - 2019 - Sententiae 38 (2):151-164.
    First, I love Greek language, a language which allow me to perceive what a language is, and what translation could mean. Then, I think it is because of Heidegger. At the time, we used to study classical antiquity and the pre-socratics through Heidegger and Nietzsche’s work. My own philosophical question was : « Is it possible to be Presocratic in some other way than the Heideggerian one? » The answer determinated my interest and passion for the sophists. I found it (...)
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  44.  86
    Analyticity and nondescriptionality[*] michigan state university [email protected].Barbara Abbott - manuscript
    One of the widely accepted and quite influential conclusions of modern Anglo-American philosophy is that there is no sharp distinction between analytic truths and statements that are true only [by] virtue of the facts; what had been called analytic truths in earlier work, it is alleged, are simply expressions of deeply held belief. This conclusion seems quite erroneous. There is no fact about the world that I could discover that would convince me that you persuaded John to go to college (...)
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  45.  48
    Scientific misconduct: Present problems and future trends.Barbara Mishkin - 1999 - Science and Engineering Ethics 5 (2):283-292.
    Substantial progress in handling scientific misconduct cases has been made since the first cases were investigated by the NIH Office of Scientific Integrity in 1989. The successor Office of Research Integrity (ORI) has simultaneously reduced the backlog of cases and increased the professionalism with which they are handled. However, a spate of lawsuits against universities, particularly those brought under the federal False Claims Act, threatens to undermine the ORI by encouraging use of the courts as an alternate route for resolving (...)
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  46.  53
    “Listening Silence” and Its Discursive Effects.Barbara Applebaum - 2016 - Educational Theory 66 (3):389-404.
    While researchers have studied how white silence protects white innocence and white ignorance, in this essay Barbara Applebaum explores a form of white silence that she refers to as “listening silence” in which silence protects white innocence but does not necessarily promote resistance to learning. White listening silence can appear to be a constructive pedagogical tool for teaching white students about their implication in the perpetuation of racism. The truth of white students' listening may make it seem as if (...)
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  47.  9
    Introduzione alla storia della filosofia antica.Carlo Natali & Barbara Botter (eds.) - 2004 - Venezia: Cafoscarina.
  48. Biobanks and the Human Microbiome in The Human Microbiome: Ethical, Legal, and Social Concerns.Abraham Schwab, Barbara Brenner, Joseph Goldfarb, Rochhelle Hirschhorn & Sean Philpott - unknown
     
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  49. Following new paths by student labs in teaching chemistry to children with special needs.Barbara Schmitt-Sody & Andreas Kometz - 2012 - In Silvija Markic, Ingo Eilks, David Di Fuccia & Bernd Ralle (eds.), Issues of heterogeneity and cultural diversity in science education and science education research: a collection of invited papers inspired by the 21st Symposium on Chemical and Science Education held at the University of Dortmund, May 17-19, 2012. Aachen: Shaker Verlag.
     
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  50. Changing notions of linguistic competence in the history of formal semantics.Barbara H. Partee - 2018 - In Derek Ball & Brian Rabern (eds.), The Science of Meaning: Essays on the Metatheory of Natural Language Semantics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 172-196.
    In the history of formal semantics, the successful joining of linguistic and philosophical work brought with it some difficult foundational questions concerning the nature of meaning and the nature of knowledge of language in the domain of semantics: questions in part about “what’s in the head” of a competent language-user. This paper, part of a project on the history of formal semantics, revisits the central issues of (Partee, 1979) in a historical context, as a clash between two traditions, Fregean and (...)
     
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