Results for 'Patricia Alison Louise Haggard'

966 found
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  1.  12
    Unilateral attention deficits and hemispheric asymmetries in the control of attention.Eric A. Roy, Patricia Reuter-Lorenz, Louise G. Roy, Sherrie Copland & Morris Moscovitch - 1987 - In Marc Jeannerod (ed.), Neurophysiological and Neuropsychological Aspects of Spatial Neglect. Elsevier Science.
  2.  36
    Trends in health research ethics in the Philippines during the American Colonial Period (1898‐1946).Patricia Ana Vic H. Arcega, Chiara Louise P. Cabantac & Ronald Allan L. Cruz - 2019 - Developing World Bioethics 19 (3):180-185.
    Research involving human participants has been conducted in the Philippines since the beginning of the Spanish colonial period. Such studies are expected to adhere to internationally accepted ethical guidelines. This paper discusses trends in clinical research ethics in the Philippines during the American colonial period (1898‐1946). Specifically, studies were assessed on: 1) their observance of ethical protocols, including review; 2) identification of inclusion and exclusion criteria in the selection of participants; 3) use of vulnerable subjects; and 4) practice of the (...)
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  3. Brain correlates of subjective freedom of choice.Elisa Filevich, Patricia Vanneste, Marcel Brass, Wim Fias, Patrick Haggard & Simone Kühn - 2013 - Consciousness and Cognition 22 (4):1271-1284.
    The subjective feeling of free choice is an important feature of human experience. Experimental tasks have typically studied free choice by contrasting free and instructed selection of response alternatives. These tasks have been criticised, and it remains unclear how they relate to the subjective feeling of freely choosing. We replicated previous findings of the fMRI correlates of free choice, defined objectively. We introduced a novel task in which participants could experience and report a graded sense of free choice. BOLD responses (...)
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  4.  50
    Creating knowledge, strengthening nations: the changing role of higher education.Glen Alan Jones, Patricia Louise McCarney & Michael L. Skolnik (eds.) - 2005 - Buffalo: University of Toronto Press.
    The essays pay particular attention to tensions associated with attempts to balance the economic with the non-economic objectives of higher education, and ...
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  5.  57
    Safety Issues In Cell-Based Intervention Trials.Liza Dawson, Alison S. Bateman-House, Dawn Mueller Agnew, Hilary Bok, Dan W. Brock, Aravinda Chakravarti, Mark Greene, Patricia King, Stephen J. O'Brien, David H. Sachs, Kathryn E. Schill, Andrew Siegel & Davor Solter - 2003 - Fertility and Sterility 80 (5):1077-1085.
    We report on the deliberations of an interdisciplinary group of experts in science, law, and philosophy who convened to discuss novel ethical and policy challenges in stem cell research. In this report we discuss the ethical and policy implications of safety concerns in the transition from basic laboratory research to clinical applications of cell-based therapies derived from stem cells. Although many features of this transition from lab to clinic are common to other therapies, three aspects of stem cell biology pose (...)
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  6.  38
    Helpful Lessons and Cautionary Tales: How Should COVID-19 Drug Development and Access Inform Approaches to Non-Pandemic Diseases?Holly Fernandez Lynch, Arthur Caplan, Patricia Furlong & Alison Bateman-House - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (12):4-19.
    After witnessing extraordinary scientific and regulatory efforts to speed development of and access to new COVID-19 interventions, patients facing other serious diseases have begun to ask “where’s...
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  7.  14
    Louise Michel, Trois Romans : Les Microbes humains, Le Monde nouveau, Le Claque-dents, textes établis, présentés et annotés par Claude Rétat et Stéphane Zékian.Patricia Izquierdo - 2014 - Clio 40:312-312.
    Cet ouvrage fait partie de la collection « Louise Michel : Œuvres » lancée par le laboratoire LIRE et par Xavière Gauthier dès 1999 afin de rendre son œuvre accessible et d’en montrer la complexité et l’intérêt littéraire. C’est la première édition critique de trois romans, Les microbes humains (p. 47-207), Le monde nouveau (p. 211-384) et Le claque-dents (p. 387-562) qui datent respectivement de 1886, 1888 et 1890 (p. 11). Pour le troisième tome uniquement, un tableau des correspondances (...)
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  8.  10
    The Psychological Benefits of an Uncertain World: Hope and Optimism in the Face of Existential Threat.Michael Smithson, Yiyun Shou, Amy Dawel, Alison L. Calear, Louise Farrer & Nicolas Cherbuin - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    We examine how prior mental health predicts hopes and how hopes predict subsequent mental health, testing hypotheses in a longitudinal study with an Australian nation-wide adult sample regarding mental health consequences of the COVID-19 outbreak during its initial stage. Quota sampling was used to select a sample representative of the adult Australian population in terms of age groups, gender, and geographical location. Mental health measures were selected to include those with the best psychometric properties. Hypotheses were tested using generalized linear (...)
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  9.  19
    An evaluation of instruments measuring behavioural aspects of the nurse–patient relationship.Rebecca Feo, Sheela Kumaran, Tiffany Conroy, Louise Heuzenroeder & Alison Kitson - 2022 - Nursing Inquiry 29 (2):e12425.
    The Fundamentals of Care Framework is an evidence‐based, theory‐informed framework that conceptualises high‐quality fundamental care. The Framework places the nurse–patient relationship at the centre of care provision and outlines the nurse behaviours required for relationship development. Numerous instruments exist to measure behavioural aspects of the nurse–patient relationship; however, the literature offers little guidance on which instruments are psychometrically sound and best measure the core relationship elements of the Fundamentals of Care Framework. This study evaluated the quality of nurse–patient relationship instruments (...)
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  10.  42
    Higher education outreach: Examining key challenges for academics.Matthew Johnson, Emily Danvers, Tamsin Hinton-Smith, Kate Atkinson, Gareth Bowden, John Foster, Kristina Garner, Paul Garrud, Sarah Greaves, Patricia Harris, Momna Hejmadi, David Hill, Gwen Hughes, Louise Jackson, Angela O’Sullivan, Séamus ÓTuama, Pilar Perez Brown, Pete Philipson, Simon Ravenscroft, Mirain Rhys, Tom Ritchie, Jon Talbot, David Walker, Jon Watson, Myfanwy Williams & Sharon Williams - 2019 - British Journal of Educational Studies 67 (4):469-491.
  11.  23
    The Practice of Art in Renaissance FlorenceFra Filippo Lippi: Carmelite PainterRenaissance Florence: The Art of the 1470s.Jeryldene M. Wood, Megan Holmes, Patricia L. Rubin & Alison Wright - 2001 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 35 (2):107.
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  12. Public Stem Cell Banks: Considerations of Justice in Stem Cell Research and Therapy.Ruth R. Faden, Liza Dawson, Alison S. Bateman-House, Dawn Mueller Agnew, Hilary Bok, Dan W. Brock, Aravinda Chakravarti, Xiao-Jiang Gao, Mark Greene, John A. Hansen, Patricia A. King, Stephen J. O'Brien, David H. Sachs, Kathryn E. Schill, Andrew Siegel, Davor Solter, Sonia M. Suter, Catherine M. Verfaillie, LeRoy B. Walters & John D. Gearhart - 2003 - Hastings Center Report 33 (6):13-27.
    If stem cell-based therapies are developed, we will likely confront a difficult problem of justice: for biological reasons alone, the new therapies might benefit only a limited range of patients. In fact, they might benefit primarily white Americans, thereby exacerbating long-standing differences in health and health care.
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  13.  33
    Relative Obscurity: The Emotions of Words, Paint and Sound in Eighteenth-Century Literary Criticism.Louise Joy - 2014 - History of European Ideas 40 (5):644-661.
    This essay investigates the marginalisation in eighteenth-century literary theoretical discussions of a category of emotion, ‘the affections’, which plays a significant role elsewhere in eighteenth-century thought, especially in moral philosophy and theology. It proposes that affections are incompatible with a series of principles that underpin dominant concepts of the literary in early and mid-eighteenth-century literary criticism by authors including Kames, Burke, Alison, Duff, Brown, Du Bos, Trapp and Beattie, many of whom were associated with the Scottish Enlightenment. By analysing (...)
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  14.  16
    Patricia W. Cummins, Patrick W. Conner, and Charles W. Connell, eds., Literary and Historical Perspectives of the Middle Ages: Proceedings of the 1981 SEMA Meeting. Morgantown: West Virginia University Press, 1982. Paper. Pp. vi, 232. $8. [REVIEW]Alison Goddard Elliott - 1984 - Speculum 59 (2):471-472.
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  15.  39
    Book Review Section 6. [REVIEW]Michael S. Littleford, William Hare, Dale L. Brubaker, Louise M. Berman, Lawrence M. Knolle, Raymond C. Carleton, James La Point, Edmonia W. Davidson, Joseph Michel, William H. Boyer, Carol Ann Moore, Walter Doyle, Paul Saettler, John P. Driscoll, Lane F. Birkel, Emma C. Johnson, Bernard Cleveland, Patricia J. R. Dahl, J. M. Lucas, Albert Montare & Lennart L. Kopra - 1974 - Educational Studies 5 (4):292-309.
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  16.  9
    Feminist Interpretations of G. W. F. Hegel, by Patricia Jagentowicz Mills. [REVIEW]Alison Stone - 1998 - Women’s Philosophy Review 18:60-61.
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  17.  98
    Review: Mothering, Diversity, and Peace Politics. [REVIEW]Alison Bailey - 1994 - Hypatia 9 (2):188 - 198.
    The most popular uniting theme in feminist peace literature grounds women's peace work in mothering. I argue if maternal arguments do not address the variety of relationships different races and classes of mothers have to institutional violence and/or the military, then the resulting peace politics can only draw incomplete conclusions about the relationships between maternal work/thinking and peace. To illustrate this I compare two models of mothering: Sara Ruddick's decription of "maternal practice" and Patricia Hill Collins's account of racial-ethnic (...)
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  18.  23
    Imagining Dewey: artful works and dialogue about Art as experience.Patricia L. Maarhuis & A. G. Rud (eds.) - 2020 - Boston: Brill Sense.
    Imagining Dewey' features productive (re)interpretations of 21st century experience using the lens of John Dewey's 'Art as Experience', through the doubled task of putting an array of international philosophers, educators, and artists-researchers in transactional dialogue and on equal footing in an academic text. This book is a pragmatic attempt to encourage application of aesthetic learning and living, ekphrasic interpretation, critical art and agonist pluralism.0There are two foci: (a) Deweyan philosophy and educational themes with (b) analysis and examples of how educators, (...)
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  19.  68
    Chomsky and His Critics. [REVIEW]Louise M. Antony & Norbert Hornstein - 2005 - Croatian Journal of Philosophy 5 (3):589-596.
    In this compelling volume, ten distinguished thinkers -- William G. Lycan, Galen Strawson, Jeffrey Poland, Georges Rey, Frances Egan, Paul Horwich, Peter Ludlow, Paul Pietroski, Alison Gopnik, and Ruth Millikan -- address a variety of conceptual issues raised in Noam Chomsky's work. Distinguished list of critics: William G. Lycan, Galen Strawson, Jeffrey Poland, Georges Rey, Frances Egan, Paul Horwich, Peter Ludlow, Paul Pietroski, Alison Gopnik, and Ruth Millikan. Includes Chomsky's substantial new replies and responses to each essay. The (...)
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  20.  97
    Cartesian Views: Papers Presented to Richard A. Watson[REVIEW]Patricia A. Easton - 2008 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 46 (2):320-321.
    Cartesian Views is a fitting tribute to a man of many parts, to use Alison Wylie’s apt description . Richard A. Watson has provoked, evoked, and invoked new directions in Cartesian scholarship—both methodologically and substantively. Watson’s Downfall of Cartesianism and its sequel, The Breakdown of Metaphysics , have become required reading for students of early modern philosophy and are largely responsible for the revival of many “minor” Cartesians, while serving as sourcebook for methodological attention to history and rational reconstruction. (...)
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  21. Patricia Lee Rubin and Alison Wright, Renaissance Florence: The Art of the 1470s. With contributions by Nicholas Penny. London: National Gallery Publications, 1999. Pp. 360; color frontispiece and many black-and-white and color figures. $50. Distributed in the US by Yale University Press. [REVIEW]Andrew C. Blume - 2001 - Speculum 76 (3):788-789.
     
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  22.  10
    Conference Announcement: Affecting Feminism: Feminist Theory and the Question of Feeling Newcastle University, UK 10—12 December 2010 Keynote Speakers: Ann Cvetkovich, Kate Chedgzoy, Ranjana Khanna, Alison Light, Patricia Waugh. [REVIEW]Anastasia Valassopoulos - 2010 - Feminist Theory 11 (2):223-224.
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  23. Discovering the forms of intuition.Patricia Kitcher - 1987 - Philosophical Review 96 (2):205-248.
  24. The Ontogeny of Common Sense.Lynd Forguson & Alison Gopnik - 1988 - Developing Theories of Mind:226--243.
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  25.  13
    Management, Political Philosophy, and Colonial Interference.Patricia H. Werhane & David Bevan - 2022 - Philosophy of Management 21 (3):301-313.
    In this paper we set out to explore the claims that corporate social responsibility (CSR) itself is little more than a complementary extension of the project of coloniality initiated by the Enlightenment (e.g. Banerjee 2019). We will not dispute that claim. Rather we will develop three points. First, we will apply a non-linear, systems approach to demonstrate how we all, of any color, ethnic origin or historical location are all part of an interconnected interrelated sets of systems—what some thinkers call (...)
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  26. Time travel and counterfactual asymmetry.Alison Fernandes - 2021 - Synthese 198 (3):1983-2001.
    We standardly evaluate counterfactuals and abilities in temporally asymmetric terms—by keeping the past fixed and holding the future open. Only future events depend counterfactually on what happens now. Past events do not. Conversely, past events are relevant to what abilities one has now in a way that future events are not. Lewis, Sider and others continue to evaluate counterfactuals and abilities in temporally asymmetric terms, even in cases of backwards time travel. I’ll argue that we need more temporally neutral methods. (...)
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  27. Utilitarianism, contractualism and demandingness.Alison Hills - 2010 - Philosophical Quarterly 60 (239):225-242.
    One familiar criticism of utilitarianism is that it is too demanding. It requires us to promote the happiness of others, even at the expense of our own projects, our integrity, or the welfare of our friends and family. Recently Ashford has defended utilitarianism, arguing that it provides compelling reasons for demanding duties to help the needy, and that other moral theories, notably contractualism, are committed to comparably stringent duties. In response, I argue that utilitarianism is even more demanding than is (...)
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  28.  41
    The Cambridge Companion to Hobbes’s L Eviathan.Patricia Springborg (ed.) - 2007 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This Companion makes a new departure in Hobbes scholarship, addressing a philosopher whose impact was as great on Continental European theories of state and legal systems as it was at home. This volume is a systematic attempt to incorporate work from both the Anglophone and Continental traditions, bringing together newly commissioned work by scholars from ten different countries in a topic-by-topic sequence of essays that follows the structure of Leviathan, re-examining the relationship among Hobbes's physics, metaphysics, politics, psychology, and religion. (...)
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  29.  43
    Accountability and responsibility in research.Patricia K. Woolf - 1991 - Journal of Business Ethics 10 (8):595 - 600.
    Fraud and misconduct in scientific research appears to be increasing since 1980 when several cases were disclosed. Earlier instances were handled awkwardly, but the scientific community has since mobilized and issued guidelines about responding to allegations of misconduct and about the responsible conduct of research. Scientists, editors and the institutions of science are slowly learning how to cope with this problem.
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  30.  69
    Gouldian arguments and the sources of contingency.Alison K. McConwell & Adrian Currie - 2017 - Biology and Philosophy 32 (2):243-261.
    ‘Gouldian arguments’ appeal to the contingency of a scientific domain to establish that domain’s autonomy from some body of theory. For instance, pointing to evolutionary contingency, Stephen Jay Gould suggested that natural selection alone is insufficient to explain life on the macroevolutionary scale. In analysing contingency, philosophers have provided source-independent accounts, understanding how events and processes structure history without attending to the nature of those events and processes. But Gouldian Arguments require source-dependent notions of contingency. An account of contingency is (...)
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  31. Practical Guilt: Moral dilemmas, Emotions, and Social Norms.Patricia S. Greenspan - 1995 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    In its treatment of the role of emotion in ethics the argument of the book outlines a new way of packing motivational force into moral meaning that allows for a ...
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  32.  24
    Philosophy with Teenagers: Nurturing a Moral Imagination for the 21st Century.Patricia Hannam - 2009 - Network Continuum. Edited by Eugenio Echeverria.
    This book explains how P4C can facilitate young people's exploration of key ethical concerns of our time, such as sustainability, justice and intercultural and ...
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  33. The Recurrent Model of Bodily Spatial Phenomenology.Tony Cheng & Patrick Haggard - 2018 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 25 (3-4):55-70.
    In this paper, we introduce and defend the recurrent model for understanding bodily spatial phenomenology. While Longo, Azañón and Haggard (2010) propose a bottom-up model, Bermúdez (2017) emphasizes the top-down aspect of the information processing loop. We argue that both are only half of the story. Section 1 intro- duces what the issues are. Section 2 starts by explaining why the top- down, descending direction is necessary with the illustration from the ‘body-based tactile rescaling’ paradigm (de Vignemont, Ehrsson and (...)
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  34. Behavior control and freedom of action.Patricia S. Greenspan - 1978 - Philosophical Review 87 (April):225-40.
  35.  6
    Can beings whose ethics evolved be ethical beings.Patricia A. Williams - 1993 - In Matthew H. Nitecki & Doris V. Nitecki (eds.), Evolutionary Ethics. SUNY Press. pp. 233--239.
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  36.  28
    How Intractability Spans the Cognitive and Evolutionary Levels of Explanation.Patricia Rich, Mark Blokpoel, Ronald Haan & Iris Rooij - 2020 - Topics in Cognitive Science 12 (4):1382-1402.
    This paper focuses on the cognitive/computational and evolutionary levels. It describes three proposals to make cognition computationally tractable, namely: Resource Rationality, the Adaptive Toolbox and Massive Modularity. While each of these proposals appeals to evolutionary considerations to dissolve the intractability of cognition, Rich, Blokpoel, de Haan, and van Rooij argue that, in each case, the intractability challenge is not resolved, but just relocated to the level of evolution.
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  37.  50
    Moral Reasoning in a Pluralistic World.Patricia Marino - 2015 - Mcgill-Queen's University Press.
    Moral diversity is a fundamental reality of today’s world, but moral theorists have difficulty responding to it. Some take it as evidence for skepticism – the view that there are no moral truths. Others, associating moral reasoning with the search for overarching principles and unifying values, see it as the result of error. In the former case, moral reasoning is useless, since values express individual preferences; in the latter, our reasoning process is dramatically at odds with our lived experience. Moral (...)
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  38.  71
    Integrating ethical dimensions into a model of budgetary Slack creation.Patricia Casey Douglas & Benson Wier - 2000 - Journal of Business Ethics 28 (3):267 - 277.
    The "Ibercorp affair" was front-page news in Spain at various times between 1992 and 1995. In itself, there was nothing particularly new about it: a newly formed financial group engaged in legally and ethically reprehensible behaviour that eventually came to light in the media, ruining the company (and the careers of those involved). What aroused public interest at the time was the fact that it involved individuals connected with Spanish public and political life, the media and certain business circles. Above (...)
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  39.  29
    The Subject's Matter: Self-Consciousness and the Body.Frederique De Vignemont & Adrian J. T. Alsmith (eds.) - 2017 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
    The body may be the object we know the best. It is the only object from which we constantly receive a flow of information through sight and touch; and it is the only object we can experience from the inside, through our proprioceptive, vestibular, and visceral senses. Yet there have been very few books that have attempted to consolidate our understanding of the body as it figures in our experience and self-awareness. This volume offers an interdisciplinary and comprehensive treatment of (...)
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  40.  2
    God, science, sex, gender: an interdisciplinary approach to Christian ethics.Patricia Beattie Jung, Aana Marie Vigen & John Anderson (eds.) - 2010 - Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
    God, Sex, Science, Gender: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Christian Ethics is a timely, wide-ranging attempt to rescue dialogues on human sexuality, sexual diversity, and gender from insular exchanges based primarily on biblical scholarship and denominational ideology. Too often, dialogues on sexuality and gender devolve into the repetition of party lines and defensive postures, without considering the interdisciplinary body of scholarly research on this complex subject. This volume expands beyond the usual parameters, opening the discussion to scholars in the humanities, social (...)
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  41.  11
    Ode to a lost icon, David Jones.Louise Ravelli - 2022 - Discourse and Communication 16 (2):269-282.
    The dramatic impact of online shopping on ‘bricks and mortar’ retail is well known, and large, well-established department stores have been no exception. This article provides a case study of one department store, ‘David Jones’ in Sydney, which has been a long-term feature of the retail landscape in Australia. This store’s embodiment of glamour and service has come to define David Jones as an institution, but the affordances of the conventional department store have been challenged in the current environment, disrupting (...)
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  42.  26
    Sexualidad, política y literatura: lugares del decir/la palabra lesbiana.Patricia Hilda Rotger - 2011 - Astrolabio: Nueva Época 6.
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  43.  72
    Persons and Perspectives: A Personalist Response to Nagel.Patricia Sayre - 1992 - The Personalist Forum 8 (Supplement):205-213.
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  44.  13
    Bioética: entre utopías y desarraigos: libro homenaje a la profesora Dra. Gladys J. Mackinson.Patricia Sorokin & Gladys Mackinson (eds.) - 2002 - Buenos Aires: Ad-Hoc Villela Editor.
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  45. Paradigms of cultural thought.Patricia M. Greenfield - 2005 - In K. Holyoak & B. Morrison (eds.), The Cambridge handbook of thinking and reasoning. Cambridge, England: Cambridge University Press. pp. 663--682.
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  46. The ethics of insider trading.Patricia H. Werhane - 1989 - Journal of Business Ethics 8 (11):841 - 845.
    Despite the fact that a number of economists and philosophers of late defend insider trading both as a viable and useful practice in a free market and as not immoral, I shall question the value of insider trading both from a moral and an economic point of view. I shall argue that insider trading both in its present illegal form and as a legalized market mechanism undermines the efficient and proper functioning of a free market, thereby bringing into question its (...)
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  47.  35
    Only natural: gender, knowledge, and humankind.Louise M. Antony - 2022 - New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press.
    This volume brings together sixteen essays by Louise Antony that reflect her distinctive approach to issues at the intersections of feminist theory, epistemology, philosophy of mind and philosophy of language. Antony proceeds from the Quinean precept that we treat knowledge as a natural phenomenon. This approach, Antony argues, offers feminists and other progressive theorists vital tools with which to expose and dismantle ideological conceptions of knowledge, human nature, and objectivity. She argues that naturalism's focus on the actual (as opposed (...)
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  48.  21
    Body shopping: Challenging convention in the donation and use of bodily materials through art practice.Louise Mackenzie, Ilke Turkmendag, Isabel Burr-Raty, WhiteFeather Hunter, Charlotte Jarvis, Miriam Simun, Hege Tapio & Adam Zaretsky - 2020 - Technoetic Arts 18 (2):279-297.
    The historical context of body and tissue donation is deeply problematic, with patriarchal and colonial narratives. The contemporary context of molecular and genetic biology further complicates issues of bodily donation through narratives of abstraction and extraction. As practitioners working outside the conventional boundaries of scientific study learn the tools and techniques to extract and use bodily materials, they are also learning and challenging the procedures and processes. This article approaches questions of bodily donation through the edited transcript of a conversation (...)
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  49.  51
    Conscientious objection to abortion, the law and its implementation in Victoria, Australia: perspectives of abortion service providers.Lynn Gillam Louise Anne Keogh, Kathleen McNamee Marie Bismark, Christine Bayly Amy Webster & Danielle Newton - 2019 - BMC Medical Ethics 20 (1):11.
    In Victoria, Australia, the law regulating abortion was reformed in 2008, and a clause was introduced requiring doctors with a conscientious objection to abortion to refer women to another provid...
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  50.  47
    The impact of sensorimotor experience on affective evaluation of dance.Louise P. Kirsch, Kim A. Drommelschmidt & Emily S. Cross - 2013 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
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