Results for 'Barbara Pecori'

972 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.  44
    The Moral Habitat.Barbara Herman - 2021 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    The Moral Habitat offers a new and systematic interpretation of Kant's moral and political philosophy. Herman introduces the idea of a moral habitat to examines the dynamic system of duties that exists between individuals and civic institutions.
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  3. Denken im Grenzgebiet: Prozessphilosophische Grundlagen einer Theorie starker Nachhaltigkeit.Barbara Muraca - 2010 - Alber Verlag.
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  4.  65
    Time.Barbara Adam - 2006 - Theory, Culture and Society 23 (2-3):119-126.
    The article argues that the relationship to time is at the root of what makes us human and that culture arises with and from efforts to transcend death, change and the rhythmicity of the physical environment. Time can be tracked through systems of time measurement and later transformed from a process of nature into clock time, a time to human design that is abstracted from context and content. In this form time can be traded with all other times. With contemporary (...)
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  5. Definiteness and Indefiniteness.Barbara Abbott - 2004 - In Laurence R. Horn & Gregory Ward (eds.), Handbook of Pragmatics. Blackwell.
    The prototypes of definiteness and indefiniteness in English are the definite article the and the indefinite article a/an, and singular noun phrases (NPs)1 determined by them. That being the case it is not to be predicted that the concepts, whatever their content, will extend satisfactorily to other determiners or NP types. However it has become standard to extend these notions. Of the two categories definites have received rather more attention, and more than one researcher has characterized the category of definite (...)
     
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  6.  7
    Essential Knowledge for Teachers: Truths to Energize, Excite, and Engage Today’s Teachers.Barbara D. Culp - 2016 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    Essential Knowledge for Teachers keeps teachers focused and relevant in today’s changing educational landscape. Short entries present one piece of wisdom, its benefits, and an example of the wisdom in action based on studies, real-world anecdotes, and Dr. Culp’s opinions. Recommendations can be implemented in easy and inexpensive ways. Become a guide, mentor and role model with Essential Knowledge for Teachers.
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  7. Marksizm jako fundament filozoficznych koncepcji nauki (na przykładzie ontologii bytu społecznego G. Lukacsa).Barbara Tuchańska - 1986 - Studia Filozoficzne 252 (11).
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  8.  19
    Bringing the men back in:: Sex differentiation and the devaluation of women's work.Barbara F. Reskin - 1988 - Gender and Society 2 (1):58-81.
    To reduce sex differences in employment outcomes, we must examine them in the context of the sex-gender hierarchy. The conventional explanation for wage gap—job segregation—is incorrect because it ignores men's incentive to preserve their advantages and their ability to do so by establishing the rules that distribute rewards. The primary method through which all dominant groups maintain their hegemony is by differentiating the subordinate group and defining it as inferior and hence meriting inferior treatment. My argument implies that neither sex-integrating (...)
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  9.  33
    Early map use as an unlearned ability.Barbara Landau - 1986 - Cognition 22 (3):201-223.
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  10.  34
    Logged out: Ownership, exclusion and public value in the digital data and information commons.Barbara Prainsack - 2019 - Big Data and Society 6 (1).
    In recent years, critical scholarship has drawn attention to increasing power differentials between corporations that use data and people whose data is used. A growing number of scholars see digital data and information commons as a way to counteract this asymmetry. In this paper I raise two concerns with this argument: First, because digital data and information can be in more than one place at once, governance models for physical common-pool resources cannot be easily transposed to digital commons. Second, not (...)
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  11. The Race for Theory.Barbara Christian - 1988 - Feminist Studies 14 (1):67.
  12. (1 other version)Reference and quantification: The Partee effect.Barbara Abbott - unknown
    Partee (1973) discussed quotation from the perspective of the then relatively new theory of transformational grammar.2 As she pointed out, the phenomenon presents many curious puzzles. In some ways quotes seem quite separate from their surrounding text; they may be in a different dialect, as in her example in (1), (1) ‘I talk better English than the both of youse!’ shouted Charles, thereby convincing me that he didn’t. [Partee (1973):ex. 20] or even in a different language, as in (2): (2) (...)
     
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  13.  26
    Reflexive Modernization Temporalized.Barbara Adam - 2003 - Theory, Culture and Society 20 (2):59-78.
    This article considers the relevance of time theory for Beck's theory of reflexive modernization and vice versa. It focuses in particular on discontinuity in the context of continuity, on decontextualization, naturalization and responsibility as key concerns of both perspectives on the industrial way of life. It makes explicit the temporal underpinnings of that cultural form with respect to five Cs: the creation of time to human design (C1), the commodification of time (C2), the compression of time (C3), the control of (...)
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  14.  38
    Sex and Skill: Notes towards a Feminist Economics.Barbara Taylor & Anne Phillips - 1980 - Feminist Review 6 (1):79-88.
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  15. O tożsamości europejskiej rozważania w nastroju melancholijnym.Barbara A. Markiewicz - 2006 - Civitas 9 (9).
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  16. 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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  17. 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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  18. Niearbitralne uwagi o Arbitralności filozofii Józefa Niżnika.Barbara Tuchańska - 2000 - Przeglad Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria 34 (2):207-210.
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  19.  30
    The Idea of Rationality of Human Actions in Marxism.Barbara Tuchańska - 1984 - Dialectics and Humanism 11 (2):373-379.
  20. Aristotle on the Necessity of Public Education.Randall R. Curren, Barbara Koziak, Waller Newell, Nalin Ranasinghe & Patrick J. Deneen - 2000 - Political Theory 30 (3):441-448.
     
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  21. Świadomość kształtuje byt.Barbara Starosta - 1994 - Studia Semiotyczne 19:31-39.
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  22. What changes in positing the body instead of the soul? Nietzsche amongst Descartes, Kant and biology. [Spanish].Barbara Stiegler - 2003 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 1:128-141.
    Se trata de preguntarse por la diferencia que genera para la filosofía el poner el cuerpo en el lugar del alma. Se responderá a partir de la reformulación que hace Nietzsche del cuerpo en su filosofía resultado de una biologización del sujeto kantiano frente al cartesianismo.
     
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  23. Human Reproductive Behaviour: a Darwinian Perspective. Edited by L. Betzig.Barbara Thompson - forthcoming - Journal of Biosocial Science.
  24. Performance Appraisal and the Emergence of Management.Barbara Townley - 2005 - In Christopher Grey & Hugh Willmott (eds.), Critical Management Studies:A Reader: A Reader. Oxford University Press.
     
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  25. Kuhnowskie pojęcie paradygmatu a problem opisania rozwoju nauki.Barbara Tuchańska - 1987 - Zagadnienia Naukoznawstwa 23 (1).
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  26. On the Superiority of the Ordinary Day over the Holy Day: Relativism.Barbara Tuchańska - 2011 - Hybris. Internetowy Magazyn Filozoficzny 13.
     
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  27. Problem filozoficzności filozofii nauki.Barbara Tuchańska - 1989 - Studia Filozoficzne 278 (1).
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  28. Donkey Demonstratives.Barbara Abbott - 2002 - Natural Language Semantics 10 (4):285-298.
    Donkey pronouns (e.g., it in Every farmer who owns a donkey beats it) are argued to have an interpretation more similar to a demonstrative phrase (e.g., . . . beats that donkey) than to any of the other alternatives generally considered (e.g., . . . the donkey(s) he owns, . . . a donkey he owns). Like the demonstrative phrase, the pronoun is not equivalent to Evans' E-type paraphrase, nor to either the weak or the strong reading sometimes claimed for (...)
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  29. What about Plurality? Aristotle’s Discussion of Zeno’s Paradoxes.Barbara M. Sattler - 2021 - Peitho 12 (1):85-106.
    While Aristotle provides the crucial testimonies for the paradoxes of motion, topos, and the falling millet seed, surprisingly he shows almost no interest in the paradoxes of plurality. For Plato, by contrast, the plurality paradoxes seem to be the central paradoxes of Zeno and Simplicius is our primary source for those. This paper investigates why the plurality paradoxes are not examined by Aristotle and argues that a close look at the context in which Aristotle discusses Zeno holds the answer to (...)
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  30.  25
    How Can Law and Policy Advance Quality in Genomic Analysis and Interpretation for Clinical Care?Barbara J. Evans, Gail Javitt, Ralph Hall, Megan Robertson, Pilar Ossorio, Susan M. Wolf, Thomas Morgan & Ellen Wright Clayton - 2020 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 48 (1):44-68.
    Delivering high quality genomics-informed care to patients requires accurate test results whose clinical implications are understood. While other actors, including state agencies, professional organizations, and clinicians, are involved, this article focuses on the extent to which the federal agencies that play the most prominent roles — the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services enforcing CLIA and the FDA — effectively ensure that these elements are met and concludes by suggesting possible ways to improve their oversight of genomic testing.
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  31.  26
    What are Clinician Scientists Expected to do? The Undefined Space for Professionalizable Work in Translational Biomedicine.Barbara Hendriks, Arno Simons & Martin Reinhart - 2019 - Minerva 57 (2):219-237.
    Clinician scientists have gained institutional support in the era of translational research, as the key solution to closing the ‘translational gap’ between biomedical research and medical practice. However, clinician scientists remain an ‘endangered species’ in search of a secure niche, while new grants and training programs attempt to counteract their measurable decline in numbers over the past decades. Our study asks how an occupational space for clinician scientists is currently situated between the politics of translation, professional dynamics, and the specialization (...)
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  32. 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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  33.  16
    Inez Baranay’s Ghosts Like Us as a Stolperstein.Bárbara Arizti - 2021 - The European Legacy 26 (3-4):327-340.
    In Multidirectional Memory Michael Rothberg argues that collective memory is best understood as a network connecting apparently disparate historical traumas. His ethical vision pre-empts the need t...
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  34.  21
    Pre-Socratics and Post-Moderns.Barbara Cassin, Michel Narcy & Alex Ling - 2020 - Journal of Continental Philosophy 1 (2):217-231.
    In this text Cassin and Narcy begin their reassessment of the mode of thought that is sophistry, which has historically functioned as the (negative) “other” of classical philosophy. To this end, the authors first present a close reading of Book Gamma of Aristotle’s Metaphysics, understood as a concerted “strategy against sophism” that, in establishing a logical basis for metaphysics, seeks to relegate the former to the sidelines once and for all. What proves ineliminable in this operation, however, and which “resurfaces (...)
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  35.  26
    Why Teaching Matters: A Philosophical Guide to the Elements of Practice, Paul Farber and Dini Metro-Roland, Bloomsbury, 2020, Pp. 224.Barbara S. Stengel - 2021 - Educational Theory 71 (5):665-672.
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  36. Models, truth and semantics.Barbara Abbott - 1997 - Linguistics and Philosophy 20 (2):117-138.
  37.  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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  38.  47
    Containment and Support: Core and Complexity in Spatial Language Learning.Barbara Landau, Kristen Johannes, Dimitrios Skordos & Anna Papafragou - 2017 - Cognitive Science 41 (S4):748-779.
    Containment and support have traditionally been assumed to represent universal conceptual foundations for spatial terms. This assumption can be challenged, however: English in and on are applied across a surprisingly broad range of exemplars, and comparable terms in other languages show significant variation in their application. We propose that the broad domains of both containment and support have internal structure that reflects different subtypes, that this structure is reflected in basic spatial term usage across languages, and that it constrains children's (...)
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  39.  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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  40.  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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  41.  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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  42. 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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  43.  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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  44.  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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  45.  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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  46.  7
    Reference.Barbara Abbott - 2016 - In Yan Huang (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Pragmatics. Oxford University Press UK.
    This chapter reviews aspects of the way we use linguistic expressions to talk about things. After reviewing various types of NPs with respect to their possible use in referring, we turn to what it is that speakers are referring to, distinguishing real world from hypothetical and discourse referents. Figures of speech such as metonymy are briefly considered. Another important issue concerns choice of NP; for any given referent there are typically many possible expressions that could be used, and much research (...)
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  47. The difference between definite and indefinite descriptions.Barbara Abbott - manuscript
  48.  8
    Rousseau’s Moral Legacy: Hospitality and Alterity in The Levite of Ephraim.Barbara Abrams - 2019 - Lumen: Selected Proceedings From the Canadian Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies 38:1.
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  49.  55
    Desplazamientos en torno a la corporalidad. Entre la ética de la liberación y la perspectiva descolonial.Bárbara Aguer - 2019 - Ideas Y Valores 68 (169):33-59.
    Se reconstruyen las diferencias alrededor del tratamiento de la corporalidad en dos corrientes contemporáneas del pensamiento latinoamericano: la filosofía de la liberación y la perspectiva descolonial. Ambas se inscriben en un campo filosófico comprendido como conocimiento situado, lo que significa que dichas perspectivas, al visibilizar su propio lugar de enunciación, realizan una sistematización críticaracional, fundada en la experiencia concreta, histórica y sensible de la herida colonial. En el marco que configura este punto de partida reflexivo, el lugar asignado a la (...)
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  50.  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.
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