Results for 'Nancy Reese-Durham'

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  1. Navigating common curves and pitfalls of the reappointment, promotion and tenure process and the importance of faculty mentoring.C. E. Davis & Nancy Reese-Durham - 2021 - In Noran L. Moffett, Navigating post-doctoral career placement, research, and professionalism. Hershey, PA: Information Science Reference.
     
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  2.  40
    Book Review Section 1. [REVIEW]Charles Strickland, Nancy R. King, Alan H. Jones, Germaine M. Reed, Margaret Glllett, William J. Reese, Robert H. Bremner, Elizabeth Ihle, Geraldine Joncich Clifford, Louis R. Harlan, Frederick M. Binder, Harvey G. Neufeldt, Earle H. West, E. V. Johanningmeier & Harold J. Franz - 1982 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 13 (3&4):336-387.
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  3.  44
    The Restlessness of Resistance: Community, Myth, and Negativity in Law.J. Reese Faust - 2021 - Law and Critique 32 (3):301-313.
    Peter Fitzpatrick’s intellectual relationship with Jean-Luc Nancy centred on the related problems of myth and community. In this article, I will explicate the ‘restlessness of the negative’ that Nancy describes in Hegel, in order to further develop Fitzpatrick’s notion of ‘law as resistance’. Set against the backdrop of myth and community, law can be understood as a community’s fragmentary attempt to explicate its essence. Modern law becomes an artefact of the negative twisting through a community’s attempts to construct (...)
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  4.  34
    Sandra Harding. Sciences from Below: Feminisms, Postcolonialities, and Modernities. 283 pp., bibl., index. Durham, N.C./London: Duke University Press, 2008. $22.95. [REVIEW]Nancy Tuana - 2010 - Isis 101 (1):271-272.
  5.  46
    Review of Stan van Hooft, Hope: Durham, UK: Acumen Publishing, 2011, ISBN 9781844652600, pb, 152pp. [REVIEW]Nancy E. Snow - 2011 - Sophia 50 (4):697-699.
  6.  21
    Nancy Rose Hunt. A Colonial Lexicon of Birth Ritual, Medicalization, and Mobility in the Congo. xx + 475 pp., illus., figs., bibl., index. Durham, N.C./London: Duke University Press, 1999. $59.95 ; $20.95. [REVIEW]Ellen Gruenbaum - 2004 - Isis 95 (2):317-318.
  7.  49
    The Social Medicine Reader, Second Edition: Volume One: Patients, Doctors, and Illness, Nancy M.P. King, Ronald P. Strauss, Larry R. Churchill, Sue E. Estroff, and Gail E. Henderson, eds. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2005. 294 pp. ISBN 978‐0822335689, $24.95. and The Social Medicine Reader, Second Edition: Volume Two: Social and Cultural Contributions to Health, Difference, and Inequality, Gail E. Henderson, Larry R. Churchill, Nancy M.P. King, Jonathan Oberlander, and Ronald P. Strauss, eds. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2005. 323 pp. ISBN 978‐0822335931, $24.95. [REVIEW]Anita Chary - 2013 - Anthropology of Consciousness 24 (1):76-81.
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  8. The being-with of being-there.Jean-Luc Nancy - 2008 - Continental Philosophy Review 41 (1):1-15.
    In Being and Time, Heidegger affirms that being-with or Mitsein is an essential constitution of Dasein but he does not submit this existential to the same rigorous analyses as other existentials. In this essay, Jean-Luc Nancy points to the different places where Heidegger erased the possibility of thinking an essential with that he himself opened. This erasure is due, according to Nancy, to the subordination of Mitsein to a thinking of the proper and the improper. The polarization of (...)
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  9. Against modularity, the causal Markov condition, and any link between the two: Comments on Hausman and Woodward.Nancy Cartwright - 2002 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 53 (3):411-453.
    In their rich and intricate paper ‘Independence, Invariance, and the Causal Markov Condition’, Daniel Hausman and James Woodward ([1999]) put forward two independent theses, which they label ‘level invariance’ and ‘manipulability’, and they claim that, given a specific set of assumptions, manipulability implies the causal Markov condition. These claims are interesting and important, and this paper is devoted to commenting on them. With respect to level invariance, I argue that Hausman and Woodward's discussion is confusing because, as I point out, (...)
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  10. Aristotle on friendship and the shared life.Nancy Sherman - 1987 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 47 (4):589-613.
    IN THIS PAPER I CONSIDER THE VALUE OF FRIENDSHIP FROM AN ARISTOTELIAN POINT OF VIEW. THE ISSUE IS OF CURRENT INTEREST GIVEN RECENT CHALLENGES TO IMPARTIALIST ETHICS TO TAKE MORE SERIOUSLY THE COMMITMENTS AND ATTACHMENTS OF A PERSON. HOWEVER, I ENTER THAT DEBATE IN ONLY A RESTRICTED WAY BY STRENGTHENING THE CHALLENGE ARTICULATED IN ARISTOTLE'S SYSTEMATIC DEFENSE OF FRIENDSHIP AND THE SHARED LIFE. AFTER SOME INTRODUCTORY REMARKS, I BEGIN BY CONSIDERING ARISTOTLE'S NOTION THAT GOOD LIVING OR HAPPINESS ("EUDAIMONIA") FOR AN (...)
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  11. In Favor of Laws that Are Not C eteris Paribus After All.Nancy Cartwright - 2002 - Erkenntnis 57 (3):425Ð439.
    Opponents of ceteris paribus laws are apt to complain that the laws are vague and untestable. Indeed, claims to this effect are made by Earman, Roberts and Smith in this volume. I argue that these kinds of claims rely on too narrow a view about what kinds of concepts we can and do regularly use in successful sciences and on too optimistic a view about the extent of application of even our most successful non-ceteris paribus laws. When it comes to (...)
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  12. Causal diversity and the Markov condition.Nancy Cartwright - 1999 - Synthese 121 (1-2):3-27.
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  13. (1 other version)Where do laws of nature come from?Nancy Cartwright - 1997 - Dialectica 51 (1):65–78.
  14. How to hunt quantum causes.Nancy Cartwright & Martin Jones - 1991 - Erkenntnis 35 (1-3):205 - 231.
    Reichenbach worked in an era when philosophers were hopeful about the unity of science, and particularly about unity of method. He looked for universal tests of causal connectedness that could be applied across disciplines and independently of specific modeling assumptions. The hunt for quantum causes reminds us that his hopes were too optimistic. The mark method is not even a starter in testing for causal links between outcomes in E.P.R., because our background hypotheses about these links are too thin to (...)
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  15. (1 other version)From metaphysics to method: Comments on manipulability and the causal Markov condition.Nancy Cartwright - 2006 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 57 (1):197-218.
    Daniel Hausman and James Woodward claim to prove that the causal Markov condition, so important to Bayes-nets methods for causal inference, is the ‘flip side’ of an important metaphysical fact about causation—that causes can be used to manipulate their effects. This paper disagrees. First, the premise of their proof does not demand that causes can be used to manipulate their effects but rather that if a relation passes a certain specific kind of test, it is causal. Second, the proof is (...)
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  16.  16
    The object.Antony Hudek (ed.) - 2014 - Cambridge, Massachesetts: The MIT Press.
    Discussions of the object as a key to understanding central aspects of modern and contemporary art. Artists increasingly refer to "post-object-based" work while theorists engage with material artifacts in culture. A focus on "object-based" learning treats objects as vectors for dialogue across disciplines. Virtual imaging enables the object to be abstracted or circumvented, while immaterial forms of labor challenge materialist theories. This anthology surveys such reappraisals of what constitutes the "objectness" of production, with art as its focus. Among the topics (...)
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  17.  86
    Vesalius and human diversity in de humani corporis fabrica.Nancy G. Siraisi - 1994 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 57 (1):60-88.
  18. Can wholism reconcile the inaccuracy of theory with the accuracy of prediction?Nancy Cartwright - 1991 - Synthese 89 (1):3 - 13.
    Work by social constructionists over the past decade and a half has reenforced the epistemological pessimist's despair that our system of science could ever be a mirror of nature. Realists argue that the amazing success of modern science at precise prediction and control indicates just the contrary. In response, social constructionists often point out that these successes seldom apply to the world as it comes naturally, but only as it is reconstructed in the scientist's laboratory. But this does not explain (...)
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  19. On the meanings of democracy.Jean-luc Nancy - 2006 - Theoria 53 (111):1-5.
    'On the Meanings of Democracy' points to the fragility and contested meanings of 'democracy'. Once 'the assurance is given that "democracy" is the only kind of political regime that is acceptable to an adult, emancipated population which is an end in itself, the very idea of democracy fades and becomes blurred and confusing'. Such 'wide-spread lack of clarity' gave rise to Europe's 'totalitarian' regimes. It is claimed that 'it is impossible to be simply a "democrat" without questioning what this really (...)
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  20.  68
    The born-Einstein debate: Where application and explanation separate.Nancy Cartwright - 1989 - Synthese 81 (3):271 - 282.
    Application in science has its own structure, distinct from the structure of theoretical science, and therefore needs its own philosophy. The covering power of a formal scientific theory is no guide to its explanatory power. Explanation is too much to ask of a fundamental scientific theory. This is seen by considering two strands of the Born-Einstein debate: first the explanatory power of quantum mechanics and second, the reality of unobserved properties. The function of theoretical physics is to describe rather than (...)
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  21.  34
    Some comments on Luckhardt's interpretation of empirical propositions as paradigms.Nancy E. Snow - 1982 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 43 (2):259-263.
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  22. Affected ignorance and animal suffering: Why our failure to debate factory farming puts us at moral risk. [REVIEW]Nancy M. Williams - 2008 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 21 (4):371-384.
    It is widely recognized that our social and moral environments influence our actions and belief formations. We are never fully immune to the effects of cultural membership. What is not clear, however, is whether these influences excuse average moral agents who fail to scrutinize conventional norms. In this paper, I argue that the lack of extensive public debate about factory farming and, its corollary, extreme animal suffering, is probably due, in part, to affected ignorance. Although a complex phenomenon because of (...)
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  23. Windows on the Russian Past.Samuel H. Baron & Nancy W. Heer - 1979 - Studies in Soviet Thought 20 (2):207-207.
  24.  25
    Partial blocking and the frustration effect.John L. Allen, Nancy L. Caven, Li-An C. Leonard & M. Ray Denny - 1980 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 15 (4):260-262.
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  25. Bridging the Gap Between Research and Practice: Predicting What Will Work Locally.Kathryn E. Joyce & Nancy Cartwright - 2019 - American Educational Research Journal 57 (3):1045-1082.
    This article addresses the gap between what works in research and what works in practice. Currently, research in evidence-based education policy and practice focuses on randomized controlled trials. These can support causal ascriptions (“It worked”) but provide little basis for local effectiveness predictions (“It will work here”), which are what matter for practice. We argue that moving from ascription to prediction by way of causal generalization (“It works”) is unrealistic and urge focusing research efforts directly on how to build local (...)
     
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  26. Princely Virtues in De felici progressuov mIchele saVonarola, Court Physician of the House of Este.Gianna Pomata & Nancy G. Siraisi - 2007 - In István Pieter Bejczy & Cary J. Nederman, Princely virtues in the Middle Ages, 1200-1500. [Abingdon: Marston, distributor]. pp. 9--237.
     
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  27.  22
    Moral Progress in the Public Safety Net: Access for Transgender and LGB Patients.Stephan Davis & Nancy Berlinger - 2014 - Hastings Center Report 44 (s4):45-47.
    As a population, people who self‐identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender face significant risks to health and difficulty in obtaining medical and behavioral health care, relative to the general public. These issues are especially challenging in safety‐net health care institutions, which serve a range of vulnerable populations with limited access, limited options, and significant health disparities. Safety‐net hospitals, particularly public hospitals with fewer resources than academic medical centers and other nonprofit hospitals that also serve as safety nets, are under (...)
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  28.  60
    Nancy Mitford on Ireland.Nancy Mitford - 2003 - The Chesterton Review 29 (1/2):243-244.
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  29.  18
    Complexity of Index Sets of Descriptive Set-Theoretic Notions.Reese Johnston & Dilip Raghavan - 2022 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 87 (3):894-911.
    Descriptive set theory and computability theory are closely-related fields of logic; both are oriented around a notion of descriptive complexity. However, the two fields typically consider objects of very different sizes; computability theory is principally concerned with subsets of the naturals, while descriptive set theory is interested primarily in subsets of the reals. In this paper, we apply a generalization of computability theory, admissible recursion theory, to consider the relative complexity of notions that are of interest in descriptive set theory. (...)
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  30. Persuasion and the Dependence Effect.Reese Miller - forthcoming - Business Ethics in Canada.
     
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  31.  29
    The Pragmatic Philosophy of C S Peirce.William Reese - 1954 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 15 (1):133-135.
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  32.  41
    The Morality of Kidney Sales: When Caring for the Seller’s Dignity Has Moral Costs.Alexander Reese & Ingo Pies - 2023 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 20 (1):139-152.
    Kidney markets are prohibited in principle because they are assumed to undermine the seller’s dignity. Considering the trade-off between saving more lives by introducing regulated kidney markets and preserving the seller’s dignity, we argue that it is advisable to demand that citizens restrain their own moral judgements and not interfere with the judgements of those who are willing to sell a kidney. We also argue that it is advisable not only to limit the political implications of the moral argument of (...)
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  33.  4
    The Role of Hospice and Palliative Medicine in the Ars Moriendi.Levi Durham - 2025 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 50 (1):36-45.
    There is disagreement among physicians and medical ethicists on the precise goals of Hospice and Palliative Medicine (HPM). Some think that HPM’s goals should differ from those of other branches of medicine and aim primarily at lessening pain, discomfort, and confusion, while others think that HPM’s practices should aim, like all other branches of medicine, at promoting health. I take the latter position: using the ars moriendi to set a standard for what it means to die well, I argue that (...)
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  34.  35
    (1 other version)Interview mit Jean-Luc Nancy.Jean-Luc Nancy, Nathalie Eder, Lilly Kroth & Martin Eleven - 2017 - Zeitschrift für Medien- Und Kulturforschung 8 (1):79-84.
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  35. How can a line segment with extension be composed of extensionless points?Brian Reese, Michael Vazquez & Scott Weinstein - 2022 - Synthese 200 (2):1-28.
    We provide a new interpretation of Zeno’s Paradox of Measure that begins by giving a substantive account, drawn from Aristotle’s text, of the fact that points lack magnitude. The main elements of this account are (1) the Axiom of Archimedes which states that there are no infinitesimal magnitudes, and (2) the principle that all assignments of magnitude, or lack thereof, must be grounded in the magnitude of line segments, the primary objects to which the notion of linear magnitude applies. Armed (...)
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  36. From a Phono-Logical Point of View: Neutralizing Quine’s Argument Against Analyticity.Reese M. Heitner - 2006 - Synthese 150 (1):15-39.
    Though largely unnoticed, in "Two Dogmas" Quine himself invokes a distinction: a distinction between logical and analytic truths. Unlike analytic statements equating 'bachelor' with 'unmarried man', strictly logical tautologies relating two word-tokens of the same word-type, e.g., 'bachelor' and 'bachelor' are true merely in virtue of basic phonological form, putatively an exclusively non-semantic function of perceptual categorization or brute stimulus behavior. Yet natural language phonemic categorization is not entirely free of interpretive semantic considerations. "Phonemic reductionism" in both its linguistic and (...)
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  37.  5
    Philosophers Speak of God, By Charles Hartshorne and William L. Reese.Charles Hartshorne & William L. Reese - 1963 - University of Chicago Press.
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  38. From a Phono-Logical Point of View.Reese M. Heitner - 2004 - Dissertation, City University of New York
    This dissertation work is premised upon the observation that semantic information is required in order to group phonetically distinct word-tokens into phonemically equivalent word-types. For philosophers, like W. V. Quine, who have a dim view of meaning, this claim regarding the semantic basis of natural language phonology, if true, is problematic. This is why in a series of publications, Quine has attempted to avoid any appeal to semantics in his efforts to reconstruct phonemic word-type equivalence. Consistent with his rejection of (...)
     
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  39.  27
    The Birth of Photography: The Story of the Formative Years, 1800-1900. Brian Coe.Reese Jenkins - 1978 - Isis 69 (1):139-140.
  40.  39
    Analogy, Symbolism, and Linguistic Analysis.William L. Reese - 1960 - Review of Metaphysics 13 (3):447 - 468.
    If the figure of philosophical sandhogs is appropriately descriptive of this recent work, still one must recognize the manner in which modern philosophers are working away in different caissons; the workers differ in judgment concerning what is hardpan and what bedrock; while some believe only hardpan confronts us all the way down, a philosophic version of the bends would seem not to be uncommon in the analogate. And it is tempting, while possibly not unfair, to think of the linguistic philosopher (...)
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  41. Christianity and the final-solution+ holocaust and responsibility.Wl Reese - 1985 - Philosophical Forum 16 (1-2):138-147.
  42. Some contributions of philosophy to behavioral sciences.H. W. Reese - 1999 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 20 (2):183-210.
    Philosophical analyses can aid scientists in several ways. For example, they can help resolve disagreements among scientists about issues such as the relative value of facts versus theories and observations versus inferences; they provide historical descriptions of how science went when it went well or badly and scientists can imitate these descriptions as though they were prescriptive rules; they identify "families" of theories and methodologies on the basis of common uses of key words, which can help scientists understand theories and (...)
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  43. The Separated Soul and the Human Person.Philip-Neri Reese, O. P. - 2024 - Nova et Vetera 22 (3):943-960.
    In this paper I weigh in on the ongoing Thomistic debate between corruptionists, survivalists, and incompletionists about whether the soul's separate, post-mortem existence suffices for my post-mortem existence.
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  44. How Infinitely Valuable Could a Person Be?Levi Durham & Alexander Pruss - 2024 - Philosophia 52 (4):1185-1201.
    Many have the intuition that human persons are both extremely and equally valuable. This seeming extremity and equality of vale is puzzling: if overall value is the sum of one’s final value and instrumental value, how could it be that persons share the same extreme value? One way that we can solve the Value Puzzle is by following Andrew Bailey and Josh Rasmussen. Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, 103, 264–277 (2020) and accepting that persons have infinite final value. But there are (...)
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  45. The Role of Hospice and Palliative Medicine in the Ars Moriendi.Durham Levi - 2024 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy (X):1-10.
    There is disagreement among physicians and medical ethicists on the precise goals of Hospice and Palliative Medicine (HPM). Some think that HPM's goals should differ from those of other branches of medicine and aim primarily at lessening pain, discomfort, and confusion; while others think that HPM's practices should, like all other branches of medicine, aim at promoting health. I take the latter position: using the ars moriendi to set a standard for what it means to die well, I argue that (...)
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  46. Dictionary of Philosophy and Religion Eastern and Western Thought /by William L. Reese. --. --.William L. Reese - 1980 - Humanities Press, 1980.
     
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  47. Process and Divinity Philosophical Essays Presented to Charles Hartshorne.William L. Reese & Eugene Freeman - 1964 - Open Court.
     
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  48. The fate of a warrior culture: Nancy Sherman on Jonathan Lear’s Radical Hope.Nancy Sherman - 2009 - Philosophical Studies 144 (1):71 - 80.
    Jonathan Lear in Radical Hope tackles the idea of cultural devastation, in the specific case of the Crow Indians. What do we mean by “annihilation” of a culture? The moral point of view that he imagines as he reconstructs the eve and aftermath of this annihilation is not second personal, of obligation, but first personal, in the collective and singular, as told by the Crows, with Lear as “analyst.” Radical Hope is a study of representative character of a people—of virtue, (...)
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  49.  18
    Some problems with reaction time as a measure of memory search.Robert Lewis Durham & Doris Sestokas - 1974 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 4 (5):489-492.
  50. Jean-Luc Nancy, par lui-même.Jean-Luc Nancy - 2014 - Cités 58 (2).
     
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