Results for 'Jill S. Lash'

976 found
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  1.  8
    He knows you.Jill S. Lash - 2020 - Springville, UT: CFI, an imprint of Cedar Fort. Edited by Shari Darley Griffiths & Heidi Darley.
    God knows when we are feeling down, or happy, or need help apologizing, or when we are scared, but most importantly, he wants us to know that he loves us no matter how we feel.
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  2.  40
    Naming the Anthropocene.Jill S. Schneiderman - 2015 - philoSOPHIA: A Journal of Continental Feminism 5 (2):179-201.
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  3.  54
    Loss of emotional insight in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia or “frontal anosodiaphoria”.Mario F. Mendez & Jill S. Shapira - 2011 - Consciousness and Cognition 20 (4):1690-1696.
    Loss of insight is a prominent clinical manifestation of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia , but its characteristics are poorly understood. Twelve bvFTD patients were compared with 12 Alzheimer’s disease patients on a structured insight interview of cognitive insight and emotional insight . Compared to the AD patients, the bvFTD patients were less aware and less concerned about their disorder, and they had less appreciation of its effects on themselves and on others. After corrective feedback , the bvFTD patients were just (...)
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  4. Lived excellence in Aristotle's Constitution of Athens: why the encomium of Theramenes matters.Jill Frank & S. Sara Monson - 2009 - In Stephen G. Salkever, The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Greek Political Thought. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  5. Speech errors and the implicit learning of phonological sequences.S. Dell Gary, A. Warker Jill & Christine Whalen - 2009 - In Ezequiel Morsella, John A. Bargh & Peter M. Gollwitzer, Oxford handbook of human action. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  6.  65
    Perceptual Characterization of the Macronutrient Picture System for Food Image fMRI.Jill L. King, S. Nicole Fearnbach, Sreekrishna Ramakrishnapillai, Preetham Shankpal, Paula J. Geiselman, Corby K. Martin, Kori B. Murray, Jason L. Hicks, F. Joseph McClernon, John W. Apolzan & Owen T. Carmichael - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  7.  46
    Speech errors reflect the phonotactic constraints in recently spoken syllables, but not in recently heard syllables.Jill A. Warker, Ye Xu, Gary S. Dell & Cynthia Fisher - 2009 - Cognition 112 (1):81-96.
  8.  18
    Kalila wa Dimna, An Allegory of the Mongol Court: The Istanbul University Album.Marianna S. Simpson & Jill Sanchia Cowen - 1991 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 111 (2):401.
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  9.  19
    Competing commitments in clinical trials.Lorna Simon Charles W. Lidz, Paul S. Appelbaum, Steven Joffe, Karen Albert, Jill Rosenbaum - 2009 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 31 (5):1.
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  10. Kant's 'Critique of Pure Reason': An Introduction.Jill Vance Buroker - 2006 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In this introductory textbook to Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, Jill Vance Buroker explains the role of this first Critique in Kant's Critical project and offers a line-by-line reading of the major arguments in the text. She situates Kant's views in relation both to his predecessors and to contemporary debates, explaining his Critical philosophy as a response to the failure of rationalism and the challenge of skepticism. Paying special attention to Kant's notoriously difficult vocabulary, she explains the strengths and (...)
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  11.  43
    Kant's Transcendental Idealism.Jill Vance Buroker - 1986 - Noûs 20 (4):577.
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  12. Remembering Air in Schilingi's Generative Music: Heideggerian Reflections on Argo and Terra.Jill Drouillard - 2022 - In Casey Rentmeester & Jeff R. Warren, Heidegger and Music. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 271-287.
    Jacopo Baboni Schilingi’s interactive musical compositions Argo and Terra play with time, space, and material sound to capture a symbiotic relationship between technology and the most intimate process fundamental to life: breathing. Argo reacts to the artist’s respiration in “real time,” generating an “infinite” sequence of diverse musical arrangements that question the relation between the human body and technology and contingency and programming. Noting the egotistical tendencies of artists, Schilingi likens himself to Odysseus, the master of Argo, the name given (...)
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  13. History of women's liberation movements in Britain: a reflective personal history.Jill Radford - 1994 - In Gabriele Griffin, Stirring it: challenges for feminism. Bristol, PA.: Taylor & Francis. pp. 40--58.
  14.  29
    Listen, Anne Frank.Marjorie Agosin & S. Jill Levine - 1985 - Feminist Studies 11 (3):594.
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  15.  94
    Physics, Structure, and Reality.Jill North - 2021 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Jill North offers answers to questions at the heart of the project of interpreting physics. How do we figure out the nature of the world from a mathematically formulated theory? What do we infer about the world when a physical theory can be mathematically formulated in different ways? The notion of structure is crucial to North's answers.
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  16.  45
    Shame, Political Accountability, and the Ethical Life of Politics: Critical Exchange on Jill Locke’s Democracy and the Death of Shame and Mark E. Button’s Political Vices.Jill Locke & Mark E. Button - 2019 - Political Theory 47 (3):391-408.
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  17.  36
    Francesco filelfo's lost letter de ideis.Jill Kraye - 1979 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 42 (1):236-249.
  18. Women’s Right to Autonomy and Identity in European Human Rights Law: Manifesting One’s Religion.Jill Marshall - 2008 - Res Publica 14 (3):177-192.
    Freedom of religious expression is to many a fundamental element of their identity. Yet the jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights on the Islamic headscarf issue does not refer to autonomy and identity rights of the individual women claimants. The case law focuses on Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which provides a legal human right to freedom of religious expression. The way that provision is interpreted is critically contrasted here with the right to personal (...)
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  19.  12
    A Consideration of Bogdan's "A Taxonomy of Responses and Respondents to Literature''.Jill Paton Walsh - 1989 - Paideusis: Journal of the Canadian Philosophy of Education Society 3 (1):5-10.
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  20.  30
    Young children’s part-whole acquisition and transfer of knowledge of a fact matrix on cats.Jill Schanbacher, Carol Martin-Davidson, Albert E. Goss & Bernard Davidson - 1979 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 14 (4):311-314.
  21.  34
    Performativity or Discourse? An Interview with John Searle.Scott Lash - 2015 - Theory, Culture and Society 32 (3):135-147.
    Scott Lash interviews John Searle, one of the foremost contemporary philosophers. Over the course of the conversation, Searle discusses his research into performativity, language and intentionality, the question of information and his account of social ontology. The conversation initially deals with the early influence of John Austin and Ludwig Wittgenstein as well as Searle's relationship to phenomenology and the rest of the philosophical tradition. This offers a conceptual reconstruction of Searle’s work from multiple perspectives. Crucial concepts are highlighted such (...)
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  22.  25
    The Wanderer’s Promise: Nietzsche’s Philosophy of the “Nearest Things”.Jill Marsden - 2019 - Nietzsche Studien 48 (1):117-133.
    In this essay I explore what might be meant by the “nearest things” in Nietzsche’s philosophy. In the first part of the essay I contextualise Nietzsche’s concerns with “the closest things of all” in the “free spirit” period (1878–1882) and raise the question of how knowledge of them is possible. This idea is developed in the second part of the paper in relation to the claim that dominant (Platonic/christian) habits of thought impede our understanding of the body. In the third (...)
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  23.  42
    Gödel's proof and the liar paradox.Jill Humphries - 1979 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 20 (3):535-544.
  24.  48
    “You ha’done me a charitable office”: Autolycus and the Economics of Festivity in The Winter’s Tale.Jill Phillips Ingram - 2012 - Renascence 65 (1):63-74.
    Considering what social and economic historians have argued about the reinforcement of societal obligations in English festival culture, still functional in a Protestant context, this essay looks at how a specific Shakespearean character exemplifies the normative interpenetration of the self-interested and the communal. Festivals foster a religious sensibility intertwining, in complex ways, spiritual with economic gain. Through his part within the atmosphere of festivity, reconciliation, and salvation at the end of The Winter’s Tale, Autolycus proves the symbiosis of commerce and (...)
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  25.  92
    Characterizing Skepticism’s Import.Jill Rusin - 2012 - International Journal for the Study of Skepticism 2 (2):99-114.
    This paper discusses a common contemporary characterization of skepticism and skeptical arguments-that their real importance is instrumental, that they “drive progress in philosophy.“ I explore two possible contrasts to the idea that skepticism's significance is thus wholly methodological. First, I recall for the reader a range of views that can be understood as `truth in skepticism' views. These concessive views are those most clearly at odds with the idea that skepticism is false, but instrumentally valuable. Considering the contributions of such (...)
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  26.  14
    Hoping against hope or Abraham's dilemma.Nicholas Lash - 1994 - Modern Theology 10 (3):233-246.
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  27.  26
    Unsettling Democracy – Honig's Emergency Politics.Jill Stauffer - forthcoming - Theory and Event 15 (3).
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  28.  15
    From Greek into Italian: Giulio Ballino's Translation of the Pseudo-Aristotelian On the Virtues and Vices.Jill Kraye - 2019 - Rivista di Storia Della Filosofia 2:361-376.
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  29.  73
    A Difficulty in Descartes’s Notion of the Infinite in the Third Meditation.Jill LeBlanc - 1998 - International Philosophical Quarterly 38 (3):275-283.
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  30.  64
    On Kant’s Proof of the Existence of Material Objects.Jill Vance Buroker - 1989 - Proceedings of the Sixth International Kant Congress 2 (1):183-197.
  31.  62
    Danaher’s Ethical Behaviourism: An Adequate Guide to Assessing the Moral Status of a Robot?Jilles Smids - 2020 - Science and Engineering Ethics 26 (5):2849-2866.
    This paper critically assesses John Danaher’s ‘ethical behaviourism’, a theory on how the moral status of robots should be determined. The basic idea of this theory is that a robot’s moral status is determined decisively on the basis of its observable behaviour. If it behaves sufficiently similar to some entity that has moral status, such as a human or an animal, then we should ascribe the same moral status to the robot as we do to this human or animal. The (...)
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  32. Editor's introduction.Jill Gordon - 2022 - In Hearing, sound, and the auditory in ancient Greece. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.
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  33. Editor's introduction.Jill Gordon - 2022 - In Hearing, sound, and the auditory in ancient Greece. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press.
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  34. Dinny Gordon, Intellectual: Anne Emery's Postwar Junior Fiction and Girls' Intellectual Culture.Jill Anderson - 2014 - Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth 7 (2):243-266.
    In her Dinny Gordon series (1958–1965), junior novelist Anne Emery’s heroine manifests intellectual desire, a passionate engagement in the life of the mind along with the desire to connect with like-minded others. Within a genre which focused on socialization and dating, in Dinny, Emery normalizes a studious, inner-directed, yet feminine heroine, passionate about ancient history rather than football captains. Emery’s endorsement of the pleasure Dinny takes in intellectual work, and the friends and boyfriends Dinny collects, challenge stereotypes of intellectual girls (...)
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  35.  34
    Plato's Erotic World: From Cosmic Origins to Human Death.Jill Gordon - 2012 - Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press.
    Plato's entire fictive world is permeated with philosophical concern for Eros, well beyond the so-called erotic dialogues. Several metaphysical, epistemological and cosmological conversations - Timaeus, Cratylus, Parmenides, Theaetetus and Phaedo - demonstrate that Eros lies at the root of the human condition and that properly guided Eros is the essence of a life well lived. This book presents a holistic vision of Eros, beginning with the presence of Eros at the origin of the cosmos and the human soul, surveying four (...)
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  36.  8
    Jane Gallop seminar papers: proceedings of the Jane Gallop seminar and public lecture 'The Teacher's Breasts' held in 1993 by the Humanities Research Centre.Jill Julius Matthews (ed.) - 1994 - Canberra: The Centre, the Australian National University.
  37.  7
    Not yet the Last.Dominic Lash - 2024 - Angelaki 29 (5):81-96.
    The final paragraph of the original 1971 edition of Stanley Cavell’s book The World Viewed has often been read too hastily; it is, as a result, frequently misunderstood. This article consists of a close reading of this one paragraph, correcting some of these misrepresentations and arguing that the juxtapositions of ideas that it presents express persistent themes in Cavell’s work in ways that are worthy of minute attention. The article attempts to show how examining the paragraph’s form and content can (...)
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  38.  10
    Et Amicorum: essays on Renaissance humanism and philosophy in honour of Jill Kraye.Jill Kraye & Anthony Ossa-Richardson (eds.) - 2017 - Boston: Brill.
    Inspired by Jill Kraye's many contributions to European intellectual history, this volume presents a diverse collection of studies in Renaissance philosophy and humanism by leading experts in the field.
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  39.  16
    Transformations and traditions: Augustine's teaching on the transformation of Christians in the liturgy and the use of these teachings in the sixteenth century.[Paper delivered to the Conference'Prayer and Spirituality in the Early Church'(1996: Melbourne)].Jill Raitt - 1997 - The Australasian Catholic Record 74 (2):212.
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  40.  23
    Turning Toward Philosophy: Literary Device and Dramatic Structure in Plato's Dialogues.Jill Gordon - 1999 - Pennsylvania State University Press.
    Acknowledging the powerful impact that Plato's dialogues have had on readers, Jill Gordon shows how the literary techniques Plato used function philosophically to engage readers in doing philosophy and attracting them toward the philosophical life. The picture of philosophical activity emerging from the dialogues, as thus interpreted, is a complex process involving vision, insight, and emotion basic to the human condition rather than a resort to pure reason as an escape from it. Since the literary features of Plato's writing (...)
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  41.  15
    Financial accountants' perceptions of management's ethical standards.M. D. Jill - 2001 - Journal of Business Ethics 31 (3):233-244.
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  42. on Asymmetry In Kant's Doctrine Of Moral Worth.Jill Hernandez - 2006 - Florida Philosophical Review 6 (1):43-52.
    That an act can have moral worth even if the end of the action is not realized seems asymmetrical with Kant’s dual notion that acts cannot have moral worth if the maxim for action is impermissible. Recent scholarship contends that fixing the asymmetry will allow impermissible acts done from a morally worthy motive to have moral worth. I argue against the asymmetry thesis and contend that Kant cannot consistently maintain a class of impermissible, morally worthy action and the view that (...)
     
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  43.  63
    Cartesian Logic: An Essay on Descartes's Conception of Inference.Jill Vance Buroker - 1990 - Philosophical Books 31 (3):143-144.
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  44. Escape from the subject : Heidegger's Das man and being-in-the-world.Jill Hargis - 2007 - In Mark Bevir, Jill Hargis & Sara Rushing, Histories of Postmodernism. Routledge.
     
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  45.  54
    Space and Incongruence: The Origin of Kant's Idealism.Jill Vance Buroker - 1983 - Philosophy of Science 50 (2):346-348.
  46.  25
    Tragedy, education, democracy: J. Peter Euben’s Political Theory.Jill Frank, Roxanne Euben, P. J. Brendese, Karen Bassi, Jason Frank, Joel Alden Schlosser, Arlene Saxonhouse & Tracy Strong - 2020 - Contemporary Political Theory 19 (2):306-340.
  47.  35
    Men’s involvement in family planning in rural bangladesh.Jill Clark, Kathryn M. Yount & Roger Rochat - 2008 - Journal of Biosocial Science 40 (6):815-840.
  48. Implicit cognition and the social unconscious.Robert S. Steele & Jill G. Morawski - 2002 - Theory and Psychology 12 (1):37-54.
  49.  54
    Goals and Learning in Microworlds.Craig S. Miller, Jill Fain Lehman & Kenneth R. Koedinger - 1999 - Cognitive Science 23 (3):305-336.
    We explored the consequences for learning through interaction with an educational microworld called Electric Field Hockey (EFH). Like many microworlds, EFH is intended to help students develop a qualitative understanding of the target domain, in this case, the physics of electrical interactions. Through the development and use of a computer model that learns to play EFH, we analyzed the knowledge the model acquired as it applied the game‐oriented strategies we observed physics students using. Through learning‐by‐doing on the standard sequence of (...)
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  50.  98
    Black Bodies Matter: A Reading of Ta-Nehisi Coates's Between the World and Me.Jill Gordon - 2017 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 38 (1):199-221.
    Some scholars read the black body as constructed by white consciousness or perceptions; Coates indicates, to the contrary, that violence against the black body and threats to black embodiment ground and make possible particular ideations of race and (white) American self-concepts. Coates takes an implicitly anti-Hegelian, anti-DuBoisian stance against any spirit or history that might redeem or affirm the black body as the grounding of black experience. Like repeated speech-acts, bodily violence is “world creating.” Although material treatment of bodies and (...)
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