Results for 'Dean Koontz'

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  1. Foreword.Dean Koontz - 2009 - In Wesley J. Smith (ed.), A Rat is a Pig is a Dog is a Boy: The Human Cost of the Animal Rights Movement. New York: Encounter Books.
     
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  2.  22
    Dogs and Monsters: Moral Status Claims in the Fiction of Dean Koontz.Stephen W. Smith - 2016 - Journal of Medical Humanities 37 (1):35-51.
    This article explores conceptions of moral status in the work of American thriller author Dean Koontz. It begins by examining some of the general theories of moral status used by philosophers to determine whether particular entities have moral status. This includes both uni-criterial theories and multi-criterial theories of moral status. After this examination, the article argues for exploring bioethics conceptions in popular fiction. Popular fiction is considered a rich source for analysis because it provides not only a good (...)
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  3.  19
    Temporal data base management.Thomas L. Dean & Drew V. McDermott - 1987 - Artificial Intelligence 32 (1):1-55.
  4.  18
    ‘One door closes, a next door opens up somewhere’: The learning of one Olympic synchronised swimmer.Natalie Barker-Ruchti, Dean Barker, Steven Rynne & Jessica Lee - 2012 - .
    Although training in sport is necessary to reach Olympic status, a conditioned body is not the only outcome. Athletes also learn how to be Olympians. This learning involves taking on certain ways of acting, thinking and valuing. Such learning has implications beyond competition, as athletes eventually retire from elite sport and devote their time to other activities. This paper examines processes of learning and transition using the case of Amelia, a former Olympic synchronised swimmer. Through two in-depth interviews, empirical material (...)
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  5.  11
    Reasoning about partially ordered events.Thomas Dean & Mark Boddy - 1988 - Artificial Intelligence 36 (3):375-399.
  6.  14
    Do Generalist CEOs Magnify Boardroom Backscratching?Egor Evdokimov, Dean Hanlon & Edwin KiaYang Lim - 2021 - Journal of Business Ethics 181 (1):221-247.
    AbstractBoardroom backscratching, or cronyism, is an unethical practice where CEOs conspire with directors to receive remuneration beyond performance- and market-related factors. Premised on the theory of planned behavior, this study investigates whether CEO generalist experience magnifies the likelihood of boardroom backscratching. Using 9482 firm-year observations spanning 1999–2018, our analysis shows that firms with greater CEO generalist managerial experience are more likely to engage in boardroom backscratching, via both cash- and equity-based compensation. We provide further evidence that backscratching firms with CEOs (...)
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  7.  19
    Wild comfort: the solace of nature.Kathleen Dean Moore - 2010 - Boston, Mass.: Trumpeter Books.
    The author records her experiences trying to commune with nature in an effort to make sense of the deaths in quick succession of loved ones, in a profound ...
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  8.  83
    Reflective solidarity.Jodi Dean - 1995 - Constellations 2 (1):114-140.
  9. Ergon and Eudaimonia in Nicomachean Ethics I: Reconsidering the Intellectualist Interpretation.Timothy Dean Roche - 1988 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 26 (2):175-194.
  10. Persons: Human and Divine.Peter van Inwagen & Dean Zimmerman - 2009 - International Journal for Philosophy of Religion 65 (1):59-64.
     
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  11.  79
    Public Policy, Consequentialism, the Environment, and Non-Human Animals.Mark Budolfson & Dean Spears - 2020 - In Douglas W. Portmore (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Consequentialism. New York, USA: Oup Usa. pp. 592-615.
    The focus of this chapter is public policy and consequentialism, especially issues that arise in connection with the environment – i.e. the natural world, including non-human animals. We integrate some of the existing literature on environmental economics, welfare economics, and policy with the literature on environmental values and philosophy. The emphasis on environmental policy is motivated by the fact that it is arguably the most philosophically interesting and challenging application of consequentialism to policy, as it includes all the challenges of (...)
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  12.  47
    Priming without awareness: What was all the fuss about?Keith E. Stanovich & Dean G. Purcell - 1986 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 9 (1):47-48.
  13.  10
    Three Forms of Democratic Political Acclamation.Mitchell Dean - 2017 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2017 (179):9-32.
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  14.  10
    A Study of the Cognomina of Soldiers in the Roman Legions.R. V. D. M. & Lindley Richard Dean - 1916 - American Journal of Philology 37 (2):217.
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  15.  69
    The Global Fight against Corruption: A Foucaultian, Virtues-Ethics Framing.Jeff Everett, Dean Neu & Abu Shiraz Rahaman - 2006 - Journal of Business Ethics 65 (1):1-12.
    This paper extends the discussion of business ethics by examining the issue of corruption, its definition, the solutions being proposed for dealing with it, and the ethical perspectives underpinning these proposals. The paper’s findings are based on a review of association, think-tank, and academic reports, books, and papers dealing with the topic of corruption, as well as the pronouncements, websites, and position papers of a number of important global organizations active in the fight. These organizations include the World Bank, the (...)
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  16.  41
    Scientific Genius: A Psychology of Science.John Ziman & Dean Keith Simonton - 1989 - British Journal of Educational Studies 37 (3):299.
  17.  35
    What we say and what we do: The relationship between real and hypothetical moral choices.Oriel FeldmanHall, Dean Mobbs, Davy Evans, Lucy Hiscox, Lauren Navrady & Tim Dalgleish - 2012 - Cognition 123 (3):434-441.
  18. Brill Online Books and Journals.Brent Dean Robbins, Jeronie H. Neyrey, William L. Petersen, P. W. da CarsonVan Der Horst & Jesse Sell - 2000 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 31 (2).
     
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  19.  53
    Sex, Breath, and Force: Sexual Difference in a Post-Feminist Era.Jodi Dean, Cathrine Egeland, Elizabeth Grosz, Sara Heinämaa, Lisa Käll, Johanna Oksala, Kelly Oliver, Tiina Rosenberg, Kristin Sampson & Vigdis Songe-Møller - 2006 - Lexington Books.
    This collection of essays provides a reassessment of the question of sexual difference, taking into account important shifts in feminist thought, post-humanist theories, and queer studies. The contributors offer new and refreshing insights into the complex question of sexual difference from a post-feminist perspective, and how it is reformulated in various related areas of study, such as ontology, epistemology, metaphysics, biology, technology, and mass-media.
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  20. Why Ockham’s Razor should be preferred to the Laser.Dean Da Vee - 2020 - Philosophical Studies 177 (12):3679-3694.
    Ockham’s Razor advises us to not multiply entities without necessity. Recently, Jonathan Schaffer and Karen Bennett have argued that we ought to replace Ockham’s Razor with the Laser, the principle that only advises us to not multiply fundamental entities without necessity. In this paper, I argue that Ockham’s Razor is preferable to the Laser. I begin by contending that the arguments offered for the Laser by Schaffer and Bennett are unpersuasive. Then I offer two cases of theory assessment that I (...)
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  21.  26
    Neuroimaging Evidence for Social Rank Theory.Marian Beasley, Dean Sabatinelli & Ezemenari Obasi - 2012 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 6.
  22.  10
    Education on the Sustainable Development Goals for nursing students: Is Freire the answer?Lorraine Fields, Bonnie A. Dean, Stephanie Perkiss & Tracey Moroney - 2022 - Nursing Inquiry 29 (4):e12493.
    Significant global events in recent years have had a substantial impact on the nursing profession. The COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, and systemic racism are a few of the many complex issues that create a landscape of disruption and uncertainty in healthcare. With the aims of protecting both people and the planet, the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals offer a road map to combat these global concerns, yet require more widespread consideration as a way forward. Education on the Sustainable Development Goals (...)
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  23.  44
    Multi-Stakeholder Labour Monitoring Organizations: Egoists, Instrumentalists, or Moralists?Jeff S. Everett, Dean Neu & Daniel Martinez - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 81 (1):117-142.
    This article examines four leading multi-stakeholder labour monitoring organizations. All operating in the maquiladora industry, these organizations are viewed in light of the growing global trend toward industry self-regulation, or what has been referred to as the 'global out-sourcing of regulation'. Their Board compositions, codes of conduct and monitoring and enforcement strategies are all examined as a means of tentatively positioning these organizations along an 'egoist-instrumentalist-moralist' ethical culture continuum. Such a framing provides insights into the perceived salience of these organizations' (...)
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  24.  24
    Vocal grooming: Man the schmoozer.David Dean - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (4):699-700.
  25.  70
    (Kivy on) the form–content identity thesis.Kelly Dean Jolley - 2008 - British Journal of Aesthetics 48 (2):193-204.
    Peter Kivy investigates the unity of form and content in the arts, particularly in poetry. While Kivy says much with which I happily agree, I sadly disagree with him about the impossibility of form–content identities. Kivy's arguments fail to compel: there are other ways of understanding form–content identities and the need for them that has been felt by artists and critics. CiteULike Connotea Del.icio.us What's this?
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  26.  41
    Stigmatization and Denormalization as Public Health Policies: Some Kantian Thoughts.Richard Dean - 2013 - Bioethics 28 (8):414-419.
    The stigmatization of some groups of people, whether for some characteristic they possess or some behavior they engage in, will initially strike most of us as wrong. For many years, academic work in public health, which focused mainly on the stigmatization of HIV-positive individuals, reinforced this natural reaction to stigmatization, by pointing out the negative health effects of stigmatization. But more recently, the apparent success of anti-smoking campaigns which employ stigmatization of smokers has raised questions about whether stigmatization may sometimes (...)
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  27.  13
    Beyond MAD: Affirming the Morality and Necessity of Nuclear Deterrence.Dean C. Curry - 1988 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 5 (1):8-15.
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  28.  11
    Recent advances in drug design methods: Where will they lead?Philip M. Dean - 1994 - Bioessays 16 (9):683-687.
    Drug design methods have made significant new advances over the last ten years, mainly in the areas of molecular modelling. In more recent times important developments in theory have led to a different type of modelling becoming possible, the so‐called de novo or automated design algorithms. In this new method the programs perform much of the chemist's thinking, in finding appropriately sized chemical groups to fit into a target site. However this is a combinatoric problem which has no general analytical (...)
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  29.  32
    Santorini and Its Eruptions. Ferdinand A. Fouque, Alexander R. McBirney.Dennis Dean - 2000 - Isis 91 (3):609-610.
  30.  38
    The Lure of the Public.Jodi Dean - 2002 - Theory and Event 6 (3).
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  31.  55
    The man who would be king of botanical classification.Sheila Ann Dean - 2010 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 41 (3):300-303.
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  32.  18
    Vicious-circle behavior involves new learning.Sanford J. Dean, M. Ray Denny & Thomas Blakemore - 1985 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 23 (3):230-232.
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  33.  36
    Virtually Citizens.Jodi Dean - 1997 - Constellations 4 (2):264-282.
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  34.  23
    Venous drainage of the brain.M. Christopher Dean - 1990 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 (2):352-352.
  35.  25
    Toward a functional theory of reduction transformations.Dean Delis & Anne Saxon Slater - 1977 - Cognition 5 (2):119-132.
  36.  11
    Žižek’s Ruptured Monism: A Comparative Typological Reading of Less Than Nothing.Dean Dettloff - 2018 - Philosophia Reformata 83 (2):177-203.
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  37. The Hidden Zero Problem: Effective Altruism and Barriers to Marginal Impact.Mark Budolfson & Dean Spears - 2019 - In Hilary Greaves & Theron Pummer (eds.), Effective Altruism: Philosophical Issues. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    In this chapter, Mark Budolfson and Dean Spears analyse the marginal effect of philanthropic donations. The core of their analysis is the observation that marginal good done per dollar donated is a product (in the mathematical sense) of several factors: change in good done per change in activity level of the charity in question, change in activity per change in the charity’s budget size, and change in budget size per change in the individual’s donation to the charity in question. (...)
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  38.  82
    Oxford Studies in Metaphysics Volume 13.Karen Bennett & Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.) - 2023 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Oxford Studies in Metaphysics is dedicated to the timely publication of new work in metaphysics, broadly construed. These volumes provide a forum for the best new work in this flourishing field. They offer a broad view of the subject, featuring not only the traditionally central topics such as existence, identity, modality, time, and causation, but also the rich clusters of metaphysical questions in neighboring fields, such as philosophy of mind and philosophy of science. This book is the 13th volume in (...)
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  39. The Truth of the Barnacles.Kathleen Dean Moore - 2005 - Environmental Ethics 27 (3):265-277.
    Beginning with Rachel Carson’s small book, The Sense of Wonder, I explore the moral significance of a sense of wonder—the propensity to respond with delight, awe, or yearning to what is beautiful and mysterious in the natural world when it unexpectedly reveals itself. An antidote to the view that the elements of the natural world are commodities to be disdained or destroyed, a sense of wonder leads us to celebrate and honor the more-than-human world, to care for it, to protect (...)
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  40.  5
    Dynamic relevance: vision-based focus of attention using artificial neural networks.Shumeet Baluja & Dean Pomerleau - 1997 - Artificial Intelligence 97 (1-2):381-395.
  41.  43
    Making Quantitative Research Work: From Positivist Dogma to Actual Social Scientific Inquiry.Michael J. Zyphur & Dean C. Pierides - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 167 (1):49-62.
    Researchers misunderstand their role in creating ethical problems when they allow dogmas to purportedly divorce scientists and scientific practices from the values that they embody. Cortina, Edwards, and Powell help us clarify and further develop our position by responding to our critique of, and alternatives to, this misleading separation. In this rebuttal, we explore how the desire to achieve the separation of facts and values is unscientific on the very terms endorsed by its advocates—this separation is refuted by empirical observation. (...)
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  42.  50
    State-Phobia, Civil Society, and a Certain Vitalism.Kaspar Villadsen & Mitchell Dean - 2012 - Constellations 19 (3):401-420.
  43.  87
    Motives for philosophizing debunking and Wittgenstein's philosophical investigations.Kelly Dean Jolley - 2009 - Metaphilosophy 40 (2):260-272.
    Abstract: In this article I contest a reading of Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations —a reading of it as debunking philosophy. I concede that such a reading is not groundless, but I show why it is nonetheless mistaken. To do so, I distinguish two different ways of viewing Philosophical Investigations and its concern with philosophical problems, an External View and an Internal View. On the External View, readers of the book are taken to know ahead of time what philosophical problems are. On (...)
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  44.  38
    Origins of Genius: Darwinian Perspectives on Creativity.Dean Keith Simonton - 1999 - Oxford University Press USA.
    How can we account for the sudden appearance of such dazzling artists and scientists as Mozart, Shakespeare, Darwin, or Einstein? How can we define such genius? What conditions or personality traits seem to produce exceptionally creative people? Is the association between genius and madness really just a myth? These and many other questions are brilliantly illuminated in The Origins of Genius. Dean Simonton convincingly argues that creativity can best be understood as a Darwinian process of variation and selection. The (...)
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  45.  35
    Graininess of judgment under uncertainty: An accuracy-informativeness trade-off.Ilan Yaniv & Dean P. Foster - 1995 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 124 (4):424.
  46. Why the Repugnant Conclusion is Inescapable.Mark Budolfson & Dean Spears - unknown
    The spectre of the repugnant conclusion and the search for a population axiology that avoids it has endured as a focus of population ethics. This is in part because the repugnant conclusion is often interpreted as a defining problem for totalism, while the implications of averagism and related views are taken to illustrate the theoretical cost of avoiding the repugnant conclusion. However, we show that this interpretation cannot be sustained unless one focuses only on a special case of the repugnant (...)
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  47.  23
    Twitter-Based Social Accountability Processes: The Roles for Financial Inscriptions-Based and Values-Based Messaging.Gregory D. Saxton & Dean Neu - 2022 - Journal of Business Ethics 181 (4):1041-1064.
    Social media is changing social accountability practices. The release of the Panama Papers on April 3, 2016 by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) unleashed a tsunami of over 5 million tweets decrying corrupt politicians and tax-avoiding business elites, calling for policy change from governments, and demanding accountability from corporate and private tax avoiders. The current study uses 297,000+ original English-language geo-codable tweets with the hashtags #PanamaGate, #PanamaPapers, or #PanamaLeaks to examine the trajectory of Twitter-based social accountability conversations and (...)
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  48.  52
    Beyond Criticism of Ethics Review Boards: Strategies for Engaging Research Communities and Enhancing Ethical Review Processes.Andrew Hickey, Samantha Davis, Will Farmer, Julianna Dawidowicz, Clint Moloney, Andrea Lamont-Mills, Jess Carniel, Yosheen Pillay, David Akenson, Annette Brömdal, Richard Gehrmann, Dean Mills, Tracy Kolbe-Alexander, Tanya Machin, Suzanne Reich, Kim Southey, Lynda Crowley-Cyr, Taiji Watanabe, Josh Davenport, Rohit Hirani, Helena King, Roshini Perera, Lucy Williams, Kurt Timmins, Michael Thompson, Douglas Eacersall & Jacinta Maxwell - 2022 - Journal of Academic Ethics 20 (4):549-567.
    A growing body of literature critical of ethics review boards has drawn attention to the processes used to determine the ethical merit of research. Citing criticism on the bureaucratic nature of ethics review processes, this literature provides a useful provocation for (re)considering how the ethics review might be enacted. Much of this criticism focuses on how ethics review boards _deliberate,_ with particular attention given to the lack of transparency and opportunities for researcher recourse that characterise ethics review processes. Centered specifically (...)
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  49.  21
    Using UNPRME to Teach, Research, and Enact Business Ethics: Insights from the Catholic Identity Matrix for Business Schools.Kenneth E. Goodpaster, T. Dean Maines, Michael Naughton & Brian Shapiro - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 147 (4):761-777.
    We address how the leaders of a Catholic business school can articulate and assess how well their schools implement the following six principles drawn from Catholic social teaching : produce goods and services that are authentically good; foster solidarity with the poor by serving deprived and marginalized populations; advance the dignity of human work as a calling; exercise subsidiarity; promote responsible stewardship over resources; and acquire and allocate resources justly. We first discuss how the CST principles give substantive content and (...)
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  50.  58
    The Big Bang Theory and Philosophy: Rock, Paper, Scissors, Aristotle, Locke.William Irwin & Dean Kowalski (eds.) - 2012 - Hoboken, New Jersey: Wiley.
    There are books that debate math, science, and history; there are books that help you build walls or even pyramids; there are even books that discuss Neanderthals with tools and autotrophs that drool. This book discusses philosophy. But you don't need an IQ of 187 to enjoy it. I swear to cow! As you'll see, the philosophy is theoretical, but the fun is real.
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