Results for 'James J. Cappel'

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  1.  57
    A study of individuals' ethical beliefs and perceptions of electronic mail privacy.James J. Cappel - 1995 - Journal of Business Ethics 14 (10):819 - 827.
    While electronic mail has enjoyed rapid growth in the workplace, many companies have failed to establish clear expectations among employees about their e-mail privacy rights. This has resulted in controversy and even lawsuits against employers where employees later learned that management personnel monitored or read their electronic communications. It has been speculated that most employees underestimate the legal right of their employer to engage in e-mail monitoring activities. However, this issue has been virtually unexplored from a research perspective. Consequently, the (...)
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  2.  59
    Ethical decision making: A comparison of computer- supported and face-to-face group. [REVIEW]James J. Cappel & John C. Windsor - 2000 - Journal of Business Ethics 28 (2):95 - 107.
    This study compares computer-supported groups, i.e., groups using group support systems (GSS), and face-to-face groups using ethical decision-making tasks. A laboratory experiment was conducted using five-person groups of information systems professionals. Face-to-face (FTF) and GSS groups were compared in terms of their decision outcomes and group members' reactions. The results revealed that computer-supported and face-to-face groups showed no significant difference in terms of the decision outcomes of choice shift and decision polarity. However, FTF groups reached their decisions more quickly and (...)
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  3. James J. Gibson.James J. Gibson - 1967 - In . pp. 125-143.
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  4. Patricia Harkin James J. Sosnoski.James J. Sosnoski - forthcoming - Intertexts: Reading Pedagogy in College Writing Classrooms.
     
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  5. The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception: Classic Edition.James J. Gibson - 1979 - Houghton Mifflin.
    This is a book about how we see: the environment around us (its surfaces, their layout, and their colors and textures); where we are in the environment; whether or not we are moving and, if we are, where we are going; what things are good for; how to do things (to thread a needle or drive an automobile); or why things look as they do.The basic assumption is that vision depends on the eye which is connected to the brain. The (...)
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  6.  12
    Teaching Psychology and the Socratic Method: Real Knowledge in a Virtual Age.James J. Dillon - 2016 - New York: Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan.
    This book presents a lively and accessible way to use the ancient figure of Socrates to teach modern psychology that avoids the didactic lecture and sterile textbook. In the online age, is a living teacher even needed? What can college students learn face-to-face from a teacher they cannot learn anywhere else? The answer is what most teachers already seek to do: help students think critically, clearly define concepts, logically reason from premises to conclusions, engage in thoughtful and persuasive communication, and (...)
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  7. An Ecological Theory of Perception.James J. Gibson - 1979 - Houghton Miflin.
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  8. Emotion regulation: Conceptual foundations.James J. Gross & Ross A. Thompson (eds.) - 2007
  9.  11
    Scottish Philosophy in America.James J. S. Foster (ed.) - 2012 - Imprint Academic.
    The Scottish Enlightenment provided the fledgling United States of America and its emerging universities with a philosophical orientation. For a hundred years or more, Scottish philosophers were both taught and emulated by professors at Princeton, Harvard and Yale, as well as newly founded colleges stretching from Rhode Island to Texas. This volume in the Library of Scottish Philosophy demonstrates the remarkable extent of this philosophical influence. Selections from William Smith, John Witherspoon, Samuel Stanhope Smith, Archibald Alexander, Alexander Campbell, W.E. Channing, (...)
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  10.  29
    Kant: Religion Within the Boundaries of Mere Reason: A Commentary.James J. DiCenso - 2012 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Kant's Religion within the Boundaries of Mere Reason is one of the great modern examinations of religion's meaning, function and impact on human affairs. In this volume, the first complete English-language commentary on the work, James J. DiCenso explains the historical context in which the book appeared, including the importance of Kant's conflict with state censorship. He shows how the Religion addresses crucial Kantian themes such as the relationship between freedom and morality, the human propensity to evil, the status (...)
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  11. Emotion Regulation: Past, Present, Future.James J. Gross - 1999 - Cognition and Emotion 13 (5):551-573.
    Modern emotion theories emphasise the adaptive value of emotions. Emotions are by no means always helpful, however. They often must be regulated. The study of emotion regulation has its origins in the psychoanalytic and stress and coping traditions. Recently, increased interest in emotion regulation has led to crucial boundary ambiguities that now threaten progress in this domain. It is argued that distinctions need to be made between (1) regulation of emotion and regulation by emotion; (2) emotion regulation in self and (...)
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  12. Emotion elicitation using films.James J. Gross & Robert W. Levenson - 1995 - Cognition and Emotion 9 (1):87-108.
  13. The Perception Of The Visual World.James J. Gibson - 1950 - Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  14.  12
    Sensations of history: animation and new media art.James J. Hodge - 2019 - Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
    In Sensations of History, James J. Hodge argues that animation in new media art transforms historical experience in the digital age. Combining close textual analysis of experimental new media artworks with discussion of key phenomenological texts, Sensations of History argues for the broad critical significance of animation as we shift from analog to digital technologies. Hodge looks closely at animation aesthetics, which allow for a clear grasp of the ways digital technologies transform our sense of historical experience.
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  15.  37
    The future of the university: A perspective from the Oort cloud.James J. Duderstadt - 2012 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 79 (3):579-600.
  16.  12
    Violence Beyond the Proximal Subjective: Theorizing an addendum of distal causality.James J. Brittain - 2017 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 11 (1).
    Not a day passes over society where the immediate expressions of violence are not widely propagated and subsequently witnessed through cultural or political mediums. Such depictions, accounts, scenes, have been uniquely framed as a lexis of ‘subjective violence’; reactions or evident illustrations of descent in physical form. Amidst their over-representation is a lapse of measured attention given to the pretext amounting to said outbursts. Seldom is the objective, if at all, contextualized as a catalytic toward the subjective. The following work (...)
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  17.  10
    From human-racism to personhood.James J. Hughes - 2007 - In Paul Kurtz & David Richard Koepsell (eds.), Science and ethics: can science help us make wise moral judgments? Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books. pp. 24--4.
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  18.  2
    Baron Friedrich von Hügel's philosophy of religion.James J. Kelly - 1983 - Leuven: Uitgeverij Peeters.
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  19. Introduction.James J. Murphy - 1992 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 25.
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  20. Analogy and" kinds" of things.James J. Heaney - 1971 - The Thomist 35 (2):291-304.
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  21.  15
    Humanism and Anti-Humanism.James J. Valone - 1986 - Human Studies 14 (1):67-79.
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  22.  20
    Evolution and the sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).James J. McKenna & Sarah Mosko - 1990 - Human Nature 1 (3):291-330.
    This paper extends the evolutionary and developmental research model for SIDS presented in previous articles (McKenna 1990a, 1990b). Data from variety of fields were used to show why we should expect human infants to be physiologically responsive in a beneficial way to parental contact, one form of which is parent-infant co-sleeping. It was suggested that on-going sensory exchanges (touch, movement, smell, temperature, etc.) between co-sleeping parent-infant pairs might diminish the chances of an infantile cardiac-respiratory crisis (such as those suspected to (...)
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  23.  54
    Econometric Causality.James J. Heckman - 2008 - .
    Founded in 1920, the NBER is a private, non-profit, non-partisan organization dedicated to conducting economic research and to disseminating research findings among academics, public policy makers, and business professionals.
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  24. Events are perceivable but time is not.James J. Gibson - 1975 - In J. T. Fraser & Nathaniel M. Lawrence (eds.), The Study of Time II: Proceedings of the Second Conference of the International Society for the Study of Time Lake Yamanaka-Japan. Springer Verlag. pp. 295-301.
    For centuries psychologists have been trying to explain how a man or an animal could perceive space. They have thought of space as having three dimensions and the difficulty was how an observer could see the third dimension. For depth, as Bishop Berkeley asserted at the outset of the New Theory of Vision (1709), “is a line endwise to the eye which projects only one point in the fund of the eye.” Space was its dimensions. It was empty save for (...)
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  25. Evolution and sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS).James J. McKenna - 1990 - Human Nature 1 (2):145-177.
    This paper and its subsequent parts (Part II and Part III) build on an earlier publication (McKenna 1986). They suggest that important clinical data on the relationship between infantile constitutional deficits and microenvironmental factors relevant to SIDS can be acquired by examining the physiological regulatory effects (well documented among nonhuman primates) that parents assert on their infants when they sleep together.I attempt to show why access to parental sensory cues (movement, touch, smell, sound) that induce arousals in infants while they (...)
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  26. Prospective and practicing secondary school science teachers' knowledge and beliefs about the philosophy of science.James J. Gallagher - 1991 - Science Education 75 (1):121-133.
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  27. The challenge to psychological theorists.James J. Jenkins - 1968 - In T. Dixon & Deryck Horton (eds.), Verbal Behavior and General Behavior Theory. Prentice-Hall.
  28.  50
    The Senses Considered as Perceptual Systems.Charles K. West & James J. Gibson - 1969 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 3 (1):142.
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  29. Teacher management and student engagement in high school science.James J. Gallagher & Kenneth Tobin - 1987 - Science Education 71 (4):535-555.
     
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  30.  12
    Thomas Jefferson and Philosophy: Essays on the Philosophical Cast of Jefferson's Writings.James J. Carpenter, Garrett Ward Sheldon, Richard E. Dixon, Paul B. Thompson, Derek H. Davis, William Merkel, Richard Guy Wilson & M. Andrew Holowchak (eds.) - 2013 - Lexington Books.
    Thomas Jefferson and Philosophy: Essays on the Philosophical Cast of Jefferson’s Writings is a collection of essays on topics that relate to philosophical aspects of Jefferson’s thinking over the years. Much historical insight is given to ground the various philosophical strands in Jefferson’s thought and writing on topics such as political philosophy, moral philosophy, slavery, republicanism, wall of separation, liberty, educational philosophy, and architecture.
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  31.  29
    Vergil and the Euphrates revisited.James J. Clauss - 1988 - American Journal of Philology 109 (3).
  32. Rhetoric in the Middle Ages. A History of Rhetorical Theory from St. Augustine to the Renaissance.James J. Murphy - 1976 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 9 (3):181-185.
  33. Cognition and Emotion Lecture at the 2010 SPSP Emotion Preconference.James J. Gross, Gal Sheppes & Heather L. Urry - 2011 - Cognition and Emotion 25 (5):765-781.
    One of the most fundamental distinctions in the field of emotion is the distinction between emotion generation and emotion regulation. This distinction fits comfortably with folk theories, which view emotions as passions that arise unbidden and then must be controlled. But is it really helpful to distinguish between emotion generation and emotion regulation? In this article, we begin by offering working definitions of emotion generation and emotion regulation. We argue that in some circumstances, the distinction between emotion generation and emotion (...)
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  34.  20
    Ross and the Ambiguity of Prima Facie Duty.James J. Brummer - 2002 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 19 (4):401 - 422.
  35. A Synoptic History of Classical Rhetoric.James J. Murphy - 1973 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 6 (1):61-62.
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  36.  13
    The future of higher education in the knowledgedriven global economy of the twenty-first century.James J. Duderstadt - 2005 - In Glen Alan Jones, Patricia Louise McCarney & Michael L. Skolnik (eds.), Creating knowledge, strengthening nations: the changing role of higher education. Buffalo: University of Toronto Press. pp. 81--97.
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  37.  18
    The Humanities in Two-Year Colleges: Essay ReviewA Review of the StudentsReviewing Curriculum and InstructionThe Faculty in Review.James J. Zigerell - 1976 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 10 (3/4):217.
  38.  16
    The Boundaries of Humanity: Humans, Animals, Machines.James J. Sheehan & Morton Sosna (eds.) - 1991 - University of California Press.
    To the age-old debate over what it means to be human, the relatively new fields of sociobiology and artificial intelligence bring new, if not necessarily compatible, insights. What have these two fields in common? Have they affected the way we define humanity? These and other timely questions are addressed with colorful individuality by the authors of _The Boundaries of Humanity_. Leading researchers in both sociobiology and artificial intelligence combine their reflections with those of philosophers, historians, and social scientists, while the (...)
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  39.  25
    Speed-accuracy trade-off with different types of stimuli.James J. Lyons & George E. Briggs - 1971 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 91 (1):115.
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  40.  8
    Nietzsche's Aesthetic Turn: Reading Nietzsche After Heidegger, Deleuze, Derrida.James J. Winchester - 1994 - State University of New York Press.
    This clearly written book, intended for both specialists and nonspecialists, focuses on Nietzsche's later writings, where he appears unsystematic and indifferent to questions of truth.
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  41.  20
    Buridan and Seneca.James J. Walsh - 1966 - Journal of the History of Ideas 27 (1):23.
  42.  34
    Some Relationships between Gerald Odo's and John Buridan's Commentaries on Aristotle's Ethics.James J. Walsh - 1976 - Franciscan Studies 35 (1):237-275.
  43. Peter Johnson, Frames of Deceit: A Study of the Loss and Recovery of Public and Private Trust Reviewed by.James J. Chriss - 1994 - Philosophy in Review 14 (4):269-272.
     
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  44. A Delicate Foot on the Well-Worn Threshold: Paradoxical Imagery in Catullus 68b.James J. Clauss - 1995 - American Journal of Philology 116 (2).
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  45. Introduction: International Medical Informatics Association Working Group 6 and the 2005 Rome Conference.James J. Cimino & Barry Smith - 2006 - Journal of Biomedical Informatics 39 (3):249-251.
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  46. Jacobi and Kant : freedom, reason, faith.James J. DiCenso - 2023 - In Alexander J. B. Hampton (ed.), Friedrich Jacobi and the end of the enlightenment: religion, philosophy, and reason at the crux of modernity. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  47.  4
    The joy of duty: human happiness and ethical obligation.James J. Dillon - 2022 - Bradford: Ethics Press.
    A corporate executive is miserable and seeks the help of a psychotherapist. A college student is unhappy in her current major and goes to her academic advisor. A married couple struggles with discord and seeks the help of a licensed counsellor. In each case, the diagnosis and prescription will likely be the same: you are miserable because you are not doing what you want. Your path to happiness thus lies in figuring out what you enjoy doing, coming up with a (...)
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  48. A Theory of Direct Visual Perception, and from The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception.James J. Gibson - 1996 - In Enrique Villanueva (ed.), Perception. Ridgeview Pub. Co. pp. 158.
  49.  21
    Thomas Reid on religion.James J. S. Foster (ed.) - 2017 - Exeter, UK: Imprint Academic.
    This volume -- a companion to Thomas Reid: Selected Philosophical Writings (2012) -- makes available material from Thomas Reid's autograph manuscripts and student notes of his lectures. It includes an introductory essay by Nicholas Wolterstorff.
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  50. Studying perceptual phenomena.James J. Gibson - 1948 - In . pp. 158-188.
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