Results for 'David Kennedy Picken'

963 found
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  1.  10
    The number system of arithmetic and algebra.David Kennedy Picken - 1923 - Melbourne,: Melbourne university press.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work. This work is in the public domain (...)
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  2. A social semiotic approach to content-based (language) learning.Kennedy David - 2013 - Fenomenologia. Diálogos Possíveis Campinas: Alínea/Goiânia: Editora da Puc Goiás 13:97-126.
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  3. Motivation and communities of practice in foreign language writing contexts.Kennedy David - 2012 - Fenomenologia. Diálogos Possíveis Campinas: Alínea/Goiânia: Editora da Puc Goiás 12:41-70.
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  4.  24
    The Idea of the Savage in North American EthnohistoryJesuit and Savage in New FranceThe Savages of America: A Study of the Indian and the Idea of Civilization.David Bidney, J. H. Kennedy & Roy H. Pearce - 1954 - Journal of the History of Ideas 15 (2):322.
  5. L2 Writing lnstruction in Japanese University Settings: Finding Authentic Audiences, Purposes, and Genres.Kennedy David - 2011 - Fenomenologia. Diálogos Possíveis Campinas: Alínea/Goiânia: Editora da Puc Goiás 11:175-202.
     
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  6.  28
    A Commentary upon Bīrũnī's Kitāb Taḥdīd al-Amākin. An 11th Century Treatise on Mathematical GeographyA Commentary upon Biruni's Kitab Tahdid al-Amakin. An 11th Century Treatise on Mathematical Geography. [REVIEW]David Pingree & E. S. Kennedy - 1976 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 96 (1):156.
  7.  76
    Wittgenstein’s Enduring Arguments.Edoardo Zamuner & David Kennedy Levy (eds.) - 2008 - Routledge.
    Fifty years after Wittgenstein's death, his philosophy and the arguments it embodied remain vital and applicable. _Wittgenstein's Enduring Arguments_ illustrates the use of Wittgenstein's thought for continuing philosophical debates, old and new. Featuring essays by leading international philosophers, the collection examines the key theme of representation in Wittgenstein's philosophy. Organised into three clear parts the book considers representation in cognition, in language and in what cannot be represented - the absolute. The first part applies Wittgenstein to leading questions concerning qualia, (...)
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  8.  55
    The Dark Sides of Virtue: Reassessing International Humanitarianism.David Kennedy - 2004 - Princeton University Press.
    In this provocative and timely book, David Kennedy explores what can go awry when we put our humanitarian yearnings into action on a global scale--and what we can do in response. Rooted in Kennedy's own experience in numerous humanitarian efforts, the book examines campaigns for human rights, refugee protection, economic development, and for humanitarian limits to the conduct of war. It takes us from the jails of Uruguay to the corridors of the United Nations, from the founding (...)
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  9.  41
    Schooling, Community of Philosophical Inquiry and a New Sensibility.David K. Kennedy - 2023 - Childhood and Philosophy 19:01-21.
    This paper seeks to reconstruct the role of schooling in a moment of accelerated social, political, economic, geo-political, climatic, indeed planetary crisis. It identifies the school as a potentially prefigurative institution, an evolutionary social frontier, capable of nurturing the democratic social character, a form of sensibility apart from which authentic political democracy is not possible. As theorized by Herbert Marcuse and Richard Hart and Antonio Negri, the “new sensibility” or “multitude” is characterized by greater psychological freedom, individuality, social creativity and (...)
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  10. The context for context : international legal history in struggle.David Kennedy - 2021 - In Annabel S. Brett, Megan Donaldson & Martti Koskenniemi (eds.), History, politics, law: thinking internationally. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  11.  68
    The Role of a Facilitator in a Community of Philosophical Inquiry.David Kennedy - 2004 - Metaphilosophy 35 (5):744-765.
    Community of philosophical inquiry (CPI) is a way of practicing philosophy in a group that is characterized by conversation; that creates its discussion agenda from questions posed by the conversants as a response to some stimulus (whether text or some other media); and that includes discussion of specific philosophers or philosophical traditions, if at all, only in order to develop its own ideas about the concepts under discussion. The epistemological conviction of community of philosophical inquiry is that communal dialogue, facilitated (...)
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  12. Thinking for Oneself and with Others.David Kennedy - 2000 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 20 (1):40-45.
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  13. Practicing Philosophy of childhood: Teaching in the evolutionary mode.David Kennedy - 2015 - Journal of Philosophy in Schools 2 (1):4-17.
    This article explores the necessary requirements for effective teacher facilitation of community of philosophical inquiry sessions among children, and suggests that the first and most important prerequisite is the capacity to listen to children, which in turn is based on a critical and reflective interrogation of one’s own philosophy of childhood —the set of beliefs and assumptions about children and childhood which adults tend to project onto real children. It argues that the most effective way to explore these assumptions is (...)
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  14.  48
    Some ethical implications of practicing philosophy with children and adults.David Kennedy & Walter Omar Kohan - 2021 - Childhood and Philosophy 17:01-16.
    This paper acts as an introduction to a dossier centered on the ethical implications of Practicing Philosophy with Children and Adults. It identifies ethical themes in the P4C movement over three generations of theorists and practitioners, and argues that, historically and materially, the transition to a “new” hermeneutics of childhood that has occurred within the P4C movement may be said to have emerged as a response to the ever-increasing pressure of neoliberalism and a weaponized capitalism to construct public policies in (...)
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  15.  74
    Community of Philosophical Inquiry and the Play of the World.David Kennedy - 2018 - Teaching Philosophy 41 (3):285-302.
    This paper seeks to identify the role of play in the design and function of Socratic dialogue as practiced in community of philosophical inquiry (CPI) in classrooms. It reviews the ideas of some major play theorists from various fields of study and practice—philosophy, cultural anthropology, evolutionary psychology, cognitive psychology, psychoanalysis, and education—and identifies the epistemological, ontological, and axiological judgments they share in their analyses of the phenomenon of play. It identifies five psychodynamic dimensions in which the Socratic play of “following (...)
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  16. Community of Philosophical Inquiry as a Discursive Structure, and its Role in School Curriculum Design.Nadia Kennedy & David Kennedy - 2011 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 45 (2):265-283.
    This article traces the development of the theory and practice of what is known as ‘community of inquiry’ as an ideal of classroom praxis. The concept has ancient and uncertain origins, but was seized upon as a form of pedagogy by the originators of the Philosophy for Children program in the 1970s. Its location at the intersection of the discourses of argumentation theory, communications theory, semiotics, systems theory, dialogue theory, learning theory and group psychodynamics makes of it a rich site (...)
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  17. Using 'Peter Rabbit' as a Philosophical Text with Young Children.David Kennedy - 1992 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 13 (1).
    One upon a time there were four little Rabbits, and their names were - Flopsy, Mopsy, Cotton-tail, and Peter. They lived with their Mother in a sand-bank, underneath the root of a very big fir-tree.
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  18.  44
    Communal Philosophical Dialogue and the Intersubject.David Kennedy - 2004 - International Journal of Applied Philosophy 18 (2):203-218.
    The self is a historical and cultural phenomenon in the sense of a dialectically evolving narrative construct about who we are, what our borders and limits and capacities are, what is pathology, and what is normality, and so on. These ontological and epistemological narratives are usually linked to grand explanatory narratives like science and religion, and are intimately linked to cosmological pictures. The “intersubject” is an emergent form of subjectivity in our time which reconstructs its borders to include the other, (...)
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  19. Sacred Books of the Buddhists, Vol. XII, the Minor Anthologies, Part 4. "Vimāna Vatthu: Stories of the Mansions; Peta Vatthu: Stories of the Departed".Rhys Davids, Jean Kennedy & Henry S. Gehman - 1943 - Philosophy 18 (71):283-284.
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  20. Young Children and Ultimate Questions: Romancing at Day Care.David Kennedy - 1991 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 12 (1).
    What follows is one piece of a series of conversations that I conducted with a small group of young children in a day care center where I was working in 1983. The children were between the ages of 3 and 6, and we had been together long enough to speak frankly and comfortably with each other. I used small group time to ask six questions, all of them about the ultimate issues - the origins, ends, and limits of things, death, (...)
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  21.  82
    ONE The International Human Rights Movement: Part of the Problem?David Kennedy - 2004 - In The Dark Sides of Virtue: Reassessing International Humanitarianism. Princeton University Press. pp. 3-36.
  22. From outer space and across the street: Matthew Lipman’s double vision.David Kennedy - 2011 - Childhood and Philosophy 7 (13):49-74.
    This review of Matthew Lipman’s autobiography, A Life Teaching Thinking, is a reflection on the themes and patterns of his extraordinarily productive career. His book begins with memories of earliest childhood and his preoccupation with the possibility of being able to fly, moves through the years in which his family struggled with the effects of the Great Depression, through his service in the military during World War II, his discovery of the joy and beauty of philosophy, his academic rise at (...)
     
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  23.  57
    Anarchism, Schooling, and Democratic Sensibility.David Kennedy - 2016 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 36 (5):551-568.
    This paper seeks to address the question of schooling for democracy by, first, identifying at least one form of social character, dependent, after Marcuse, on the historical emergence of a “new sensibility.” It then explores one pedagogical thread related to the emergence of this form of subjectivity over the course of the last two centuries in the west, and traces its influence in the educational counter-tradition associated with philosophical anarchism, which is based on principles of dialogue and social reconstruction as (...)
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  24. Dialogic Schooling.David Kennedy - 2014 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 35 (1):1-9.
    This paper offers a genealogy of dialogic education, tracing its origins in Romantic epistemology and corresponding philosophy of childhood, and identifying it as a counterpoint to the purposes and assumptions of universal, compulsory, state-imposed and regulated schooling. Dialogic education has historically worked against the grain of standardized mass education, not only in its view of the nature, capacities and potentialities of children, but in its economic, political and social views, for which childhood is understood as a promissory condition. Dialogic education (...)
     
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  25.  54
    (1 other version)Scenarios in banking ethics: responses, reflections and commentary.David Molyneaux, Lucia Webster & David Kennedy - 2004 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 13 (4):255-268.
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  26.  21
    Psychology and the Arts.John M. Kennedy & David O'Hare - 1984 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 18 (2):110.
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  27.  15
    Childhood, philosophy, and dialogical education: (r)evolutionary essays.David Kennedy - 2024 - Albany: State University of New York Press.
    Offers both theoretical and practical insights into the dialogue between adults and children as a democratic model for schooling.
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  28.  6
    My name is Myshkin: a philosophical novel for children.David Kennedy - 2012 - Berlin: Lit.
    My Name is Myshkin is a philosophical novel for children 10 years and older, which explores themes in philosophy of science, environmental philosophy, and philosophy of mythology through dialogue. The story takes place in the context of an adventure tale set in the near future, in which two children find themselves in the deep woods and they stumble upon a seemingly abandoned villa. (Series: Philosophy in Schools / Philosophie in der Schule / Philosophie a l'Ecole - Vol. 17).
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  29.  9
    Guest Editor’s Introduction.David Kennedy - 1997 - Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 16 (4):1-5.
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  30.  38
    Reconstructing Childhood.David Kennedy - 1998 - Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children 14 (1):29-37.
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  31. John Dewey On Children, Childhood, And Education.David Kennedy - 2006 - Childhood and Philosophy 2 (4):211-229.
    It is difficult to find just one place to look for children and childhood in the American philosopher John Dewey’s work. This is not because he uses the terms so often, but because the concept of childhood pervades his opus in and through another set of terms—development, growth, experience, plasticity, habit, impulse, and education. In Dewey’s language, none of these terms mean quite what they mean in other thinkers’ language, and especially not in the language of the human development theorists (...)
     
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  32.  7
    SIX Bringing Market Democracy to Eastern and Central Europe.David Kennedy - 2004 - In The Dark Sides of Virtue: Reassessing International Humanitarianism. Princeton University Press. pp. 169-198.
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  33. Young Children Discuss Conflict.David Kennedy - 2006 - Childhood and Philosophy 2 (3):127-182.
    If there is one constant, uninvited guest in the typical public school classroom—or indeed in any setting in which children gather in numbers—it is conflict. The transcripts from which I draw in this reflection on how young children think together about conflict reflect two four-part sets of conversations with two second grades in a small school of roughly 300 students in a predominantly middle to upper middle class suburban town in a heavily populated metropolitan area in the northeastern U.S. Most (...)
     
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  34.  40
    The New School.David Kennedy - 2018 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 52 (1):105-125.
    This paper traces the changing status of the school as a counter culture in the anthropological and historical literature, in particular from the moment when compulsory mass schooling assumed the function of ideological state apparatus in the post-revolutionary 19th century West. It then focuses attention on what may be called the New School, which could be said to represent an evolved, postmodern embodiment of the social archetype of the school as interruption of the status quo. It emerged in the form (...)
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  35. Hans-Georg Gadamer's Dialectic of Dialogue and the Epistemology of the Community of Inquiry.David Kennedy - 1990 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 11 (1).
    The idea of the classroom as a community of inquiry, and of the community of inquiry as a model for optimal classroom practice, is perhaps one of the great unrealized ideas in Western educational history. We first find it represented in the Socratic dialogues, but it is not realized there, whether becasue of the dominating power of Socrates' intellect, or the scribal distortions which resulted from PLatos's didacticism, or both. More recently, the concept finds powerful theoretical articulation in the epistemology (...)
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  36. An Empirical Study of Environmental Awareness and Practices in SMEs.David L. Gadenne, Jessica Kennedy & Catherine McKeiver - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 84 (1):45-63.
    With increasing awareness of environmental issues, there has been rising demand for environmental-friendly business practices. Prior research has shown that the implementation of environmental management practices is influenced by existing and potential stakeholder groups in the form of external pressures from legislators, environmental groups, financial institutions and suppliers, as well as internally by employees and owner/manager attitudes and knowledge. However, it has been reported that despite business owner/managers having strong “green” attitudes, the level of implementation of environmental-friendly practices is low. (...)
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  37.  18
    Child and Fool in the Western Wisdom Tradition.David Kennedy - 1993 - Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children 11 (1):11-21.
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  38. Philosophy for Children and the Redefinition of Philosophy: Total Immersion at Mendham.David Kennedy - 1989 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 10 (1).
    Philosophy, like the IAPC Mendham seminar itself, is a place apart. I don't mean by this that philosophy is a realm of timeless ideas, or a dream time, or a place of the ancestors where all the seminal ideas are, although it may very well be that; what I mean is that when we do philosophy, everything stops. Everything stops, I think, because if, as we are flowing along in life and language, we encounter a problem, and we don't smooth (...)
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  39.  14
    Where Was the Doll Before It Was in the Dollmaker's Mind.David Kennedy, Matthew Schertz, Andrew Kenny & Henry Minarick - 2000 - Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children 15 (1):46-47.
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  40. 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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  41.  30
    Disciplinary stereotypes and reinventing the wheel on culture.David P. Kennedy - 2007 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 30 (1):31-32.
    Gintis argues that disciplinary models of human behavior are incompatible. However, his depiction of the discipline of anthropology relies on a broad generalization that is not supported by current practice. Gintis also ignores the work of cognitive anthropologists, who have developed theories and methods that are highly compatible with the perspective advocated by Gintis. (Published Online April 27 2007).
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  42.  31
    An Archetypal Phenomenology of Skholé.David Kennedy - 2017 - Educational Theory 67 (3):273-290.
    In this essay David Kennedy argues that children represent one vanguard of an emergent shift in Western subjectivity, and that adult–child dialogue, especially in the context of schooling, is a key locus for the epistemological change that implies. Following Herbert Marcuse's invocation of a “new sensibility,” Kennedy argues that the evolutionary phenomenon of neoteny — the long formative period of human childhood and the paedomorphic character of humans across the life cycle — makes of the adult–child collective (...)
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  43.  17
    FIVE The Rule of Law as a Strategy for Economic Development.David Kennedy - 2004 - In The Dark Sides of Virtue: Reassessing International Humanitarianism. Princeton University Press. pp. 149-168.
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  44.  17
    (USA) Another World Is Possible: Schooling, Multitude, and Philosophy for Children.David Kennedy - 2009 - In Eva Marsal, Takara Dobashi & Barbara Weber (eds.), Children Philosophize Worldwide: Theoretical and Practical Concepts. Frankfurt, Germany: Peter Lang GmbH. pp. 9--47.
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  45.  14
    EIGHT Humanitarianism and Force.David Kennedy - 2004 - In The Dark Sides of Virtue: Reassessing International Humanitarianism. Princeton University Press. pp. 235-324.
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  46.  6
    Index.David Kennedy - 2004 - In The Dark Sides of Virtue: Reassessing International Humanitarianism. Princeton University Press. pp. 359-368.
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  47.  9
    THREE Autumn Weekend: The Activist Community.David Kennedy - 2004 - In The Dark Sides of Virtue: Reassessing International Humanitarianism. Princeton University Press. pp. 85-108.
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  48. Talking Globally.David Kennedy - 2006 - Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis 25 (2):89-102.
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  49. The discussion about proposals to change the Western Culture program at Stanford University.Donald Kennedy, John Perky, Carolyn Lougee, Marsh McCall, Paul Robinson, James Gibb, Clara N. Bush, Judith Brown, George Dekker, Bill King, William Chace, Carlos Camargo, J. Martin Evans, Ronald Rebholz, Carl Degler, Barbara Gelpi, Renato Rosaldo, William Mahrt, Halsey Rayden, Herbert Lindenberger, Albert Gelpi, Gregson Davis, Diane Middlebrook, David Kennedy, Dennis Phillips, Harry Papasotiriou, Martin Evans, Ron Rebholz, Bill Chace, Jim van HarveySneehan & David Riggs - 1989 - Minerva 27 (2):223-411.
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  50.  18
    Roman Arabia.David Kennedy & G. W. Bowersock - 1985 - American Journal of Philology 106 (3):385.
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