Results for 'Christine Branigan'

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  1. Positive emotions broaden the scope of attention and thought‐action repertoires.Barbara L. Fredrickson & Christine Branigan - 2005 - Cognition and Emotion 19 (3):313-332.
    The broaden‐and‐build theory (CitationFredrickson, 1998, Citation2001) hypothesises that positive emotions broaden the scope of attention and thought‐action repertoires. Two experiments with 104 college students tested these hypotheses. In each, participants viewed a film that elicited (a) amusement, (b) contentment, (c) neutrality, (d) anger, or (e) anxiety. Scope of attention was assessed using a global‐local visual processing task (Experiment 1) and thought‐action repertoires were assessed using a Twenty Statements Test (Experiment 2). Compared to a neutral state, positive emotions broadened the scope (...)
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  2. A Kantian Case for Animal Rights.Christine Korsgaard - unknown
    Most legal systems divide the world into persons and property, treating human beings as persons, and pretty much everything else, including non-human animals, as property. Persons are the subjects of both rights and obligations, including the right to own property, while objects of property, being by their very nature for the use of persons, have no rights at all. I will call this the “legal bifurcation.” We might look to Immanuel Kant’s moral and political philosophy to provide a philosophical vindication (...)
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  3.  25
    Global Human Smuggling: Comparative Perspectives by David Kyle and Rey Koslowski, eds: Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2011.Christine Balarezo - 2015 - Human Rights Review 16 (3):307-309.
  4.  27
    Mixed Blessings.Christine Ball - 2009 - Metascience 18 (3):491-495.
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  5.  6
    Heart and vessels from stem cells: A short history of serendipity and good luck.Christine Mummery - 2024 - Bioessays 46 (12):2400078.
    Stem cell research is the product of cumulative, integrated effort between and within laboratories and disciplines. The many collaborative steps that lead to that special “Eureka moment”, when something that has been a puzzle perhaps for years suddenly become clear, is among the greatest pleasures of a scientific career. In this essay, the serendipitous pathway from first acquaintance with pluripotent stem cells to advanced cardiovascular models that emerged from studying development and disease will be described. Perhaps inspiration for later generations (...)
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  6. Reproductive ‘Surrogacy’ and Parental Licensing.Christine Overall - 2014 - Bioethics 29 (5):353-361.
    A serious moral weakness of reproductive ‘surrogacy’ is that it can be harmful to the children who are created. This article presents a proposal for mitigating this weakness. Currently, the practice of commercial ‘surrogacy’ operates only in the interests of the adults involved , not in the interests of the child who is created. Whether ‘surrogacy’ is seen as the purchase of a baby, the purchase of parental rights, or the purchase of reproductive labor, all three views share the same (...)
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  7. Führungsverantwortung in der Hochschullehre. Zur Situation in den MINT-Fächern und Wirtschaftswissenschaften an den Universitäten in Baden-Württemberg, Rheinland-Pfalz und Thüringen.Philipp Richter, Marie-Christine Fregin, Benedikt Schreiber, Stefanie Wüstenhagen, Julia Dietrich, Rolf Frankenberger, Uwe Schmidt & Peter Walgenbach - 2016 - Materialien Zur Ethik in den Wissenschaften 12.
     
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  8.  5
    The Swirl of Emotion Among Us: Affect, the Voice, and Performance Training.Christine Hamel & Ann J. Cahill - forthcoming - British Journal of Aesthetics.
    Our recent theory of intervocality (Cahill and Hamel 2018, 2021) provided a new model of voice as material, relational, and socially constructed. However, our work did not substantially address the complex relationship between voice and emotion, or how that complex relationship could be taken up more effectively and ethically in actor training and the theater studio. Utilizing insights from affect theory, cultural psychology, and affective neuroscience, this article argues for the need for pedagogies that substantively engage with the cultural specificity (...)
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  9.  8
    The Undeserving Sick? An Evaluation of Patients’ Responsibility for Their Health Condition.Christine Clavien & Samia Hurst - 2020 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 29 (2):175-191.
    The recent increased prevalence of diseases related to unhealthy lifestyles raises difficulties for healthcare insurance systems traditionally based on the principles of risk-management, solidarity, and selective altruism: since these diseases are, to some extent, predictable and avoidable, patients seem to bear some responsibility for their condition and may not deserve full access to social medical services. Here, we investigate with objective criteria to what extent it is warranted to hold patients responsible for their illness and to sanction them accordingly. We (...)
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  10.  48
    On the nature of sexual harassment.Jan Crosthwaite & Christine Swanton - 1986 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 64 (S1):91-106.
  11.  31
    Selective Termination of Pregnancy and Women's Reproductive Autonomy.Christine Overall - 1990 - Hastings Center Report 20 (3):6-11.
    The “demand” for selective termination of pregnancy is a socially constructed response to prior medical interventions in women's reproductive processes, themselves dependent on cultural views of infertility.
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  12.  8
    When Patient Voices Get Lost in Evidence Hierarchies: A Testimony of Rare Adverse Events and Participatory Epistemic Injustice in Drug Safety Monitoring.Rani Lill Anjum, Christine Price & Elena Rocca - forthcoming - Social Epistemology.
    We explore an unsolved challenge in the era of evidence-based medicine (EBM): the recognition of the patient as an epistemic agent or ‘knower’. While patients are increasingly acknowledged as carriers of values and preferences, it seems more challenging to acknowledge them as carriers of important causal information. In contrast, the science of pharmacovigilance depends on patient testimonies as valuable sources of causal evidence. This incompatibility can give rise to cases of what has been called participatory epistemic injustice. We analyse the (...)
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  13. Role Muddles: The Stereotyping of Feminists.Christine Overall - 1992 - Canadian Research Institute for the Advancement of Women.
  14.  1
    Mediated parent networks as communicative figurations: practical sense and communicative practices among parents in four European countries.Christine W. Trültzsch-Wijnen, Niklas A. Chimirri, Ranjana Das & Ana Jorge - forthcoming - Communications.
    This paper investigates the diversity of mediated parent networks from the perspective of communicative figurations, by focussing on what kinds of networks can be identified (RQ1) and what expectations parents hold towards these networks (RQ2). It draws upon a qualitative, exploratory study conducted in Austria, Denmark, Portugal and the UK, with interviews conducted with parents across 16 families in 2021. Different kinds of parent networks are described in terms of size, perceived publicness, frames of relevance, actors involved, communicative practices, and (...)
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  15.  49
    Beneficent Deception: Whose Best Interests Are We Serving?Connie Ulrich & Christine Grady - 2004 - American Journal of Bioethics 4 (4):76-77.
  16.  12
    Les sagesses démotiques et la question du consentement sexuel (Égypte, ve-ier siècle).Christine Hue-Arcé - 2020 - Clio 52:195-205.
    Plusieurs sagesses démotiques de l’Égypte ancienne rédigées entre le ve et le ier siècle avant notre ère déconseillent à leur lecteur d’entretenir des relations sexuelles avec des femmes mariées. Si la perception négative de l’adultère est évidente dans les extraits étudiés, qu’en est-il du consentement des femmes? Est-il possible d’établir si ces relations étaient consenties ou non? L’analyse de la terminologie et du contexte des occurrences ainsi que la comparaison avec d’autres textes issus de la littérature démotique permettent à l’auteure (...)
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  17.  33
    Trance, posture, and tobacco in the Casas Grandes shamanic tradition: Altered states of consciousness and the interaction effects of behavioral variables.Christine S. VanPool, Laura Lee, Paul Robear & Todd L. VanPool - 2024 - Anthropology of Consciousness 35 (1):75-95.
    Here, we describe how Casas Grandes Medio period (AD 1200 to 1450) shamanic practices of the North American Southwest used tobacco shamanism, a ritual stance called the Tennessee Diviner (TD) posture, and cultural expectations to generate trance experiences of soul flight and divination. We introduce a conceptual model that holds that specific trance experiences are the emergent result of human minds interacting with additional factors including entheogens, cultural expectations, physiological states, postures/movement, and sound/stimulation. Experimental and ethnographic evidence indicates initiating trance (...)
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  18. AIDS and Women: The (Hetero)Sexual Politics of HIV Infection.Christine Overall - 1991 - In Christine Overall & William P. Zion (eds.), Perspectives on AIDS: Ethical and Social Issues. Oxford University Press.
  19.  14
    L’entretien de co-explicitation au service de la recherche collaborative.Christine Pierrisnard - 2017 - Revue Phronesis 6 (1-2):153-165.
    Within the framework of the searches about the new philosophic practices with the children, teachers-researchers and primary school teachers specialized in French educational systéme, gather for a collaborative search.The group observes the practices of his members and notes that they tend to modify the temporal representations on which teachers usually lean to think and act in their class. These changes have important consequences that are sometimes difficult to identify.The co-explicitation interviews presented here have led to the awareness and recognition of (...)
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  20.  24
    Green Crusaders or Captives of Industry? The British Alkali Inspectorate and the Ethics of Environmental Decision Making, 1864–95.Christine Garwood - 2004 - Annals of Science 61 (1):99-117.
    The enforcement of the alkali acts by the chief inspectors Robert Angus Smith and Alfred Evans Fletcher indicates how scientific ideals of neutrality and impartiality were placed under strain by their state‐sanctioned role as arbitrators between environmental and industrial interests. Previously unused or unexploited sources reveal the precise ways in which they sought to resolve the conflicts between ‘muck and brass' intrinsic to environmental regulation and illustrate the value‐laden and discretionary implementation of scientific public policy. Through an analysis of the (...)
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  21.  25
    What the Women of Dublin Did with John Locke.Christine Gerrard - 2020 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 88:171-193.
    William Molyneux's friendship with John Locke helped make Locke's ideas well known in early eighteenth-century Dublin. TheEssay Concerning Human Understandingwas placed on the curriculum of Trinity College in 1692, soon after its publication. Yet there has been very little discussion of whether Irish women from this period read or knew Locke's work, or engaged more generally in contemporary philosophical debate. This essay focuses on the work of Laetitia Pilkington (1709–1750) and Mary Barber (1685–1755), two of the Dublin women writers of (...)
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  22.  29
    Internet-using children and digital inequality: A comparison between majority and minority Europeans.Christine Ogan & Leen D’Haenens - 2013 - Communications 38 (1):41-60.
    In this research we focus on ethnic minorities, one of the underserved groups in Europe. In particular, we address the internet use of Turkish ethnic children, aged 9 to 16, in several EU countries. We examine the extent to which they can be considered digitally disadvantaged when compared to the majority population in those countries. We also compare Turkish children living in Turkey to those in the diaspora as well as to the majority children living in those same European countries. (...)
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  23. Dorothy Napangardi: une place sur la carte et une place dans l'histoire de l'art.Christine Nicholls - 2004 - Cahiers Internationaux de Symbolisme 107:163-168.
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  24. Heterosexuality and Feminist Theory.Christine Overall - 1990 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 20 (1):1 - 18.
    Heterosexuality, which I define as a romantic and sexual orientation toward persons not of one's own sex, is apparently a very general, though not entirely universal, characteristic of the human condition. In fact, it is so ubiquitous a part of human interactions and relations as to be almost invisible, and so natural-seeming as to appear unquestionable. Indeed, the 1970 edition of The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary defines ‘heterosexual’ as ‘pertaining to or characterized by the normal relation of the sexes.’.
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  25.  12
    Indirect Indoctrination, Internalized Religion, and Parental Responsibility.Christine Overall - 2010 - In Peter Caws & Stefani Jones (eds.), Religious Upbringing and the Costs of Freedom: Personal and Philosophical Essays. University Park, Pa.: Pennsylvania State University Press. pp. 11-26.
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  26. Into the Mouths of Babes: The Moral Responsibility to Breastfeed.Christine Overall & Tabitha Bernard - 2011 - In Sheila Lintott & Maureen Sander-Staudt (eds.), Philosophical Inquiries into Pregnancy, Childbirth, and Mothering: Maternal Subjects. Routledge.
     
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  27. John P. Lizza, Persons, Humanity, and the Definition of Death Reviewed by.Christine Overall - 2007 - Philosophy in Review 27 (1):46-48.
     
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  28. The Misuse of Feminist Values in the Defence of Reproductive Engineering: A Case Study.Christine Overall - 1989 - Resources for Feminist Research 18 (3):67-71.
     
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  29. The First World.Christine Pancott, Sarah Marris, Helen Hill, Rob Taylor & Peter Harvey - 1990 - Landmark Films.
     
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  30.  23
    Farewell Editorial.Christine Parker - 2012 - Legal Ethics 15 (1):3-5.
    This article is currently available as a free download on ingentaconnect.
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  31.  76
    Indeterminacy and collective harms.Christine Tiefensee - 2022 - Philosophical Studies 179 (11):3307-3324.
    The ‘no-difference problem’ challenges us to explain in which way the occurrence of an aggregate effect gives us reason to act in a specific way, although our individual actions make no difference to the effect’s occurrence. When discussing this problem, philosophers usually distinguish between so-called ‘triggering cases’, where the aggregate effect in question is brought about upon reaching a precise threshold, and ‘non-triggering cases’, in which no such precise threshold exists. However, despite their relevant differences, it is widely assumed not (...)
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  32.  33
    Autoconstitución en la ética de Platón y Kant.Christine Korsgaard, Javier Fuentes González & Eva Monardes Pereira - 2022 - Revista Ethika+ 6:193-224.
    Platón y Kant plantean un modelo “constitucional” del alma, en el que la razón y el apetito o la pasión tienen diferentes roles estructurales y funcionales en la generación de la motivación, en contraposición al común “modelo combativo,” en el que son mostrados como fuentes de motivación independientes que luchan por el control. Desde el punto de vista del modelo constitucional, podemos explicar qué hace que una acción sea diferente de un evento. Lo que hace que una acción sea atribuible (...)
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  33.  29
    Socrates’ kατάβασις and the Sophistic Shades: Education and Democracy.Christine Rojcewicz - 2023 - Plato Journal 24:45-60.
    This article addresses the unusually elaborate dramatic context in Plato’s Protagoras and effect of sophistry on democratic Athens. Because Socrates evokes Odysseus’ κατάβασις in the Odyssey to describe the sophists in Callias’ house (314c-316b), I propose that Socrates depicts the sophists as bodiless shades residing in Hades. Like the shades dwelling in Hades with no connection to embodied humans on Earth, the sophists in the Protagoras are non-Athenians with no consideration for the democratic body of the Athenian πόλις. I conclude (...)
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  34.  39
    The Possibility of Moral Cultivation in the Ontological Oblivion: a Re-exploration of Hongzhou School of Chan Buddhism Through Guo Xiang.Christine Abigail Tan - 2021 - Philosophia: International Journal of Philosophy 22 (1):97-114.
    Chan Buddhism as we know it today can perhaps be traceable to what is known as the Hongzhou school, founded by Mazu Daoyi. Although it was Huineng who represented an important turn in the development of Chan with his iconoclastic approach to enlightenment as sudden rather than gradual, it was in Huineng’s successor, Mazu, where we saw its complete radicalization. Specifically, Mazu introduced a radicalized approach of collapsing substance and function, as well as principle and phenomena, into a complete overlap. (...)
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  35.  21
    Re-enchanting meat: how sacred meaning-making strengthens the ethical meat movement.Christine Jeske - 2024 - Agriculture and Human Values 41 (1):135-146.
    Anthropologists have long documented rituals that reinforce the social and spiritual aspects of killing and eating animals. The historical processes of modernization, industrialization, and the spread of market capitalism have driven many such references to sacredness out of meat production in North America, leading dominant social relations around meat into what Max Weber famously termed “disenchantment.” In this article, I argue that re-enchanting discourses are one technique being used to develop the alternative production models of ethically raised meat—animals raised for (...)
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  36.  19
    The Demands of Equality.Christine Sypnowich - 2022 - Social Philosophy and Policy 39 (2):210-232.
    Ever since the publication of G. A. Cohen’s essay “If You’re an Egalitarian, How Come You’re So Rich?” the matter of personal responsibility for the amelioration of economic disadvantage has become a question for egalitarian political philosophers to wrestle with both theoretically and personally. This essay examines “the demands of equality” in light of an egalitarian philosophy that focuses on human flourishing. I consider Cohen’s call for personal commitments to the egalitarian project to show both the power and problems of (...)
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  37.  20
    Quantifying Laughter in International Research.Christine A. James - 2023 - The Philosophy of Humor Yearbook 4 (1):263-279.
    Historical theories of humor rely on a classic distinction in philosophy, the distinction between reason and emotion. Such a distinction lends itself to qualitative rather than quantitative research. In the last 40 years, quantitative scholarship on laughter and comedy has become very popular, and often includes international and indigenous examples of laughter as a healing or teaching tool. This paper addresses the historical research on laughter and mockery, then shows the broad range of quantitative studies that have provided important data (...)
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  38.  20
    Soziale Vulnerabilität am Beispiel der Krebstherapie.Christine Mainka, Anne Letsch, Claudia Schmalz & Claudia Bozzaro - 2023 - Ethik in der Medizin 35 (3):377-387.
    Zusammenfassung Lebensweltliche Bedingungen können sich als Barrieren in Hinblick auf die Durchführung einer von den Patient*innen gewählten – beispielsweise onkologischen – Therapie erweisen und den Therapieerfolg gefährden. Solche lebensweltlichen Herausforderungen lassen sich als Schichten sozialer Vulnerabilität begreifen. In dieser Arbeit wird untersucht, ob es geboten ist, herausfordernde soziale Lebensbedingungen von Patient*innen systematisch bei Therapieentscheidungen zu berücksichtigen. Hierfür wird der Befähigungsansatz nach Martha Nussbaum herangezogen, der die Achtung der Patient*innenautonomie mit der Möglichkeit der Unterstützung durch Dritte zusammenbringt. Anschließend werden anhand des (...)
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  39.  16
    For More than Forty Years on the Bookshelves: The Death of Nature—A Tribute to Carolyn Merchan.Christine Bauhardt - 2022 - Ethics and the Environment 27 (1):1-16.
    Abstract:Carolyn Merchant's book The Death of Nature, first published in 1980, has been seminal for feminist research on the relationships between gender, knowledge production, and human-nature relations. In her historical reconstruction of the transition from the organic to a mechanical worldview during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, she points to the coincidence of colonialism, resource exploitation and the establishment of the scientific methods for understanding nature's laws. Merchant's first book launched a productive debate among historians of science and feminist researchers (...)
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  40.  6
    Le mythe bioét[h]ique.Christine Boutin, Lucien Israël & Gérard Mémeteau (eds.) - 1999 - Paris: Bassano.
    La bioéthique est à la mode. Il faut " être pour "! La prochaine étude par le législateur français des lois " bioéthiques " en témoigne. Avortement, fabrication d'enfants " prêts-à-porter ", recherche biomédicale, clonage, génétique, rien n'échappe à la bioéthique. Et si, cheval de Troie pénétrant le droit, la morale, les déontologies, elle ne constituait qu'une habile machine de subversion des sciences médicales, d'appropriation globale de l'être humain. Des médecins, des philosophes, parlementaires, juristes engagés dans l'examen des doctrines et (...)
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  41.  19
    Dobbs, the Intrusive State, and the Future of Solidarity.Christine Nero Coughlin & Nancy M. P. King - 2023 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 32 (3):344-356.
    The intrusive state has long viewed women as fetal containers. TheDobbsdecision goes further, essentially causing women to vanish when fetuses are abstracted from their relationships to pregnant persons. The ways in which women are first controlled and then made invisible are clearly connected with the move from obedience to omission that has historically affected black Americans. When personal decisionmaking and participation in democracy are regarded as threats, those threatened restrict decisional freedom and political power, deepening structural injustices relating to sex, (...)
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  42. Simone Weil et la justice d'après-guerre.Christine Ann Evans - 2019 - In Robert Chenavier & Thomas G. Pavel (eds.), Simone Weil, réception et transposition. Paris: Classiques Garnier.
     
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  43.  11
    "Mensch, werde und mache alles immer besser": Überlegungen zur Aufklärung und Vervollkommnung des Menschen am Beispiel von Rudolph Zacharias Becker in der Zeit von 1779 bis 1794.Christine Freytag - 2014 - Jena: Edition Paideia.
  44. Wissenschaftlich-technischer Fortschritt und Produktivkraftentwicklung im Sozialismus: Konferenz des wissenschaftlichen Nachwuchses der Gesellschaftswissenschaftlichen Fakultät der Humboldt- Universität zu Berlin 2. Dez. 1983.Christine Gorek (ed.) - 1984 - Berlin: Die Universität.
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  45.  7
    Par-dessus les épaules des stagiaires infirmières et infirmiers: Le care comme projet de société.Christine Grard, Channel Baquet & Lynca Erica Mugisha - 2023 - Revue Philosophique De Louvain 120 (1):121-139.
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  46. Multiple listenings : anthropology of sound worlds.Christine Guillebaud - 2017 - In Towards an anthropology of ambient sound. New York, NY: Routledge.
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  47.  8
    Towards an anthropology of ambient sound.Christine Guillebaud (ed.) - 2017 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    This volume approaches the issue of ambient sound through the ethnographic exploration of different cultural contexts including Italy, India, Egypt, France, Ethiopia, Scotland, Spain, Portugal, and Japan. It examines social, religious, and aesthetic conceptions of sound environments, what types of action or agency are attributed to them, and what bodies of knowledge exist concerning them. Contributors shed new light on these sensory environments by focusing not only on their form and internal dynamics, but also on their wider social and cultural (...)
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  48.  10
    Wissenschaft verantworten: soziale und ethische Orientierung in der technischen Zivilisation: Wolfgang Bender zum 70. Geburtstag.Christine Hauskeller, Wolfgang Liebert, Heiner Ludwig & Wolfgang Bender (eds.) - 2001 - Münster: Agenda.
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  49.  13
    What's divine about divine law?: early perspectives.Christine Elizabeth Hayes - 2015 - Princeton: Princeton University Press.
    Biblical discourses of divine law -- Greco-Roman discourses of law -- Bridging the gap: divine law in Hellenistic and Second temple Jewish sources -- Minding the gap: Paul -- The "truth" about Torah -- The (ir)rationality of Torah -- The flexibility of Torah -- Natural law in Rabbinic sources?
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  50. Epilogue: a three-dimensional feminist post-structuralist analysis.Christine Hudson & Malin Rönnblom - 2017 - In Christine Hudson, Malin Rönnblom & Katherine Teghtsoonian (eds.), Gender, governance and feminist analysis: missing in action? New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
     
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