Results for 'Felicia S. Manciu'

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  1. A Diamond-Based Electrode for Detection of Neurochemicals in the Human Brain.Kevin E. Bennet, Jonathan R. Tomshine, Hoon-Ki Min, Felicia S. Manciu, Michael P. Marsh, Seungleal B. Paek, Megan L. Settell, Evan N. Nicolai, Charles D. Blaha, Abbas Z. Kouzani, Su-Youne Chang & Kendall H. Lee - 2016 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10.
  2.  10
    Our Digital Agora: Politics Without Privacy.Felicia S. Jing - 2022 - Techné Research in Philosophy and Technology 26 (3):529-533.
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  3.  37
    The Feast of Kingship: Accession Ceremonies in Ancient JapanThe Japanese Enthronement CeremoniesJapanese Shrine Mergers 1906-1912.Felicia G. Bock, Robert S. Ellwood, Daniel Clarence Holtom & Wilbur M. Fridell - 1977 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 97 (2):234.
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  4.  59
    Limits on Monolingualism? A Comparison of Monolingual and Bilingual Infants’ Abilities to Integrate Lexical Tone in Novel Word Learning.Leher Singh, Felicia L. S. Poh & Charlene S. L. Fu - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7:188260.
    To construct their first lexicon, infants must determine the relationship between native phonological variation and the meanings of words. This process is arguably more complex for bilingual learners who are often confronted with phonological conflict: phonological variation that is lexically relevant in one language may be lexically irrelevant in the other. In a series of four experiments, the present study investigated English–Mandarin bilingual infants’ abilities to negotiate phonological conflict introduced by learning both a tone and a non-tone language. In a (...)
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  5.  39
    Editor's introduction.Felicia Miedema - 1995 - HEC Forum 7 (4):201-203.
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  6.  63
    Predicting Children's Reading and Mathematics Achievement from Early Quantitative Knowledge and Domain-General Cognitive Abilities.Felicia W. Chu, Kristy vanMarle & David C. Geary - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
  7.  43
    The nurse's role on the healthcare ethics committee.Felicia A. Miedema - 1993 - HEC Forum 5 (2):89-99.
  8.  76
    Du Châtelet, Voltaire, and the Transformation of Mandeville's Fable.Felicia Gottmann - 2012 - History of European Ideas 38 (2):218-232.
    Summary In about 1735, Emilie Du Châtelet began to translate Mandeville's Fable of the Bees. Her work, which is largely ignored by scholars, did, as this article demonstrates, turn out to be one of transformation rather than of translation and came at a crucial moment in the emerging French luxury debate. So far commercial society and luxury had been defended in purely economic terms, for instance in Melon's Essai politique, or as an aspect of divine providence for fallen man, by (...)
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  9.  35
    Ethics Consultation: Data and the Path to Professionalization.Felicia Cohn - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (4):1-4.
    In this issue, Ellen Fox and colleagues report on their national study on ethics consultation in U.S. hospitals, following up on the previous 1999–2000 landmark study. Th...
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  10.  35
    (1 other version)Edenic Paradise And Paradisal Eden Moshe Idel's Reading Of The Talmudic Legend Of The Four Sages Who Entered The Pardes.Felicia Waldman - 2007 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 6 (18):79-87.
    Of the stories describing the adventures full of deep significances of the various rabbis from the glorious Talmudic era, the most famous but also the most exploited is undoubtedly that of the “four sages who entered the Pardes”. If in the Talmudic-Midrashic literature it was used to point out the dangers and achievements that were related to speculations, rather than experiences, and in the mystical literature it was used to point out the dangers that could befall the mystic on his (...)
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  11. Is music a pure icon?Felicia Kruse - 2007 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 43 (4):626 - 635.
    : In his landmark book, Peirce's Theory of Signs, T. L. Short argues that music signifies as a pure icon. A pure icon, according to Peirce, is not a likeness. It "does not draw any distinction between itself and its object" (EP2:163), and it "serves as a sign solely and simply by exhibiting the quality it serves to signify" (EP2:306). In music, this quality consists of the specifically musical feelings or ideas contained in the piece in question, and such musical (...)
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  12.  16
    De quelques questions que la psychologie historique d’Ignace Meyerson actualise en psychologie.Felicia Ghica - 2018 - Lato Sensu: Revue de la Société de Philosophie des Sciences 5 (1):61-68.
    Depuis sa fondation comme discipline indépendante, la psychologie semble contourner les questions épistémologiques constitutives d’une science de l’esprit. Cet article s’attache à présenter brièvement quelques-unes de ces questions, à travers la psychologie historique d’Ignace Meyerson.
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  13.  82
    Emotion in Musical Meaning: A Peircean Solution to Langer's Dualism.Felicia E. Kruse - 2005 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 41 (4):762-778.
  14.  33
    Late in the Quest: The Study of Malory's Morte Darthur as a New Direction in Philosophy.Felicia Ackerman - 2002 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 23 (1):312-342.
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  15.  40
    Literary Forms of Life.Felicia Martinez - 2013 - Philosophy and Literature 37 (1):247-256.
    A common contention of literary criticism is that literary forms can express, reflect, shape, represent or otherwise give form to human life. Literature can seem to offer the same idea as a promise of life’s meaningfulness; where expressive form is powerful, life need not be empty. Can literary forms give form to human life? I will argue for one sense in which this is true. As will become clear, at stake in this inquiry is not simply an idea about the (...)
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  16.  15
    Lyotard's homeopathic indeterminacy: The medicinal sublime.Felicia Miller-Frank - 1995 - History of European Ideas 20 (4-6):823-827.
  17.  6
    La philosophie d'Athènes à Rome et ses philosophes.Félicia Michot - 2023 - Paris: L'Harmattan.
    La philosophie commence avec l'étonnement. Et l'étonnement engendre l'interrogation et la connaissance. C'est Aristote qui structure les connaissances et l'intelligence. D'après M. Conche, la philosophie est « la recherche de la Vérité par la lumière naturelle », et cela au sujet du Tout de la réalité, et de la place de l'homme dans ce Tout. Et lorsque, dans cette recherche, une Vérité s'offre à nous, alors notre esprit, comme le pensait Cicéron, est empli du plus noble plaisir humain. Ce nouveau (...)
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  18.  82
    Peirce, God, and the "transcendentalist virus".Felicia E. Kruse - 2010 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 46 (3):386-400.
    At the beginning of "The Law of Mind," Charles S. Peirce makes this striking admission (W8:135):I may mention, for the benefit of those who are curious in studying mental biographies, that I was born and reared in the neighborhood of Concord—I mean in Cambridge—at the time when Emerson, Hedge, and their friends were disseminating the ideas that they had caught from Schelling, and Schelling from Plotinus, from Boehm, or from God knows what minds struck with the monstrous mysticism of the (...)
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  19.  41
    Indexicality and the Abductive Link.Felicia E. Kruse - 1986 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 22 (4):435 - 447.
  20.  77
    "I Know Who I Am": Don Quixote, Self-Fashioning, and the Humanness of Ordinary Identity.Martinez Felicia - 2016 - Philosophy and Literature 40 (2):511-525.
    What does it mean to know who you are? Is it a matter of knowing your name? The things that you’ve done? The people you love? Such indispensible knowledge is somehow not enough; I can know all of these things, and still feel puzzled about who I am. “I am not the person I once was,” “I am not myself today,” and “I am learning who I am,” are all commonplace poems of a kind: expressive sentences completely at home both (...)
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  21. Does Philosophy Only State What Everyone Admits? A Discussion of the Method of Wittgenstein's Philosophical Investigations.Felicia Ackerman - 1992 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 17 (1):246-254.
  22.  60
    Flourish Your Heart in This World: Emotion, Reason, and Action in Malory's Le Morte D'Arthur.Felicia Ackerman - 1998 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 22 (1):182-226.
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  23. "Always to do ladies, damosels, and gentlewomen succour": Women and the chivalric code in malory's morte darthur.Felicia Ackerman - 2002 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 26 (1):1–12.
    I am indebted to many people, especially Dorsey Armstrong, Shannon French, and Kenneth Hodges, for helpful discussions of this material. An early version of this essay was read at the Thirty-Sixth International Congress on Medieval Studies.This essay is dedicated to the glorious memory of Nina Lindsey.
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  24.  26
    The New Literature on Gender and the Welfare State: The U.S. Case. [REVIEW]Felicia A. Kornbluh - 1996 - Feminist Studies 22 (1):170.
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  25.  33
    Commentary on ‘expressivism at the beginning and end of life’.Felicia Nimue Ackerman - 2020 - Journal of Medical Ethics 46 (8):548-549.
    Death can be good— I’ll tell you how. Just have it come Decades from now.1 Full disclosure: The above poem expresses my outlook, and I have trouble empathising with people who want to die. But that does not make me unable to evaluate objections to the expressivist argument against PAS. Reed sets forth the expressivist argument as follows: ‘[W]hen we allow PAS for individuals who are terminally ill or facing some severe disease or disability, we send a message of disrespect (...)
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  26.  30
    Altered sensory feedbacks in pianist's dystonia: the altered auditory feedback paradigm and the glove effect.Felicia P.-H. Cheng, Michael Großbach & Eckart O. Altenmüller - 2013 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  27.  16
    Hélène Marquié, Non, La danse n’est pas un truc de filles! Essai sur le genre en danse.Felicia McCarren - 2017 - Clio 46:287-289.
    En danse comme dans les autres arts – même en science – écrit Hélène Marquié, le premier pas pour les études de genre est de donner de la visibilité aux femmes dans l’archive historique afin de reconstruire une histoire « mixte » (p. 218). L’auteure explique que c’est seulement avec les rapports de 2006 et de 2009 sur « l’accès égal » des hommes et des femmes aux performances et aux structures chorégraphiques que le féminisme à tonalité politique a commencé (...)
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  28.  34
    Genuineness and Degeneracy in Peirce's Categories.Felicia E. Kruse - 1991 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 27 (3):267 - 298.
  29.  65
    What Is the Proper Role for Charity in Healthcare?Felicia Ackerman - 1996 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 5 (3):425.
    My little girl has leukemia; she has had it for over a year, and now she needs at least five pints of blood a day. Not the whole blood, just the platelets. Most of our relatives and friends have given at least a few times. But we need more. Now I have to go to strangers.So begins Roberta Silman's short story, “Giving Blood,” a story about illness and charity. When the narrator's husband solicited blood donations at his workplace, “he thought (...)
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  30. The Ethics of End-of-Life Care for Prison Inmates.Felicia Cohn - 1999 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 27 (3):252-259.
    Terminally ill elderly and long-term disabled persons under our system of health care are eligible for Medicare and may qualify for the hospice care benefit. Despite such provisions, research shows that individuals still frequently do not receive the health care they need. But, as inadequate as end-of-life care can be for the general population, these inadequacies are exacerbated for individuals incarcerated in U.S. prisons and jails. Although inmates are guaranteed a basic level of health care under the Eighth Amendment and (...)
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  31.  25
    Nurses’ Participation in Limited Resuscitation: Gray Areas in End of Life Decision-Making.Felicia Stokes & Rick Zoucha - 2021 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 12 (4):239-252.
    Historically nurses have lacked significant input in end-of-life decision-making, despite being an integral part of care. Nurses experience negative feelings and moral conflict when forced to aggressively deliver care to patients at the EOL. As a result, nurses participate in slow codes, described as a limited resuscitation effort with no intended benefit of patient survival. The purpose of this study was to explore and understand the process nurses followed when making decisions about participation in limited resuscitation. Five core categories emerged (...)
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  32.  24
    Luce Irigaray's "Purler Femme" and American Metaphysics.Felicia E. Kruse - 1991 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 27 (4):451 - 464.
  33.  59
    What WALL-E Can Teach Us About Global Capitalism in the Age of the Anal Father.Felicia Cosey - 2018 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 12 (1).
    This article employs the animated feature film WALL-E to examine a contemporary incarnation of paternal authority, the anal father of enjoyment. Slavoj Zizek coined the expression “anal father of enjoyment” to identify a metaphorical father who operates counter to Sigmund Freud’s oedipal. Unlike the oedipal father, the anal father does not command the subject to sacrifice enjoyment as a price for entry into the social order. Rather, the anal father directs the subject to enjoy excessively. This article reasons that the (...)
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  34.  5
    Emotion specificity, coherence, and cultural variation in conceptualizations of positive emotions: a study of body sensations and emotion recognition.Zaiyao Zhang, Felicia K. Zerwas & Dacher Keltner - forthcoming - Cognition and Emotion.
    The present study examines the association between people’s interoceptive representation of physical sensations and the recognition of vocal and facial expressions of emotion. We used body maps to study the granularity of the interoceptive conceptualisation of 11 positive emotions (amusement, awe, compassion, contentment, desire, love, joy, interest, pride, relief, and triumph) and a new emotion recognition test (Emotion Expression Understanding Test) to assess the ability to recognise emotions from vocal and facial behaviour. Overall, we found evidence for distinct interoceptive conceptualizations (...)
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  35.  26
    A Critical Discussion of John E. Smith's Communitarian Vision.Felicia E. Kruse - 1995 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 31 (1):41 - 51.
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  36.  96
    The ethics of bioethics: mapping the moral landscape.Lisa A. Eckenwiler & Felicia Cohn (eds.) - 2007 - Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
    Stem cell research. Drug company influence. Abortion. Contraception. Long-term and end-of-life care. Human participants research. Informed consent. The list of ethical issues in science, medicine, and public health is long and continually growing. These complex issues pose a daunting task for professionals in the expanding field of bioethics. But what of the practice of bioethics itself? What issues do ethicists and bioethicists confront in their efforts to facilitate sound moral reasoning and judgment in a variety of venues? Are those immersed (...)
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  37. Death, Dying, and Dignity.Felicia Ackerman - 1999 - The Proceedings of the Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 1:189-201.
    The word ‘dignity’ is a staple of contemporary American medical ethics, where it often follows the words ‘death with’. People unfamiliar with this usage might expect it to apply to one’s manner of dying—for example, a stately exit involving ceremonial farewells. Instead, conventional usage generally holds that “death with dignity” ends or prevents life without dignity, by which is meant life marked not by buffoonery, but by illness and disability. Popular examples of dignity-depleters include dementia, incontinence, and being “dependent on (...)
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  38.  27
    Nature and Semiosis.Felicia E. Kruse - 1990 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 26 (2):211 - 224.
  39.  41
    Informed Consent in Two Alzheimer’s Disease Research Centers: Insights From Research Coordinators.Christine M. Suver, Jennifer K. Hamann, Erin M. Chin, Felicia C. Goldstein, Hanna M. Blazel, Cecelia M. Manzanares, Megan J. Doerr, Sanjay J. Asthana, Lara M. Mangravite, Allan I. Levey, James J. Lah & Dorothy F. Edwards - 2020 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 11 (2):114-124.
  40.  10
    A nurses’ ethical commitment to people with intellectual and developmental disabilities.Kathleen Fisher, Catherine Robichaux, Jeanie Sauerland & Felicia Stokes - 2020 - Nursing Ethics 27 (4):1066-1076.
    Aim: This article explores the issues of knowledge deficits of healthcare professionals in meeting the needs of people with IDD throughout the life span, and to identify factors that contribute to these deficits. Although statistics vary due to census results and the presence of a “hidden population,” approximately 1%–3% of the global population identify as living with an intellectual or developmental disability. People with intellectual or developmental disability experience health inequities and confront multiple barriers in society, often related to the (...)
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  41. The Hidden Rules of Race: Barriers to an Inclusive Economy.Andrea Flynn, Dorian T. Warren, Felicia J. Wong & Susan R. Holmberg - 2017 - Cambridge University Press.
    Why do black families own less than white families? Why does school segregation persist decades after Brown v. Board of Education? Why is it harder for black adults to vote than for white adults? Will addressing economic inequality solve racial and gender inequality as well? This book answers all of these questions and more by revealing the hidden rules of race that create barriers to inclusion today. While many Americans are familiar with the histories of slavery and Jim Crow, we (...)
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  42.  7
    Shakespeare’s Ghost and Felicia Hemans’s The Vespers of Palermo: Nineteenth-Century Readings of the Page and Feminist Meanings for the Stage.Marjean D. Purinton - 2004 - Intertexts 8 (2):135-154.
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  43. Lacan's medievalism-Erin Felicia Labbie: Lacan's medievalism, University of Minnesota press, Minneapolis, 2006.Dmitry Olshansky - 2010 - Filozofija I Društvo 21 (3):217-220.
     
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  44.  19
    Introduction to Charles Honorton’s 1993 Firsthand Report on Felicia Parise and Rosemarie Pilkington’s 2013 Interview with Felicia Parise. [REVIEW]Stephen Braude - 2015 - Journal of Scientific Exploration 29 (1).
    Readers of the JSE will have recently been exposed to some data and issues regarding macro-PK (see, in particular, Volume 28, Number 2). And probably many JSE readers realize that some individuals seem to have demonstrated the ability to psychically influence, and in particular move, ordinary visible objects outside of the spiritist context characteristic of physical mediumship-that is, by means of one's own ostensible PK abilities and without invoking the assistance of deceased spirits to produce the effects. The Russian Nina (...)
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  45.  14
    Fractured Histories in Felicia Mihali’s Novels.Carmen Andrei - 2020 - Episteme 24:3-43.
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  46.  90
    Responses to “Goldilocks and Mrs. Ilych: A Critical Look at the 'Philosophy of Hospice'” (CQ Vol 6 No 3) by Felicia Ackerman. [REVIEW]Gretchen M. Brown - 1998 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 7 (2):206-207.
    The critical look at hospice care by Felicia Ackerman in Vol. 6 of the CambridgeQuarterly requires a response, since the author presents her view as having major implications for health policy. As a healthcare executive with over 25 years experience, and as a spokesperson for both my own program and others in the National Hospice Work Group, twelve of the nation's largest nonprofit hospices, I submit that her analysis of hospice care is naive. Ackerman's lack of practical understanding concerning (...)
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  47.  20
    Response to Eugenie Gatens-Robinson, Marcia K. Moen, Felicia Kruse.Marjorie C. Miller - 1991 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 27 (4):465 - 474.
  48.  16
    On Certification’s Real Role.Giles Scofield - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (11):5-6.
    I am grateful to Felicia Cohn for saying that my commentary “miss[ed] the real role credentialing has in professionalization”, and hope that I can rectify the situation by including...
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  49.  7
    An Introduction to Botany: In a Series of Familiar Letters, with Illustrative Engravings.Priscilla Wakefield - 2015 - Cambridge University Press.
    Coming from a prosperous London Quaker family, the author Priscilla Wakefield wrote educational books for children, and one work for adults, Reflections on the Present Condition of the Female Sex, also reissued in this series. This 1796 book on botany, a science which 'contributes to health of body and cheerfulness of disposition' but is difficult to study because of its Latin nomenclature and the cost of textbooks, offers a simple introduction for children through the medium of letters between sisters, as (...)
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  50.  14
    Writing about Nothing?Ingo Meyer - 2023 - Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift für Literaturwissenschaft Und Geistesgeschichte 97 (4):1065-1079.
    Opposing contemporary literature’s conventional rhetorical profile, along with its awaitable topics of social concern, the article focuses on more recent examples of ›Sprachkunst‹. Via an analysis of Rainald Goetz’s and Felicia Zeller’s shorter prose, a habit of ›writing about nothing‹ could remind us what literature is all about: language and form.
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