Results for 'Michelle Dicinoski'

977 found
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  1.  59
    Is Environmental Governance Substantive or Symbolic? An Empirical Investigation.Michelle Rodrigue, Michel Magnan & Charles H. Cho - 2013 - Journal of Business Ethics 114 (1):107-129.
    The emergence of environmental governance practices raises a fundamental question as to whether they are substantive or symbolic. Toward that end, we analyze the relationship between a firm’s environmental governance and its environmental management as reflected in its ultimate outcome, environmental performance. We posit that substantive practices would bring changes in organizations, most notably in terms of improved environmental performance, whereas symbolic practices would portray organizations as environmentally committed without making meaningful changes to their operations. Focusing on a sample of (...)
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  2. Inter)Disciplinary Transgressions : Feminism, Communication, and Critical Interdisciplinarity.Michelle Phillips Buchberger - 2018 - In Jennifer C. Dunn & Jimmie Manning, Transgressing feminist theory and discourse: advancing conversations across disciplines. New York: Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group.
     
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  3.  28
    Pour une épistémologie de la notion de qualité de la vie.Michelle Durand - 1980 - Philosophica 26.
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  4.  10
    Foreword.Michelle Forrest - 2012 - Paideusis: Journal of the Canadian Philosophy of Education Society 20 (1):1-1.
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  5.  51
    The Given: Experience and its Content.Michelle Montague - 2016 - Oxford: Oxford University Press UK.
    What is given to us in conscious experience? The Given is an attempt to answer this question and in this way contribute to a general theory of mental content. The content of conscious experience is understood to be absolutely everything that is given to one, experientially, in the having of an experience. Michelle Montague focuses on the analysis of conscious perception, conscious emotion, and conscious thought, and deploys three fundamental notions in addition to the fundamental notion of content: the (...)
  6.  27
    Is There a Duty to Use Moral Neurointerventions?Michelle Ciurria - 2019 - Topoi 38 (1):37-47.
    Do we have a duty to use moral neurointerventions to correct deficits in our moral psychology? On their surface, these technologies appear to pose worrisome risks to valuable dimensions of the self, and these risks could conceivably weigh against any prima facie moral duty we have to use these technologies. Focquaert and Schermer :139–151, 2015) argue that neurointerventions pose special risks to the self because they operate passively on the subject’s brain, without her active participation, unlike ‘active’ interventions. Some neurointerventions, (...)
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  7.  50
    The Meaning of Situationism in advance.Michelle Ciurria - forthcoming - Teaching Ethics.
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  8. Alimentação e literatura : Eça de Queiroz e a cozinha burguesa d'A cidade e as serras.Michelle Medeiros & Alex Galeno - 2013 - In Maria da Conceição de Almeida Moura & Alex Galeno, Ensaios de complexidade 3. Natal: EDUFRN, Editora da Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte.
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  9.  16
    Post-Anthropocentric Social Work: Critical Posthuman and New Materialist Perspectives.Michelle Newcomb - 2021 - Ethics and Social Welfare 15 (4):444-445.
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  10.  9
    Interment: re-framing the death of the Red Location Museum building (2006 - 2013).Michelle Smith - 2016 - Kronos 1 (1):155-173.
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  11. Kant's Doctrine of Transcendental Illusion.Michelle Grier - 2001 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This major study of Kant provides a detailed examination of the development and function of the doctrine of transcendental illusion in his theoretical philosophy. The author shows that a theory of 'illusion' plays a central role in Kant's arguments about metaphysical speculation and scientific theory. Indeed, she argues that we cannot understand Kant unless we take seriously his claim that the mind inevitably acts in accordance with ideas and principles that are 'illusory'. Taking this claim seriously, we can make much (...)
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  12. (1 other version)Algorithmic fairness in mortgage lending: from absolute conditions to relational trade-offs.Michelle Seng Ah Lee & Luciano Floridi - 2020 - Minds and Machines 31 (1):165-191.
    To address the rising concern that algorithmic decision-making may reinforce discriminatory biases, researchers have proposed many notions of fairness and corresponding mathematical formalizations. Each of these notions is often presented as a one-size-fits-all, absolute condition; however, in reality, the practical and ethical trade-offs are unavoidable and more complex. We introduce a new approach that considers fairness—not as a binary, absolute mathematical condition—but rather, as a relational notion in comparison to alternative decisionmaking processes. Using US mortgage lending as an example use (...)
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  13.  87
    On the Individual Essences of Moments of Time.Michelle Beer - 2007 - Philo 10 (1):69-71.
    In “Can the New Tenseless Theory of Time be Saved by Individual Essences?” Smith objects to the co-reporting theory on the groundsthat, since it grants that every time “now” is tokened it expresses a unique individual essence of that time which can be apprehended only at that time, the co-reporting theory is consistent with an A-theory of time that holds that each moment of time acquires its own particular property of presentness. I argue that Smith’s conclusion does not follow, since (...)
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  14.  8
    Re-articulating the God-Experience: The Archetypal Significance of Iamblichus and Caputo.Michelle Blohm - 2011 - Quaestiones Disputatae 2 (1-2):277-287.
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  15.  32
    Performing the ‘lifeworld’ in public education campaigns.Michelle M. Lazar - 2010 - Pragmatics and Society 1 (2):284-310.
    In Singapore, top down public education campaigns have long been a mode of governance by which the conduct of citizens is constantly regulated. This article examines how in two fairly recent campaigns, a new approach to campaign communication is used that involves media interdiscursivity, viz., the mixing of discourses and genres in which the media constitute a significant element. The present approach involves the appropriation of a popular local television character, ‘Phua Chu Kang’, in order to address the public through (...)
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  16.  30
    An event-related potential and psychophysical investigation of cross-modal integration of auditory and tactile stimulation at rapid stimulus rates.Hedgcoe Michelle, Timora Justin & Budd Timothy - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  17. Eursafe 2006.Michelle Micheletti & Vittorio Hosle - 2006 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 19:217-218.
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  18.  36
    Hannah Arendt.Michelle-Irène Brudny - 2004 - Cités 20 (4):179.
    « Hannah Arendt avait l’air enchanté, sur la piste d’un paradoxe flambant neuf. Ses yeux et son sourire avaient un éclat plus profond que celui de la tolérance, car il jaillissait d’un besoin d’aimer ce qui était étranger, et de pardonner ce qui paraissait laid, horrible, sauvage » . Le romancier précise que le..
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  19. The problem of mental ill-health in the profession and a suggested solution.Michelle Sharp - 2011 - In Reid Mortensen, Francesca Bartlett & Kieran Tranter, Alternative perspectives on lawyers and legal ethics: reimagining the profession. New York: Routledge.
     
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  20.  33
    The aerodynamics of insects: The role of models and matter in scientific experimentation.Michelle R. Silva - 2005 - Social Epistemology 19 (4):325 – 337.
    Historians and philosophers of science have examined the relationship between language and practice for a long time. Scholars have made important contributions to the field by attending to the social, cultural and economic contexts in which scientific paradigms are created and re-created. However, this article posits that while it is true that scientific practice and the artifacts they generate are both socially and discursively constructed and therefore, inextricable from the human contexts that produce them, these artifacts are not only texts (...)
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  21.  28
    Constructing the Battered Woman.Michelle VanNatta - 2005 - Feminist Studies 31 (2):416-443.
  22.  34
    Deepening Ethical Analysis in Business Ethics.Michelle Greenwood & R. Edward Freeman - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 147 (1):1-4.
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  23.  28
    Trust in Neuroethics.Michelle Trang Pham & Gabriel Lázaro-Muñoz - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 13 (1):33-35.
    Dubljević et al. (2022) argue that neuroethics has a socio-political role that can “(1) serve to clarify and resolve conflicts, (2) orient the public with regards to the moral status of neurotechno...
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  24.  37
    Returning To Marx: A communist critical pedagogy for the 21st century.Michelle Gautreaux & Sandra Delgado - 2016 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 48 (11).
  25. Understanding Academic Integrity Education: Case Studies from Two Australian Universities.Michelle Striepe, Sheona Thomson & Lesley Sefcik - 2023 - Journal of Academic Ethics 21 (1):1-17.
    An increase in Academic Integrity (AI) breaches has resulted in higher education institutions implementing solutions to improve AI competence. It has been argued that to improve students’ AI understanding, concepts and skills should be taught at the classroom level and contextual factors should be considered. This article presents an investigation on how AI is taught at the classroom level across a range of disciplines, how contextual factors inform approaches to AI education, and how the approaches align with evidence-based recommendations. Purposeful (...)
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  26.  20
    Tyranny: A new interpretation.Michelle T. Clarke - 2017 - Contemporary Political Theory 16 (1):165-168.
  27. Films of situation. Being-Lost in translation.Michelle R. Darnell - 2011 - In Jean-Pierre Boulé & Enda McCaffrey, Existentialism and contemporary cinema: a Sartrean perspective. New York: Berghahn Books.
     
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  28.  33
    ‘The Good Doctor’: the Making and Unmaking of the Physician Self in Contemporary South Africa.Michelle Pentecost & Thomas Cousins - 2019 - Journal of Medical Humanities 43 (1):43-54.
    In this article we examine the figure of the doctor in animated debates around public sector medicine in contemporary South Africa. The loss of health professionals from the South African public system is a key contributor to the present healthcare crisis. South African medical schools have revised curricula to engage trainee doctors with a broader set of social concerns, but the disjunctures between training, health systems failures, and a high disease burden call into question whether junior doctors are adequately prepared (...)
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  29.  76
    (1 other version)Georges Duby et l'imaginaire-écran de la féminité.Michelle Perrot - 1998 - Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 2:2-2.
    Quand, comment, pourquoi Georges Duby s’est-il intéressé à l’histoire des femmes, au point d’en faire le centre de son oeuvre dernière ? Une lecture, même cavalière, de ses écrits montre un intérêt croissant à partir du milieu des années 1970, en même temps qu’un changement de perspective. D’abord victimes d’un « mâle moyen-âge » qui les utilise comme un « leurre » jusque dans l’amour courtois, les femmes apparaissent , à un examen plus attentif, comme « dotées d’une puissance singulière (...)
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  30.  38
    Postmodernism: No Longer Useful?Michelle M. Tokarczyk - 1997 - Theory and Event 1 (4).
  31. Freedom and reason in Kant, Schelling, and Kierkegaard.Michelle Kosch - 2006 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Michelle Kosch examines the conceptions of free will and the foundations of ethics in the work of Kant, Schelling, and Kierkegaard. She seeks to understand the history of German idealism better by looking at it through the lens of these issues, and to understand Kierkegaard better by placing his thought in this context. Kosch argues for a new interpretation of Kierkegaard's theory of agency, that Schelling was a major influence and Kant a major target of criticism, and that both (...)
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  32. The sense/cognition distinction.Michelle Montague - 2023 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 66 (2):229-245.
    Many contemporary philosophers have been concerned about whether there is a fundamental distinction between perception and cognition. Although I do not think there is a fundamental distinction between perception and cognition, at least given what I take perception to be, I do think there is a fundamental distinction between sense and cognition, which I will argue is best understood in terms of a distinction between two irreducible kinds of phenomenology: sensory and cognitive.
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  33.  42
    Testimonial injustice: considering caregivers in paediatric behavioural healthcare.Michelle Trang Pham, Eric A. Storch & Gabriel Lázaro-Muñoz - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (11):738-739.
    Harcourt argues that in clinical contexts, children and young people with mental health illness can experience epistemic, specifically testimonial, injustice when their perspectives are unjustifiably discounted by health service providers.1 Our goal in this commentary was to illustrate how caregivers, a critical component of CYP treatment triad, can also engage in testimonial injustice towards CYP patients. Testimonial injustice occurs when one suffers a credibility deficit and that credibility deficit is based on prejudice.2 Harcourt expands Fricker’s account of testimonial injustice by (...)
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  34.  30
    Why the Doctor Will NOT See You Now: The Ethics of Enforcing Covenants Not to Compete in Physician Employment Contracts.Michelle Bednarz Beauchamp, Sandra S. Benson & Lara Womack Daniel - 2014 - Journal of Business Ethics 119 (3):381-398.
    When a physician employment relationship terminates, the physician–patient relationship may also be terminated by enforcement of a covenant not to compete, which typically forces the physician to leave the geographic area for a period of time. This gives rise to several ethical dilemmas. The public interest is compromised when enforcement of these covenants contributes to the shortage of physicians in the community, and individual patients are harmed when their physicians are no longer available. The authors undertook a unique study to (...)
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  35.  9
    Preface.Michelle Rowley & Millie Thayer - 2012 - Feminist Studies 38 (3):551-558.
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  36.  15
    Critical reflections.Michelle C. Sanchez - 2021 - Critical Research on Religion 9 (3):337-340.
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  37.  9
    Spirituality and the Wine’s Soul.Michelle Williams - 2020 - Southwest Philosophy Review 36 (1):5-11.
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  38.  60
    Affective Scaffolds, Expressive Arts, and Cognition.Michelle Maiese - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
  39.  23
    Episodic memory processes modulate how schema knowledge is used in spatial memory decisions.Michelle M. Ramey, John M. Henderson & Andrew P. Yonelinas - 2022 - Cognition 225 (C):105111.
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  40. The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness.Michelle Alexander & Cornel West - 2010 - The New Press.
    Argues that the War on Drugs and policies that deny convicted felons equal access to employment, housing, education and public benefits create a permanent under-caste based largely on race. Reprint. 12,500 first printing.
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  41. The nature of awe: Elicitors, appraisals, and effects on self-concept.Michelle N. Shiota, Dacher Keltner & Amanda Mossman - 2007 - Cognition and Emotion 21 (5):944-963.
    Awe has been defined as an emotional response to perceptually vast stimuli that overwhelm current mental structures, yet facilitate attempts at accommodation. Four studies are presented showing the information-focused nature of awe elicitors, documenting the self-diminishing effects of awe experience, and exploring the effects of awe on the content of the self-concept. Study 1 documented the information-focused, asocial nature of awe elicitors in participant narratives. Study 2 contrasted the stimulus-focused, self-diminishing nature of appraisals and feelings associated with a prototypical awe (...)
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  42.  45
    The Mind-Body Politic.Michelle Maiese & Robert Hanna - 2019 - Springer Verlag.
    Building on contemporary research in embodied cognition, enactivism, and the extended mind, this book explores how social institutions in contemporary neoliberal nation-states systematically affect our thoughts, feelings, and agency. Human beings are, necessarily, social animals who create and belong to social institutions. But social institutions take on a life of their own, and literally shape the minds of all those who belong to them, for better or worse, usually without their being self-consciously aware of it. Indeed, in contemporary neoliberal societies, (...)
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  43.  21
    Making Sense of Freedom and Responsibility, by Dana Kay Nelkin.Michelle Ciurria - 2014 - Philosophical Psychology 27 (4):596-600.
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  44.  22
    Spatial and temporal features of superordinate semantic processing studied with fMRI and EEG.Michelle E. Costanzo, Joseph J. McArdle, Bruce Swett, Vladimir Nechaev, Stefan Kemeny, Jiang Xu & Allen R. Braun - 2013 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  45.  8
    Horizontal Chemistry.Michelle DiMeo, Andrew Gregory, Frank A. J. L. James & Viviane Quirke - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Science:1-11.
    In 1976 Raymond Williams commented, ‘Culture is one of the two or three most complicated words in the English language.’ Such implied difficulty has not prevented Bloomsbury Academic, since the 2000s, from publishing around forty series of their well-produced and generously illustrated Cultural Histories, with, according to their website, a further fifty in progress. Each series contains six volumes, each book covering, in theory, the same chronological period (antiquity, the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, the age of empire and (...)
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  46.  20
    Unearthing Contradictions: An Essay Inspired by "Women and Male Violence".Michelle Fine - 1985 - Feminist Studies 11 (2):391.
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  47.  22
    A Short Story About Reason: The Strange Case of Habermas and Poe.Michelle Boulous Walker - 1997 - Philosophy Today 41 (3):432-445.
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  48.  29
    Capacity, Vulnerability, and Informed Consent for Research.Michelle Biros - 2018 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 46 (1):72-78.
    This article presents an overview for clinician investigators on the concepts of decision-making capacity and vulnerability as related to human subjects research. Tools for capacity assessment and unacknowledged sources of vulnerability are discussed, and the practical gaps in current informed consent requirements related to impaired capacity and potential vulnerability are described. Options are suggested for research discussions when full regulatory consent is not possible and an exception from informed consent does not apply.
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  49. Contempt: At the Limits of Reactivity.Michelle Mason - 2018 - In The Moral Psychology of Contempt. Rowman & Littlefield International. pp. 173-192.
  50.  15
    The Politics of Immunity: Reading Cohen through Canguilhem and New Materialism.Michelle Jamieson - 2016 - Body and Society 22 (4):106-129.
    The issue of what is proper to nature, or life itself, is central to critical accounts of biomedicine and its complex interrelations with social, political and economic forces. These engagements, namely biopolitical accounts of medical practices and ethical-political critiques of biomedical discourse, grapple with the indistinction between the political and biological that biomedicine enacts. Making a significant contribution to both literatures, Ed Cohen’s A Body Worth Defending argues that the emergence of the concept of biological immunity signals the entry of (...)
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