Results for 'Elisabeth Nails'

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  1.  18
    Aprendiendo de La Vida (Learning from Life): Development of a Radionovela to Promote Preventive Health Care Utilization among Indigenous Farmworkers from Mexico Living in California.Annette E. Maxwell, Sandra Young, Norma Gomez, Khoa Tran, L. Cindy Chang, Elisabeth Nails, David Gere & Roshan Bastani - 2021 - Journal of Medical Humanities 43 (2):365-376.
    Mixtecs and Zapotecs, originating from the Oaxaca area in Mexico, are among the largest indigenous groups of workers in California. Many adults in this community only access the health care system when sick and as a last resort. This article describes the development of a radionovela to inform the community about the importance of preventive health care. It was developed following the Sabido Method. The methodology to develop a radionovela may be of interest to other public health practitioners who want (...)
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  2. Slurring Perspectives.Elisabeth Camp - 2013 - Analytic Philosophy 54 (3):330-349.
    Slurs are rhetorically insidious and theoretically interesting because they communicate something above and beyond the truth-conditional predication of group membership, something which typically though not always projects across 'blocking' constructions like negation, conditionals, and indirect quotation, and which is exceptionally resistant to direct challenge. I argue that neither pure expressivism nor straightforward truth-conditionalism can account for the sort of commitment that speakers undertake by using slurs. Instead, I claim, users of slurs endorse a denigrating perspective on the targeted group.
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  3.  71
    Why maps are not propositional.Elisabeth Camp - 2018 - In Alex Grzankowski & Michelle Montague (eds.), Non-Propositional Intentionality. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 19-45.
    A number of philosophers and logicians have argued for the conclusion that maps are logically tractable modes of representation by analyzing them in propositional terms. But in doing so, they have often left what they mean by "propositional" undefined or unjustified. I argue that propositions are characterized by a structure that is digital, universal, asymmetrical, and recursive. There is little positive evidence that maps exhibit these features. Instead, we can better explain their functional structure by taking seriously the observation that (...)
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  4.  27
    Children, Collect Bones!Elisabeth Vaupel & Florian Preiß - 2018 - NTM Zeitschrift für Geschichte der Wissenschaften, Technik und Medizin 26 (2):151-183.
    Knochen waren im 19. und frühen 20. Jahrhundert ein unverzichtbarer, größtenteils importabhängiger Rohstoff der chemischen Industrie, die daraus Düngemittel, Tierfutter, Leim, Gelatine, Seife und andere Produkte herstellte. Das Thema Knochenverwertung wurde im Schulunterricht der NS-Zeit genutzt, um Jugendlichen die Relevanz des Vierjahresplans und der deutschen Autarkiepolitik zu verdeutlichen und sie zu motivieren, sich im Rahmen der Altstoffsammlungen an der heimischen Erfassung dieses Rohmaterials zu beteiligen. Diverse NS-Instanzen hatten ein differenziertes Spektrum von Lehrmitteln erarbeitet, um die Behandlung dieses Themas in der (...)
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  5.  89
    A Dual Act Analysis of Slurs.Elisabeth Camp - 2018 - In David Sosa (ed.), Bad Words: Philosophical Perspectives on Slurs. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. pp. 29-59.
    Slurs are incendiary terms so much that many ordinary speakers and theorists deny that sentences containing them can ever be true, and utterances where they occur embedded within normally "quarantining" contexts, like conditionals and indirect reports, are still typically offensive. At the same time, however, many speakers and theorists also find it obvious that sentences containing slurs can be true; and there are clear cases where embedding does inoculate a speaker from the slur's offensiveness. I argue that four standard accounts (...)
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  6. Perspectives and Frames in Pursuit of Ultimate Understanding.Elisabeth Camp - 2019 - In Stephen Robert Grimm (ed.), Varieties of Understanding: New Perspectives From Philosophy, Psychology, and Theology. New York, New York: Oup Usa. pp. 17-45.
    Our ordinary and theoretical talk are rife with “framing devices”: expressions that function, not just to communicate factual information, but to suggest an intuitive way of thinking about their subjects. Framing devices can also play an important role in individual cognition, as slogans, precepts, and models that guide inquiry, explanation, and memory. At the same time, however, framing devices are double-edged swords. Communicatively, they can mold our minds into a shared pattern, even when we would rather resist. Cognitively, the intuitive (...)
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  7.  47
    From self to social cognition: Theory of Mind mechanisms and their relation to Executive Functioning.Elisabeth E. F. Bradford, Ines Jentzsch & Juan-Carlos Gomez - 2015 - Cognition 138 (C):21-34.
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  8. Aesthetic Experience and Intellectual Pursuits.Elisabeth Schellekens - 2022 - Aristotelian Society Supplementary Volume 96 (1):123-146.
    The main aim of this paper is to examine the practice of describing intellectual pursuits in aesthetic terms, and to investigate whether this practice can be accounted for in the framework of a standard conception of aesthetic experience. Following a discussion of some historical approaches, the paper proposes a way of conceiving of aesthetic experience as both epistemically motivating and epistemically inventive. It is argued that the aesthetics of intellectual pursuits should be considered as central rather than marginal to our (...)
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  9.  89
    Stories and Selves: A Twisted Love Story about the Meaning of Life.Elisabeth Camp - 2024 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 95:157-179.
    I argue that stories are ‘equipment for living’ in two senses: retrospectively, they provide ‘configurational comprehension’ of a temporal sequence of events; prospectively, they offer templates for action. Narrative conceptions of the self appear well poised to leverage these functional roles for stories into an intuitively compelling view of self-construction as self-construal. However, the narrative conception defines selves in terms of the lives they live: a self is the protagonist in a lifelong story. And narrative structure is itself defined by (...)
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  10. Instrumental Reasoning in Nonhuman Animals.Elisabeth Camp & Eli Shupe - 2017 - In Kristin Andrews & Jacob Beck (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Animal Minds. Routledge. pp. 100-118.
  11. Just saying, just kidding : liability for accountability-avoiding speech in ordinary conversation, politics and law.Elisabeth Camp - 2022 - In Laurence R. Horn (ed.), From lying to perjury: linguistic and legal perspective on lies and other falsehoods. Boston: De Gruyter Mouton. pp. 227-258.
    Mobsters and others engaged in risky forms of social coordination and coercion often communicate by saying something that is overtly innocuous but transmits another message ‘off record’. In both ordinary conversation and political discourse, insinuation and other forms of indirection, like joking, offer significant protection from liability. However, they do not confer blanket immunity: speakers can be held to account for an ‘off record’ message, if the only reasonable interpreta- tions of their utterance involve a commitment to it. Legal liability (...)
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  12.  65
    Alterations of agency in hypnosis: A new predictive coding model.Jean-Rémy Martin & Elisabeth Pacherie - 2019 - Psychological Review 126 (1):133-152.
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  13.  92
    Husserls manuskripte zu seinem göttinger doppelvortrag Von 1901.Elisabeth Schuhmann & Karl Schuhmann - 2001 - Husserl Studies 17 (2):87-123.
  14.  22
    Dimensional order property and pairs of models.Elisabeth Bouscaren - 1989 - Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 41 (3):205-231.
  15. Playing with labels: Identity terms as tools for building agency.Elisabeth Camp & Carolina Flores - 2024 - Philosophical Quarterly 74 (4):1103-1136.
    Identity labels like “woman”, “Black,” “mother,” and “evangelical” are pervasive in both political and personal life, and in both formal and informal classification and communication. They are also widely thought to undermine agency by essentializing groups, flattening individual distinctiveness, and enforcing discrimination. While we take these worries to be well-founded, we argue that they result from a particular practice of using labels to rigidly label others. We identify an alternative practice of playful self-labelling, and argue that it can function as (...)
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  16.  63
    Agency, Stability, and Permeability in "Games".Elisabeth Camp - 2023 - Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 23 (3).
    In “Games and the Art of Agency,” Thi Nguyen argues that games both highlight and foster a profound complexity in human motivation, in the form of “purposeful and managed agential disunity.” I agree that human agency is “fluid and fleeting” rather than stable and unified; but I argue that Nguyen’s analysis itself relies on a traditional conception of selves as enduring goal-driven agents which his discussion calls into question. Without this conception, games look more like life, and both look riskier, (...)
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  17.  85
    (1 other version)Countable models of nonmultidimensional ℵ0-stable theories.Elisabeth Bouscaren & Daniel Lascar - 1983 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 48 (1):377 - 383.
  18. Sarcastic ‘Like’: A Case Study in the Interface of Syntax and Semantics.Elisabeth Camp & John Hawthorne - 2008 - Philosophical Perspectives 22 (1):1-21.
    The expression ‘Like’ has a wide variety of uses among English and American speakers. It may describe preference, as in (1) She likes mint chip ice cream. It may be used as a vehicle of comparison, as in (2) Trieste is like Minsk on steroids.
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  19.  45
    Metaphor and Varieties of Meaning.Elisabeth Camp - 2013 - In Ernie Lepore & Kurt Ludwig (eds.), Blackwell Companion to Donald Davidson. Blackwell. pp. 361–378.
    I compare two of Davidson's main discussions of metaphor. I argue, first, that despite some puzzling inconsistencies, the overall thrust of “What Metaphors Mean” is a radical form of noncogitivism, on which speakers of metaphors merely cause their hearers to perceive certain features in the world, but do not claim or implicate that things are any particular way. By contrast, in “A Nice Derangement of Epitaphs,” Davidson endorses a neo‐Gricean account of metaphor as a form of speaker's meaning. However, he (...)
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  20. Pragmatic force in semantic context.Elisabeth Camp - 2017 - Philosophical Studies 174 (6):1617-1627.
    Stalnaker’s Context deploys the core machinery of common ground, possible worlds, and epistemic accessibility to mount a powerful case for the ‘autonomy of pragmatics’: the utility of theorizing about discourse function independently of specific linguistic mechanisms. Illocutionary force lies at the peripherybetween pragmatics—as the rational, non-conventional dynamics of context change—and semantics—as a conventional compositional mechanism for determining truth-conditional contents—in an interesting way. I argue that the conventionalization of illocutionary force, most notably in assertion, has important crosscontextual consequences that are not (...)
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  21. Metaethical Expressivism.Elisabeth Camp - 2017 - In Tristram Colin McPherson & David Plunkett (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Metaethics. New York: Routledge. pp. 87-101.
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  22.  54
    Pantheism and panpsychism in the Renaissance and the emergence of secularism.Elisabeth Blum, Paul Richard Blum, Tomáš Nejeschleba & Martin Žemla - 2024 - Intellectual History Review 34 (1):1-3.
    Pantheism, Panpsychism, and secularism? To any historian of ideas still under the die-hard spell of the Enlightenment narrative, this would appear as an unlikely connection.1 If ever the theory of...
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  23.  23
    Thinking the Aesthetic: Towards a Noetic Conception of Aesthetic Experience The 2023 Richard Wollheim Memorial Lecture.Elisabeth Schellekens - 2024 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 82 (2):129-141.
    This paper defends a ‘noetic’ conception of aesthetic experience whereby such experience is best conceived as a kind of explorative thought process. Although not directly aimed at acquiring knowledge, this process often leads to an enhanced understanding or improved epistemic grasp of the object of appreciation itself and the world. On this conception, aesthetic value acts as an invitation to engage in a series of contemplative and reflective processes during which we rely not only on the perceptual, imaginative, and affective (...)
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  24. cosmopolitan History.Elisabeth Young-Bruehl - 1983 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 37 (147):440.
     
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  25.  31
    Homophobias: A Diagnostic and Political Manual.Elisabeth Young-Bruehl - 2002 - Constellations 9 (2):263-273.
  26. Too much ado about belief.Jérôme Dokic & Elisabeth Pacherie - 2007 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 6 (1):185-200.
    Three commitments guide Dennett’s approach to the study of consciousness. First, an ontological commitment to materialist monism. Second, a methodological commitment to what he calls ‘heterophenomenology.’ Third, a ‘doxological’ commitment that can be expressed as the view that there is no room for a distinction between a subject’s beliefs about how things seem to her and what things actually seem to her, or, to put it otherwise, as the view that there is no room for a reality/appearance distinction for consciousness. (...)
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  27.  26
    Renaissance magic as a step towards secularism: Agrippa, Bruno, Campanella.Elisabeth Blum - 2024 - Intellectual History Review 34 (1):67-74.
    Renaissance magic was an attempt to supply Platonism with a philosophy of nature that could compete with Aristotelian physics. It was expected to heal the increasing breach between science and faith. However, the basic presupposition of every magic worldview, the notion of a living universe, favors immanentism and arguably hastened the rise of secularism. Secularism, it should be noted, was not an identifiable set of theories but a process towards modernity with its correspondent philosophical theology. Three different stages in that (...)
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  28. Language: Power Plays in Communication.Elisabeth Camp - 2020 - In Melissa Shew & Kimberly Garchar (eds.), Philosophy for girls: an invitation to the life of thought. New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press. pp. 167-180.
    We do many things with words. We describe, we plan and promise, we invite and command, we hint and intimate. We also use words to wound – to demean, insult, and exclude. The fact that words can have such potent, pernicious effects is puzzling, because they are, after all, just words. As the schoolyard chant goes, “Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words can never hurt me.” Words do hurt though–not only our feelings, but our social status, even (...)
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  29.  86
    Priorities and Diversities in Thought and Language.Elisabeth Camp - 2020 - In Andrea Bianchi (ed.), Language and reality from a naturalistic perspective: Themes from Michael Devitt. Cham: Springer. pp. 45-66.
    Philosophers have long debated the relative priority of thought and language, both at the deepest level, in asking what makes us distinctively human, and more superficially, in explaining why we find it so natural to communicate with words. The “linguistic turn” in analytic philosophy accorded pride of place to language in the order of investigation, but only because it treated language as a window onto thought, which it took to be fundamental in the order of explanation. The Chomskian linguistic program (...)
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  30.  17
    Keya Maitra and Jennifer McWeeny (Eds.), "Feminist Philosophy of Mind.".Elisabeth Schilling - 2024 - Philosophy in Review 44 (2):17-19.
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  31.  29
    Autobiography as Enigma.Elisabeth Cardonne-Arlyck & Steven Vogel - 1989 - Substance 18 (3):30.
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  32.  9
    Les incandescentes: Simone Weil, María Zambrano, Cristina Campo.Elisabeth Bart - 2019 - Paris: Pierre-Guillaume de Roux.
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  33.  11
    Am 19. August 1821 vormittags.Elisabeth Blumrich - 1980 - In Predigten 1820-1821. De Gruyter. pp. 827-837.
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  34.  9
    Am 9. April 1820 vormittags.Elisabeth Blumrich - 1980 - In Predigten 1820-1821. De Gruyter. pp. 93-103.
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  35.  19
    Am 26. April 1820 vormittags.Elisabeth Blumrich - 1980 - In Predigten 1820-1821. De Gruyter. pp. 113-123.
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  36.  7
    Am 2. Dezember 1821 vormittags.Elisabeth Blumrich - 1980 - In Predigten 1820-1821. De Gruyter. pp. 982-992.
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  37.  9
    Am 20. Februar 1820 vormittags.Elisabeth Blumrich - 1980 - In Predigten 1820-1821. De Gruyter. pp. 49-57.
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  38.  10
    Am 3. Juni 1821 früh.Elisabeth Blumrich - 1980 - In Predigten 1820-1821. De Gruyter. pp. 672-680.
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  39.  6
    Am 29. Juli 1821 vormittags.Elisabeth Blumrich - 1980 - In Predigten 1820-1821. De Gruyter. pp. 782-792.
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  40.  5
    Am 11. Juni 1820 vormittags.Elisabeth Blumrich - 1980 - In Predigten 1820-1821. De Gruyter. pp. 207-218.
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  41.  8
    Am 4. März 1821 vormittags.Elisabeth Blumrich - 1980 - In Predigten 1820-1821. De Gruyter. pp. 528-545.
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  42.  9
    Am 4. November 1821 vormittags.Elisabeth Blumrich - 1980 - In Predigten 1820-1821. De Gruyter. pp. 933-942.
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  43.  54
    Editorial: Parenting in the Context of Opioid Use: Mechanisms, Prevention Solutions, and Policy Implications.Leslie D. Leve, Elisabeth Conradt & Emily E. Tanner-Smith - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
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  44.  9
    Politik und Geschichte: zu den Intentionen von G.W.F. Hegels Reformbill-Schrift.Christoph Jamme & Elisabeth Weisser (eds.) - 1995 - Bonn: Bouvier.
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  45. Differences in brain metabolism between patients in coma, vegetative state, minimally conscious state and locked-in syndrome.Steven Laureys, Marie-Elisabeth E. Faymonville & M. Ferring - 2003 - European Journal of Neurology 10.
  46. Vorlesungen über Pragmatismus.Charles S. Peirce & Elisabeth Walther - 1993 - Revue Philosophique de la France Et de l'Etranger 183 (1):75-75.
     
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  47. Responsibility: the many faces of a social phenomenon.Ann Elisabeth Auhagen & Hans Werner Bierhoff (eds.) - 2001 - New York: Routledge.
    This important new volume argues that responsibility is a characteristic of fundamental importance for the survival of modern democratic structures. It represents a comprehensive collection of cutting-edge psychological, philosophical, sociological and evolutionary approaches to the topic.
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  48.  4
    Die unendlichen modi bei Spinoza..Elisabeth Schmitt - 1910 - Leipzig,: J. A. Barth.
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  49.  42
    Les transformations de la sensation condillacienne:«un opérateur secret»?Élisabeth Schwartz - 1999 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 1:27-51.
  50.  34
    Carlo JANSITI, Violette Leduc, Paris, Grasset, 1999, 494 p.Elisabeth Seys - 2000 - Clio 11:24-24.
    « Un désert qui monologue », ainsi se définissait Violette Leduc, cette femme que trop ont refusé d'écouter, cet auteur que trop peu de ses contemporains ont comprise. Vingt-sept ans après son décès, Carlo Jansiti lui rend, avec la biographie qu'il vient de publier, un hommage posthume, sobre mais poignant. Il redonne du relief à une forte personnalité et à une figure attachante, qui scandalisa ses contemporains par sa marginalité et son originalité, et fut souvent mal jugée par eux. L...
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