Results for 'Deborah Uduk'

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  1. Adorno on Nature.Deborah Cook - 2011 - Routledge.
    Decades before the environmental movement emerged in the 1960s, Adorno condemned our destructive and self-destructive relationship to the natural world, warning of the catastrophe that may result if we continue to treat nature as an object that exists exclusively for our own benefit. "Adorno on Nature" presents the first detailed examination of the pivotal role of the idea of natural history in Adorno's work. A comparison of Adorno's concerns with those of key ecological theorists - social ecologist Murray Bookchin, ecofeminist (...)
     
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  2. Creating and Maintaining Ethical Work Climates.Deborah Vidaver Cohen - 1993 - Business Ethics Quarterly 3 (4):343-358.
    This paper examines how unethical behavior in the workplace occurs when management places inordinately strong emphasis on goalattainment without a corresponding emphasis on following legitimate procedures. Robert Merton's theory of sodal structure and anomie provides a foundation to discuss this argument. Key factors affecting ethical climates in work organizations are also addressed. Based on this analysis, the paper proposes strategies for developing and changing aspects of organizational culture to reduce anomie, thereby creating work climates which discourage unethical practices and provide (...)
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  3. Models of group selection.Deborah G. Mayo & Norman L. Gilinsky - 1987 - Philosophy of Science 54 (4):515-538.
    The key problem in the controversy over group selection is that of defining a criterion of group selection that identifies a distinct causal process that is irreducible to the causal process of individual selection. We aim to clarify this problem and to formulate an adequate model of irreducible group selection. We distinguish two types of group selection models, labeling them type I and type II models. Type I models are invoked to explain differences among groups in their respective rates of (...)
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  4. Methodology in Practice: Statistical Misspecification Testing.Deborah G. Mayo & Aris Spanos - 2004 - Philosophy of Science 71 (5):1007-1025.
    The growing availability of computer power and statistical software has greatly increased the ease with which practitioners apply statistical methods, but this has not been accompanied by attention to checking the assumptions on which these methods are based. At the same time, disagreements about inferences based on statistical research frequently revolve around whether the assumptions are actually met in the studies available, e.g., in psychology, ecology, biology, risk assessment. Philosophical scrutiny can help disentangle 'practical' problems of model validation, and conversely, (...)
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  5. Chess is Not a Game.Deborah P. Vossen - 2008 - In Benjamin Hale, Philosophy Looks at Chess. Open Court Press. pp. 191-208.
    As described in Benjamin Hale’s Introduction to “Philosophy Looks at Chess”: -/- “Deb Vossen asks whether chess can rightly be considered a game in the first place. She concludes, much to the surprise of many readers, that chess is not a game. Her evocative claim turns on a distinction between a game and the idea of a game, which evolved out of Bernard Suits’s phenomenally underappreciated work The Grasshopper: Games, Life and Utopia. She advances this position by way of a (...)
     
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  6.  68
    Justice, sexual harassment, and the reasonable victim standard.Deborah L. Wells & Beverly J. Kracher - 1993 - Journal of Business Ethics 12 (6):423 - 431.
    In determining when sexual behavior in the workplace creates a hostile working environment, some courts have asked, Would a reasonableperson view this as a hostile environment? Two recent court decisions, recognizing male-female differences in the perception of social sexual behavior at work, modified this standard to ask, Would a reasonablevictim view this as a hostile environment? As yet, there is no consensus in the legal community regarding which of these standards is just.We propose that moral theory provides the framework from (...)
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  7. Adorno, ideology and ideology critique.Deborah Cook - 2001 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 27 (1):1-20.
    Throughout his work, Adorno contrasted liberal ideology to the newer and more pernicious form of ideology found in positivism. The paper explores the philosophical basis for Adorno's contrast between liberal and positivist ideology. In Negative Dialectics, Adorno describes all ideology as identity-thinking. However, on his view, liberal ideology represents a more rational form of identity-thinking. Fearing that positivism might obliterate our capacity to distinguish between what is and what ought to be, Adorno sought a more secure foundation for his critique (...)
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  8.  51
    Open thinking: Adorno’s exact imagination.Deborah Cook - 2018 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 44 (8):805-821.
    Adorno thought that substantive change was not just desirable but also possible. He also offered ideas about what positive change might look like on the basis of his determinate negation of damaged life. This paper begins by exploring Adorno’s ideas about possibility and determinate negation. It also discusses his views about the sort of changes that might be made. Given Adorno’s ideas about the possibility of change, the paper ends by challenging Fabian Freyenhagen’s reading of Adorno as a methodological, epistemic, (...)
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  9.  39
    Big is a Thing of the Past: Climate Change and Methodology in the History of Ideas.Deborah R. Coen - 2016 - Journal of the History of Ideas 77 (2):305-321.
  10. (1 other version)From the Actual to the Possible: Nonidentity Thinking.Deborah Cook - 2005 - Constellations 12 (1):21-35.
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  11. Peircean Induction and the Error-Correcting Thesis.Deborah G. Mayo - 2005 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 41 (2):299 - 319.
  12.  55
    Rise, Grubenhund: on provincializing Kuhn.Deborah R. Coen - 2012 - Modern Intellectual History 9 (1):109-126.
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  13. The celestial cartography of Giovanni Antonio vanosino da varese.Deborah Jean Warner - 1971 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 34 (1):336-337.
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  14.  23
    How Sweet It Is: Sugar, Science, and the State.Deborah Jean Warner - 2007 - Annals of Science 64 (2):147-170.
    Summary Americans import large amounts of sugar, levy a stiff tariff on it, and base this tariff on the saccharine content of each sample, and thus the assessment of sugar quality for tax purposes was enormously important. It was also among the most difficult challenges of a scientific or technical nature facing the federal government in the nineteenth century, and the issues it raised would often recur as science-based quality control became an essential feature of industry.
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  15.  29
    Mothers of Invention: From the Bra to the Bomb, Forgotten Women and Their Unforgettable Ideas. Ethlie Ann Vare, Greg Ptacek.Deborah Warner - 1988 - Isis 79 (4):720-720.
  16.  33
    Political Geodesy: The Army, the Air Force, and the World Geodetic System of 1960.Deborah Jean Warner - 2002 - Annals of Science 59 (4):363-389.
    Since military planners must know the size and shape of the earth if they hope to track earth-orbiting satellites and to target missiles on distant lands, geodesy was an important concern of the two superpowers during the Cold War. The most important geodetic product in the United States was a series of increasingly powerful World Geodetic Systems, the first of which was published for the Department of Defense in 1960. Although WGS 60 was created because of intense international rivalries, it (...)
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  17.  22
    Woman in ScienceH. J. Mozans.Deborah Jean Warner - 1976 - Isis 67 (1):112-113.
  18.  19
    Worm Work: Recasting Romanticism - by Janelle A. Schwarz.Deborah Elise White - 2014 - Centaurus 56 (2):131-133.
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  19. Adorno’s critical materialism.Deborah Cook - 2006 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 32 (6):719-737.
    The article explores the character of Adorno’s materialism while fleshing out his Marxist-inspired idea of natural history. Adorno offers a non-reductionist and non-dualistic account of the relationship between matter and mind, human history and natural history. Emerging from nature and remaining tied to it, the human mind is nonetheless qualitatively distinct from nature owing to its limited independence from it. Yet, just as human history is always also natural history, because human beings can never completely dissociate themselves from the natural (...)
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  20.  28
    Imagination as an intellectual virtue.Déborah Marber & Alan T. Wilson - forthcoming - Analysis.
    Many philosophers have recently defended the epistemic value of imagination. In this paper, we expand these discussions into the realm of virtue epistemology by proposing and defending a virtue-theoretic conception of imagination. On this account, the intellectual virtue of imagination is a character trait consisting of dispositions to engage skilfully in activities characteristic of imagining, with good judgement and from appropriate epistemic motivations. We argue that this approach helps to explain important connections between related, but distinct, intellectual virtues, including creativity (...)
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  21.  28
    A Lens of Many Facets.Deborah R. Coen - 2006 - Isis 97 (3):395-419.
  22.  32
    What ethical approaches are used by scientists when sharing health data? An interview study.Deborah Mascalzoni, Heidi Beate Bentzen & Jennifer Viberg Johansson - 2022 - BMC Medical Ethics 23 (1):1-12.
    BackgroundHealth data-driven activities have become central in diverse fields (research, AI development, wearables, etc.), and new ethical challenges have arisen with regards to privacy, integrity, and appropriateness of use. To ensure the protection of individuals’ fundamental rights and freedoms in a changing environment, including their right to the protection of personal data, we aim to identify the ethical approaches adopted by scientists during intensive data exploitation when collecting, using, or sharing peoples’ health data.MethodsTwelve scientists who were collecting, using, or sharing (...)
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  23.  9
    (1 other version)The Greening of German History.Deborah Coen - 2008 - Isis 99:142-148.
  24.  27
    On After-Trial Criticisms of Neyman-Pearson Theory of Statistics.Deborah G. Mayo - 1982 - PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1982:145 - 158.
    Despite its widespread use in science, the Neyman-Pearson Theory of Statistics (NPT) has been rejected as inadequate by most philosophers of induction and statistics. They base their rejection largely upon what the author refers to as after-trial criticisms of NPT. Such criticisms attempt to show that NPT fails to provide an adequate analysis of specific inferences after the trial is made, and the data is known. In this paper, the key types of after-trial criticisms are considered and it is argued (...)
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  25.  40
    Ein Reaktionares Schwein ? Political Activism and Prospects for Change in Adorno.Deborah Cook - 2004 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 1:47-67.
  26.  14
    The Oxford Handbook of Parenting and Moral Development.Deborah Laible, Gustavo Carlo & Laura M. Padilla-Walker (eds.) - 2019 - Oup Usa.
    The Oxford Handbook of Parenting and Moral Development provides a collection of state-of-the-art theories and research on the role that parents play in moral development. Contributors who are leaders in their fields take a comprehensive, yet nuanced approach to considering the complex links between parenting and moral development.
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  27.  9
    Miss Fielde’s Nests.Deborah R. Coen - 2016 - In Susan Neiman, Peter Galison & Wendy Doniger, What Reason Promises: Essays on Reason, Nature and History. Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 77-87.
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  28.  19
    (1 other version)Reframing Women: Gender and Film in Aotearoa New Zealand 1999–2014.Deborah Shepard - 2015 - Diogenes 62 (1):7-23.
    When my book Reframing Women: A history of New Zealand cinema was published in 2000 New Zealand women’s film was flourishing. There had been an explosion of filmmaking following the upsurge of twentieth century feminism in the 1970s beginning with the international women’s year film Some of My Best Friends are Women and the subsequent production of nine feminist documentary films. The energy generated by these films and the international feminist history projects that uncovered the formerly invisible contribution of women (...)
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  29.  58
    Learning from Error.Deborah Mayo - 2010 - Modern Schoolman 87 (3-4):191-217.
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  30.  37
    Really existing socialization.Deborah Cook - 2015 - Thesis Eleven 127 (1):78-94.
    The paper begins by comparing Adorno’s and Foucault’s accounts of the normalizing practices that socialize individuals, integrating them into Western societies. In this context, I argue that the animus against socialism can be read as an expression of profound anxiety about the existing socialization of reproduction in the West. In fact, Adorno and Foucault contend that really existing socialization has contained our political imagination to the point where even our ideas about alternatives only conjure up more of the same. Yet (...)
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  31.  22
    Tradition and Critique.Deborah Cook - 1992 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1992 (94):30-36.
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  32.  41
    Introduction: Witness to Disaster: Comparative Histories of Earthquake Science and Response.Deborah R. Coen - 2012 - Science in Context 25 (1):1-15.
    For historians of science, earthquakes may well have an air of the exotic. Often terrifying, apparently unpredictable, and arguably even more deadly today than in a pre-industrial age, they are not a phenomenon against which scientific progress is easy to gauge. Yet precisely because seismic forces seem so uncanny, even demonic, naturalizing them has been one of the most tantalizing and enduring challenges of modern science. Earthquakes have repeatedly shaken not just human edifices but the foundations of human knowledge. They (...)
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  33.  21
    Plants, maps, and the politics of scale: Nils Güttler, Das Kosmoskop: Karten und ihre Benutzer in der Pflanzengeographie des 19. Jahrhunderts. Göttingen: Wallstein, 2014, 545 pp, € 65.90 HB.Deborah R. Coen - 2016 - Metascience 25 (2):213-216.
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  34.  8
    Interrompre le temps, inventer le divorce en révolution.Déborah Noûs Cohen - 2020 - Temporalités 31.
    À l’aube de la Révolution française, alors que l’idée de sphère domestique et intime n’est pas finalisée, la famille est encore pensée comme une société politique : en conséquence, les bouleversements ouverts dans la sphère publique s’appliquent également à la sphère familiale. C’est le cas de la pensée de ces interruptions temporelles que sont la révolution comme rupture du contrat politique et le divorce comme rupture du contrat familial. L’article montre qu’une révolution soucieuse de stabilité a cherché, entre 1789 et (...)
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  35.  35
    Le « mouvement ouvrier » en questions.Déborah Cohen & Michèle Riot-Sarcey - 2015 - Actuel Marx 58 (2):93-103.
    In this interview M. Riot-Sarcey returns to a number of marginalized figures in labour history. Against the domination of the form of the party, as established since the end of the 19th century, which discounts the hypothesis of the proletariat’s ability to liberate itself, the author re-emphasises here the vitality of the forms of worker self-organization that had preceded the hegemony of the party, in particular after 1848 and the disillusionment of the labour movement regarding the republic. These autonomous worker (...)
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  36.  26
    Masculinité et visibilité sociale : le spectacle de l’État dans la construction de la nation mexicaine.Deborah Cohen - 2000 - Clio 12.
    Cet article se pose la question de la relation « genrée » entre la visibilité sociale – définie comme la reconnaissance d’un individu (ou d’une collectivité) comme membre de la nation – et la construction de la nation elle-même. L’analyse porte sur le moment de la mise en place du Bracero Program qui, entre 1942 et 1964, a conduit des Mexicains à travailler aux États-Unis : les hommes, exclus de la nation par leur position sociale et territoriale, ont été alors, (...)
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  37.  30
    1968's Paradoxical Topicality.Déborah Cohen, Jacques Guilhaumou & Emmanuel Renault - 2009 - Critical Horizons 10 (3):412-424.
  38.  15
    The great good place: The country house & English Literature.Deborah O. Collins - 1994 - History of European Ideas 18 (6):1018-1019.
  39.  22
    Adorno and Habermas on the Human Condition.Deborah Cook - 2002 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 33 (3):236-259.
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  40.  48
    Adorno’s Endgame.Deborah Cook - 2008 - Philosophy Today 52 (2):173-187.
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  41.  1
    Adorno, Foucault and critique.Deborah Cook - 2013 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 39 (10):965-981.
    Adorno and Foucault are among the 20th century’s most renowned social critics but little work has been done to compare their ideas about the activity of critique. ‘Adorno, Foucault and Critique’ attempts to fill this lacuna. It takes as its starting point the Kantian legacy that informs Adorno’s and Foucault’s notions of critique, or their ‘ontologies of the present’, as Foucault calls them. Exploring the ontological foundations of critique, the article then addresses the principal objects of critique: domination and fascism. (...)
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  42. Arthur Kroker and David Cook, The Postmodern Scene: Excremental Culture and Hyperaesthetics Reviewed by.Deborah Cook - 1987 - Philosophy in Review 7 (3):114-116.
     
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  43.  50
    Adorno on mass societies.Deborah Cook - 2001 - Journal of Social Philosophy 32 (1):35–52.
  44.  16
    Constructing the Subject: Historical Origins of Psychological Research. Kurt Danziger.Deborah Coon - 1992 - Isis 83 (1):162-163.
  45.  16
    Domination and enlightenment: the limits of manipulation.Deborah Cook - 1995 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 26 (1):17-26.
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  46. Daniel T. O'Hara, Radical Parody: American Culture and Critical Agency after Foucault Reviewed by.Deborah Cook - 1993 - Philosophy in Review 13 (3):113-115.
     
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  47.  29
    Hans-Robert Jauss and the exemplarity of art.Deborah Cook - 1987 - British Journal of Aesthetics 27 (3):259-267.
  48.  30
    Nature Becoming Conscious of Itself.Deborah Cook - 2006 - Philosophy Today 50 (3):296-306.
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  49.  46
    Nietzsche, Foucault, Tragedy.Deborah Cook - 1989 - Philosophy and Literature 13 (1):140-150.
  50.  24
    Ruses de guerre: Baudrillard and Fiske on media reception.Deborah Cook - 1992 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 22 (2):227–238.
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