Results for 'Helen Wilcox'

967 found
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  1.  7
    ‘Ah Famous Citie’: Women, Writing, and Early Modern London.Helen Wilcox - 2010 - Feminist Review 96 (1):20-40.
    This article explores aspects of the textual relationship between women and early modern London by examining three verbal ‘snapshots’ of the city in works either written by women or focusing on women in their urban environment. The first text, Isabella Whitney's ‘Wyll and Testament’ (1573), addresses London from a rural perspective, treating the city as a fickle male to whom she wants to hand back all his treasures. The poem constructs a vivid and ironic social topography, giving a glimpse of (...)
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  2.  12
    Teaching Women: Feminism and English Studies (Ann Thompson and Helen Wilcox (Eds.)).Kathleen Thomson - 1993 - Paideusis: Journal of the Canadian Philosophy of Education Society 7 (1):43-46.
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  3. Lyn Frazier, Maria nella Carminati, Anne E. cook, Helen Majewski and Keith Rayner (university of massachusetts) semantic evaluation of syntactic structure: Evidence from eye movements, b53–b62 Andrea Weber (saarland university), Martine Grice (university of cologne) and Matthew W. Crocker (saarland university). [REVIEW]Tania Lombrozo, Susan Carey, Joana Cholin, Willem Jm Levelt, Niels O. Schiller, Rebecca J. Woods & Teresa Wilcox - 2006 - Cognition 99:385-387.
  4.  93
    Studying Human Behavior: How Scientists Investigate Aggression and Sexuality.Helen E. Longino - 2013 - University of Chicago Press.
    In Studying Human Behavior, Helen E. Longino enters into the complexities of human behavioral research, a domain still dominated by the age-old debate of “nature versus nurture.” Rather than supporting one side or another or attempting..
  5.  42
    The Habits of Racism: A Phenomenology of Racism and Racialized Embodiment.Helen Ngo - 2017 - Lexington Books.
    The Habits of Racism examines some of the complex questions raised by the phenomenon and experience of racism. Helen Ngo argues that the conceptual reworking of habit as bodily orientation helps to identify the more subtle but fundamental workings of racism, exploring what the lived experience of racism and racialization teaches about the nature of the embodied and socially-situated being.
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  6. Making a Difference: Essays on the Philosophy of Causation.Helen Beebee, Christopher Hitchcock & Huw Price (eds.) - 2017 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Making a Difference presents fifteen original essays on causation and counterfactuals by an international team of experts. Collectively, they represent the state of the art on these topics. The essays in this volume are inspired by the life and work of Peter Menzies, who made a difference in the lives of students, colleagues, and friends. Topics covered include: the semantics of counterfactuals, agency theories of causation, the context-sensitivity of causal claims, structural equation models, mechanisms, mental causation, causal exclusion argument, free (...)
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  7.  45
    Living with Data: Aligning Data Studies and Data Activism Through a Focus on Everyday Experiences of Datafication.Helen Kennedy - 2018 - Krisis 38 (1):18-30.
    In this paper I argue that there is an urgent need for more empirical research into everyday experiences of living with datafication, something that has not been prioritised in the emerging field of data studies to date. As a result of this absence, the knowledge produced within data studies is not as aligned to the aims of data activism as it might be. Data activism seeks to challenge existing, unequal data power relations and to mobilise data in order to enhance (...)
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  8.  32
    Navigating by the North Star: The Role of the ‘Ideal’ in John Stuart Mill's View of ‘Utopian’ Schemes and the Possibilities of Social Transformation.Helen McCabe - 2019 - Utilitas 31 (3):291-309.
    The role of the ‘ideal’ in political philosophy is currently much discussed. These debates cast useful light on Mill's self-designation as ‘under the general designation of Socialist’. Considering Mill's assessment of potential property-relations on the grounds of their desirability, feasibility and ‘accessibility’ (disambiguated as ‘immediate-availability’, ‘eventual-availability’ and ‘conceivable-availability’) shows us not only how desirable and feasible he thought ‘utopian’ socialist schemes were, but which options we should implement. This, coupled with Mill's belief that a socialist ideal should guide social reforms (...)
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  9.  36
    The Devaluation of Nursing: a Position Statement.Helen Allan, Verena Tschudin & Khim Horton - 2008 - Nursing Ethics 15 (4):549-556.
    How nursing as a profession is valued may be changing and needs to be explored and understood in a global context. We draw on data from two empirical studies to illustrate our argument. The first study explored the value of nursing globally, the second investigated the experiences of overseas trained nurses recruited to work in a migrant capacity in the UK health care workforce. The indications are that nurses perceive themselves as devalued socially, and that other health care professionals do (...)
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  10.  73
    Idealization and Problem Intuitions: Why No Possible Agent is Indisputably Ideal.Helen Yetter-Chappell - 2019 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 26 (9-10):270-279.
    This paper explores one way in which the meta-problem may shed light on existing debates about the hard problem (though not directly on the hard problem itself). I'll argue that the possibility of a suitable agent without problem intuitions would undercut the dialectical force of arguments against physicalism. Standard antiphysicalist arguments begin from intuitions about what's ideally conceivable, and argue from there to the falsity of physicalism. For these arguments to be dialectically effective, there must be a shared conception of (...)
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  11.  25
    A Qualitative Study of the Views of Patients With Medically Unexplained Symptoms on The BodyMind Approach®: Employing Embodied Methods and Arts Practices for Self-Management.Helen Payne & Susan Deanie Margaret Brooks - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    The arts provide openings for symbolic expression by engaging the sensory experience in the body they become a source of insight through embodied cognition and emotion, enabling meaning-making, and acting as a catalyst for change. This synthesis of sensation and enactive, embodied expression through movement and the arts is capitalized on in The BodyMind Approach®. It is integral to this biopsychosocial, innovative, unique intervention for people suffering medically unexplained symptoms applied in primary healthcare. The relevance of embodiment and arts practices (...)
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  12.  95
    What Do We Measure When We Measure Aggression?Helen E. Longino - 2001 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 32 (4):685-704.
    Biological research on aggression is increasingly consulted for possible answers to the social problems of crime and violence. This paper reviews some contrasting approaches to the biological understanding of behavior—behavioral genetic, social-environmental, physiological, developmental—as a prelude to arguing that approaches to aggression are beset by vagueness and imprecision in their definitions and disunity in their measurement strategies. This vagueness and disunity undermines attempts to compare and evaluate the different approaches empirically. Nevertheless, the definitions reveal commitments to particular metaphysical views concerning (...)
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  13. The chorus in Greek life and drama.Helen H. Bacon - forthcoming - Arion 3 (1).
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  14.  21
    From working collections to the World Germplasm Project: agricultural modernization and genetic conservation at the Rockefeller Foundation.Helen Anne Curry - 2017 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 39 (2):1-20.
    This paper charts the history of the Rockefeller Foundation’s participation in the collection and long-term preservation of genetic diversity in crop plants from the 1940s through the 1970s. In the decades following the launch of its agricultural program in Mexico in 1943, the Rockefeller Foundation figured prominently in the creation of world collections of key economic crops. Through the efforts of its administrators and staff, the foundation subsequently parlayed this experience into a leadership role in international efforts to conserve so-called (...)
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  15.  52
    Women in Philosophy.Helen Beebee - 2021 - The Philosophers' Magazine 93:50-56.
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  16. Some remarks about mass nouns and plurality.Helen M. Cartwright - 1975 - Synthese 31 (3-4):395 - 410.
  17.  24
    A Tale of Two Anteaters: Madrid 1776 and London 1853.Helen Cowie - 2022 - Centaurus 64 (3):591-614.
    In 1776, the first living giant anteater to reach Europe arrived in Madrid from Buenos Aires. It survived 6 months in the Real Sitio del Buen Retiro before being transferred to the newly founded Real Gabinete de Historia Natural. In 1853, 77 years later, a second anteater was brought to London by two German showmen and exhibited at a shop in Bloomsbury, where it was visited by the novelist Charles Dickens. The animal was subsequently purchased by the Zoological Society of (...)
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  18.  37
    What can complexity do for diabetes management? Linking theory to practice.Helen C. Cooper & Robert Geyer - 2009 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 15 (4):761-765.
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  19.  52
    Backtracking Counterfactuals and Agents’ Abilities.Helen Beebee - 2021 - In Marco Hausmann & Jörg Noller, Free Will: Historical and Analytic Perspectives. Springer Verlag. pp. 139-164.
    John Martin Fischer argues that a version of the Consequence Argument that invokes a principle he calls the ‘Principle of the Fixity of the Past and Laws’ is immune to the broadly Lewisian response that the compatibilist can make to the ‘conditional’ version of the argument. In his contribution to this volume, he argues—in part by appealing to backtracking counterfactuals—that denying PFPL leads to trouble, specifically, for the fixed-laws compatibilist. I argue on behalf of the fixed-laws compatibilist that his argument (...)
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  20.  78
    Foregrounding the Background.Helen Longino - 2016 - Philosophy of Science 83 (5):647-661.
    Practice-centric and theory-centric approaches in philosophy of science are described and contrasted. The contrast is developed through an examination of their different treatments of the underdetermination problem. The practice-centric approach is illustrated by a summary of comparative research on approaches in the biology of behavior. The practice-centric approach is defended against charges that it encourages skepticism regarding the sciences.
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  21.  16
    Playing with environmental stories in the news — good or bad practice?Helen Caple & Monika Bednarek - 2010 - Discourse and Communication 4 (1):5-31.
    The aim of this article is to analyse environmental reporting in the Australian broadsheet newspaper The Sydney Morning Herald. The focus is on a particular kind of new, multisemiotic news story genre that appears regularly in this newspaper, and that makes use of word-image play. Using a social semiotic framework and employing Appraisal theory, we analyse a corpus of 40 stories in terms of evaluative meanings in heading, image and caption, and interpret the significance of our findings in terms of (...)
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  22.  60
    The Limited Use View of the Duty to Save.Helen Frowe - 2021 - In David Sobel, Steven Wall & Peter Vallentyne, Oxford Studies in Political Philosophy Volume 7. Oxford University Press. pp. 66-99.
    This paper defends the Limited Use View of our duties to save. The Limited Use View holds that the duty to save is a duty to treat oneself, and perhaps one’s resources, as a means for preventing harm to others. But the duty to treat oneself as a means for the sake of others is limited. One need not treat oneself as a means when doing so is either very costly, or conflicts with one’s more stringent duties to others. This (...)
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  23.  80
    Evidence‐based medicine and epistemological imperialism: narrowing the divide between evidence and illness.Helen Crowther, Wendy Lipworth & Ian Kerridge - 2011 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 17 (5):868-872.
    Evidence-based medicine has been rapidly and widely adopted because it claims to provide a method for determining the safety and efficacy of medical therapies and public health interventions more generally. However, as others have noted, EBM may be riven through with cultural bias, both in the generation of evidence and in its translation. We suggest that technological and scientific advances in medicine accentuate and entrench these cultural biases, to the extent that they may invalidate the evidence we have about disease (...)
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  24.  78
    Intervening Agency and Civilian Liability.Helen Frowe - 2022 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 16 (1):181-191.
    Adam Hosein has recently proposed that a sufficient degree of intervening agency between a person’s contribution to an unjust lethal threat and the posing of that threat can exempt the contributor from liability to defensive killing. Hosein suggests that this will exempt most civilians from liability to lethal defence even if they contribute to unjust killings. I argue that intervening agency does not bear on a person’s responsibility for a threat, and does not exempt her from liability to defensive killing.
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  25.  27
    Altered neural connectivity in excitatory and inhibitory cortical circuits in autism.Basilis Zikopoulos & Helen Barbas - 2013 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  26.  65
    Philosophy of Science after the Social Turn.Helen Longino - 2006 - Vienna Circle Institute Yearbook 12:167-177.
  27.  53
    Motor awareness without perceptual awareness.Helen Johnson & Patrick Haggard - 2005 - Neuropsychologia. Special Issue 43 (2):227-237.
    The control of action has traditionally been described as "automatic". In particular, movement control may occur without conscious awareness, in contrast to normal visual perception. Studies on rapid visuomotor adjustment of reaching movements following a target shift have played a large part in introducing such distinctions. We suggest that previous studies of the relation between motor performance and perceptual awareness have confounded two separate dissociations. These are: (a) the distinction between motoric and perceptual representations, and (b) an orthogonal distinction between (...)
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  28.  64
    How to Carve Nature Across the Joints Without Abandoning Kripke-Putnam Semantics.Helen Beebee - 2013 - In Stephen Mumford & Matthew Tugby, Metaphysics and Science. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 141-163.
    ‘Natural kind essentialism’—here defined as the view that (i) the existence of natural kinds is a mind- and theory-independent matter, (ii) their essences are intrinsic, and (iii) they have a hierarchical structure—is commonly thought to be justified by appeal to Kripke–Putnam semantics, according to which propositions like ‘water is H20’ are necessary a posteriori. This chapter argues that the Kripke–Putnam semantics is in fact compatible with the denial of each of the three tenets of natural kind essentialism. The basic argument (...)
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  29.  19
    Ecological and Developmental Perspectives on Social Learning.Helen Elizabeth Davis, Alyssa N. Crittenden & Michelle Scalise Sugiyama - 2021 - Human Nature 32 (1):1-15.
    In this special issue of Human Nature we explore the possible adaptive links between teaching and learning during childhood, and we aim to expand the dialogue on the ways in which the social sciences, and in particular current anthropological research, may better inform our shifting understanding of how these processes vary in different social and ecological environments. Despite the cross-disciplinary trend toward incorporating more behavioral and cognitive data outside of postindustrial state societies, much of the published cross-cultural data is presented (...)
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  30. Flannery O'Connor's hylomorphic view of humanity.Helen R. Andretta & Adam J. Liska - 2005 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 28 (2):109.
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  31. Constitutional Abortion and Culture.Helen M. Alvaré - 2013 - Christian Bioethics 19 (2):133-149.
    The US Supreme Court’s abortion decisions over the past forty years have helped to shape cultural beliefs and practices concerning heterosexual relationships, marriage, and parenting. This is true both in the practical and in the legal senses. Practically speaking, definitively separating sex from childbearing, as only abortion can do (given how often contraception fails), inevitably changes the meaning of sex, and therefore of heterosexual relationships. Legally speaking, the Court’s influence was mediated significantly by its decision to locate the right of (...)
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  32.  10
    Managing as if faith mattered: Christian social principles in the modern organization.Helen J. Alford - 2001 - Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press. Edited by Michael Naughton.
    Making us whole : avoiding split personalities -- The purpose of business : working together for the common good -- The virtues : human development in the corporate community -- Job design : prudence and subsidiarity in operations -- Just wages : justice and the subjective dimension of work in human resources -- Corporate ownership : temperance and common use in finance -- Marketing communication and product development : courage and solidarity in marketing -- Faith, hope and charity : authentic (...)
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  33.  31
    Catholic Social Thought and United States Family Law.Helen Alvaré - 2010 - Journal of Catholic Social Thought 7 (2):315-336.
  34.  23
    A Distinguishing Skill Art, Language, and Complex Cognition.Helen Anderson - 2013 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 20 (3-4):3-4.
    Representational art, when it first emerges in the archaeological record between 30,000-40,000 years ago, is seen as a watershed. It is upheld as one of the defining characteristics that makes us 'human', argued as the 'gold standard'by which cultural modernity is measured and identified and intimately linked with the development of language. In the past decade it has been suggested that the emergence of representational art in prehistory and the concomitance of language are assumptions that may need reviewing. This enquiry (...)
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  35.  17
    Performing Philosophy of Education “Whitely”: Reliable Narration as Racialized Practice.Helen Marie Anderson - 2008 - Philosophy of Education 64:144-152.
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  36.  13
    In Praise of Prometheus. Humanism and Rationalism in Aeschylean Thought.Helen H. Bacon & Leon Golden - 1969 - American Journal of Philology 90 (3):374.
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  37.  29
    Preparing for what might happen: An episodic specificity induction impacts the generation of alternative future events.Helen G. Jing, Kevin P. Madore & Daniel L. Schacter - 2017 - Cognition 169:118-128.
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  38.  36
    Troubling practices of control: re‐visiting H annah A rendt's ideas of human action as praxis of the unpredictable.Helen Kohlen - 2015 - Nursing Philosophy 16 (3):161-166.
    In this article, Hannah Arendt's concept of action will be used to problematize current transformations of the health care sector and examine some responses by ethicists in light of those transformations. The sphere of human interaction that should typify health care work is identified as an action of unpredictable praxis in contrast to controllable procedures and techniques which increasingly take place in the health care sector.
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  39. Chappell on stuff and things.Helen Morris Cartwright - 1972 - Noûs 6 (4):369-377.
  40.  55
    The moral irrelevance of moral coercion.Helen Frowe - 2021 - Philosophical Studies 178 (11):3465-3482.
    An agent A morally coerces another agent, B, when A manipulates non-epistemological facts in order that B’s moral commitments enjoin B to do what A wants B to do, and B is motivated by these commitments. It is widely argued that forced choices arising from moral coercion are morally distinct from forced choices arising from moral duress or happenstance. On these accounts, the fact of being coerced bears on what an agent may do, the voluntariness of her actions, and/or her (...)
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  41.  35
    The Relation of Plana and Bravais to Theory of Correlation.Helen Walker - 1928 - Isis 10 (2):466-484.
  42.  31
    The Second Yearbook of Research and Statistical Methodology. Oscar Krisen Buros.Helen Walker - 1943 - Isis 34 (4):375-377.
  43. State of nature or Eden?: Thomas Hobbes and his contemporaries on the natural condition of human beings.Helen Thornton - 2005 - Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press.
    State of nature or Eden? -- Hobbes' state of nature as an account of the fall? -- Hobbes' own belief or unbelief -- The contemporary reaction to Leviathan -- Hobbes and commentaries on Genesis -- A note on method and chapter order -- Good and evil -- Hobbes on good and evil -- The 'seditious doctrines' of the schoolmen -- The contemporary reaction -- The scriptural account -- The state of nature as an account of the fall? -- Equality and (...)
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  44.  73
    Parent implemented early intervention for young children with autism spectrum disorder: a systematic review.Helen McConachie & Tim Diggle - 2007 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 13 (1):120-129.
  45.  1
    The Sea.Helen Palmer & Charlie Blake - 2025 - Angelaki 30 (1):1-1.
    This special issue of Angelaki sets out to curate a range of literary and philosophical perspectives on how the sea is currently thought, felt and theorized across the theoretical humanities. Drawi...
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  46.  19
    Beauty.Helen Huss Parkhurst - 1931 - International Journal of Ethics 41 (3):394-398.
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  47. Cathedral.Helen Huss Parkhurst - 1937 - Philosophical Review 46:681.
  48. Index.Helen Huss Parkhurst - 1919 - Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods 16 (26):722.
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  49.  23
    Platonic pluralism in esthetics.Helen Huss Parkhurst - 1919 - Philosophical Review 28 (5):466-478.
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  50. Recent logical realism..Helen Huss Parkhurst - 1917 - [Lancaster, Pa.,: The New Era printing co.].
     
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