Results for 'S. S. Connor'

969 found
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  1. Medical bioethics.D. Gracia, S. S. Connor & H. L. Fuenzalida-Puelma - forthcoming - Bioethics: Issues and Perspectives. Connor Ss, Fuenzalida-Puelma Hl, Eds. Washington Dc: Pan American Health Organization.
     
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  2.  47
    The name of the game: a Wittgensteinian view of ‘invasiveness’.Stacy S. Chen, Connor T. A. Brenna, Matthew Cho, Liam G. McCoy & Sunit Das - 2024 - Journal of Medical Ethics 50 (4):240-241.
    In their forthcoming article, ‘What makes a medical intervention invasive?’ De Marco, Simons, and colleagues explore the meaning and usage of the term ‘invasive’ in medical contexts. They describe a ‘Standard Account’, drawn from dictionary definitions, which defines invasiveness as ‘incision of the skin or insertion of an object into the body’. They then highlight cases wherein invasiveness is employed in a manner that is inconsistent with this account (eg, in describing psychotherapy) to argue that the term invasiveness is often (...)
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  3. AIDS projections are too high.A. J. Clayton, A. S. Meltzer, Garcia Garcia Ml, Dominguez Torix Jl, Valdespino Gomez Jl, S. S. Connor, J. Ivo-dos-Santos, B. Galvao-Castro, C. Bartholomew & F. Cleghorn - 1989 - Journal of Biosocial Science 21 (3):179-85.
     
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  4.  32
    Big Decisions on a Small Scale: From Evidence-Based Medicine to Personalized Medicine.Liam G. McCoy, Stacy S. Chen, Connor T. A. Brenna & Sunit Das - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 13 (2):132-134.
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  5.  6
    Analysis of Cricket Ball Type and Innings on State Level Cricket Batter’s Performance.Jonathan Douglas Connor, Wade H. Sinclair, Anthony S. Leicht & Kenji Doma - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  6.  21
    Steering clear of Akrasia: An integrative review of self‐binding Ulysses Contracts in clinical practice.Connor T. A. Brenna, Stacy S. Chen, Matthew Cho, Liam G. McCoy & Sunit Das - 2023 - Bioethics 37 (7):690-714.
    In many jurisdictions, legal frameworks afford patients the opportunity to make prospective medical decisions or to create directives that contain a special provision forfeiting their own ability to object to those decisions at a future time point, should they lose decision‐making capacity. These agreements have been described with widely varying nomenclatures, including Ulysses Contracts, Odysseus Transfers, Psychiatric Advance Directives with Ulysses Clauses, and Powers of Attorney with Special Provisions. As a consequence of this terminological heterogeneity, it is challenging for healthcare (...)
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  7.  44
    Affective antecedents of revenge.Kieran O'Connor & Gabrielle S. Adams - 2013 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (1):29-30.
    We propose that revenge responses are often influenced more by affective reactions than by deliberate decision making as McCullough et al. suggest. We review social psychological evidence suggesting that justice judgments and reactions may be determined more by emotions than by cognitions.
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  8.  64
    Preemption of Local Smoke-Free Air Ordinances: The Implications of Judicial Opinions for Meeting National Health Objectives.Jean C. O'Connor, Allison MacNeil, Jamie F. Chriqui, Michael Tynan, Hannalori Bates & Shelby K. S. Eidson - 2008 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 36 (2):403-412.
    Despite governmental and private antismoking initiatives, tobacco smoking remains a significant public health and economic challenge. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that for each year between 1997 and 2001, cigarette smoking and exposure to secondhand smoke caused approximately 438,000 U.S. residents to die prematurely, resulting in 5.5 million years of potential life lost, and in $92 billion dollars of lost productivity. Also, despite convincing scientific data that laws against indoor smoking protect people from the negative health effects (...)
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  9.  15
    Performance Advantages of Left-Handed Cricket Batting Talent.Jonathan D. Connor, David L. Mann, Miguel-Angel Gomez, Anthony S. Leicht & Kenji Doma - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  10. Rough magic: bags.S. Connor - 2002 - In Ben Highmore, The everyday life reader. New York: Routledge. pp. 346--351.
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  11.  35
    Should Physicians Have the Right to Approve Insurance Settlements for Their Alleged Malpractice?James P. Connors & Marvin S. Fish - 1981 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 9 (6):30-42.
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  12.  85
    Hemispheric Differences in Relational Reasoning: Novel Insights Based on an Old Technique.Michael S. Vendetti, Elizabeth L. Johnson, Connor J. Lemos & Silvia A. Bunge - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  13.  35
    The Stability of DNR Orders on Hospital Readmission.Neil S. Wenger, Robert K. Oye, Norman A. Desbiens, Russell S. Phillips, Joan M. Teno, Alfred F. Connors, Honghu H. Liu, M. F. Zemsky & Peter Kussin - 1996 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 7 (1):48-54.
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  14.  30
    Gaining human ethics approval: a strategy for refining research studies.S. Allen, K. Francis, M. O'Connor & Y. Chapman - 2008 - Monash Bioethics Review 27 (3):S54-S60.
    We argue that developing a human ethics application is an effective method for refining the intent and design of research studies. Our study aimed to investigate the delivery of end-of-life and palliative care nursing to residents of an aged care unit in a Multi-purpose Service/centre in rural Victoria. We used the ethics application process as a strategy to focus the study, and to refine the data collection and analysis techniques. It is our contention that the process of completing the application (...)
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  15.  89
    Believing in black boxes: machine learning for healthcare does not need explainability to be evidence-based.Liam G. McCoy, Connor T. A. Brenna, Stacy S. Chen, Karina Vold & Sunit Das - 2022 - Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 142:252-257.
    Objective: To examine the role of explainability in machine learning for healthcare (MLHC), and its necessity and significance with respect to effective and ethical MLHC application. Study Design and Setting: This commentary engages with the growing and dynamic corpus of literature on the use of MLHC and artificial intelligence (AI) in medicine, which provide the context for a focused narrative review of arguments presented in favour of and opposition to explainability in MLHC. Results: We find that concerns regarding explainability are (...)
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  16.  13
    Conceptual Hierarchies in a Flat Attractor Network: Dynamics of Learning and Computations.Ken McRae Christopher M. O'Connor, George S. Cree - 2009 - Cognitive Science 33 (4):665.
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  17. Why are we seeing more unionization.Karen S. O'connor & J. F. Gibson - 1990 - In Joanne McCloskey Dochterman & Helen K. Grace, Current Issues in Nursing. Mosby.
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  18.  44
    Conceptual Hierarchies in a Flat Attractor Network: Dynamics of Learning and Computations.Christopher M. O’Connor, George S. Cree & Ken McRae - 2009 - Cognitive Science 33 (4):665-708.
    The structure of people’s conceptual knowledge of concrete nouns has traditionally been viewed as hierarchical (Collins & Quillian, 1969). For example, superordinate concepts (vegetable) are assumed to reside at a higher level than basic‐level concepts (carrot). A feature‐based attractor network with a single layer of semantic features developed representations of both basic‐level and superordinate concepts. No hierarchical structure was built into the network. In Experiment and Simulation 1, the graded structure of categories (typicality ratings) is accounted for by the flat (...)
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  19.  20
    Reflections.G. K. Chesterton, Flannery O'Connor, C. S. Lewis, Philip H. Phenix & Lewis Thomas - 1981 - Thinking: The Journal of Philosophy for Children 3 (2):24-26.
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  20.  79
    Reviews. [REVIEW]Timothy E. O'Connor, Julien S. Murphy, Irving H. Anellis, Pavel Kovaly, Nigel Gibson, N. G. O. Pereira, Fred Seddon, Oliva Blanchette & Friedrich Rapp - 1996 - Studies in East European Thought 48 (2-4):135-137.
  21. S. Houlgate, "Freedom, Truth and History".Brian O' Connor - 1993 - Humana Mente:152.
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  22.  47
    Unfulfilled renown: Thomas Preston and the anomalous Zeeman effect.D. Weaire & S. O'Connor - 1987 - Annals of Science 44 (6):617-644.
    When leading spectroscopists in Europe and America were engaged, during 1897, in exploring the recently-discovered Zeeman Effect, they were overtaken by a relatively obscure phsicist working in Dublin. Thomas Preston had previously been known only for his excellent textbooks. His achievement in discovering the Anomalous Zeeman Effect was immediately recognized, but his untimely death has deprived posterity until now of a full account of his life and qualities.
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  23.  21
    Navigating Informed Consent and Patient Safety in Surgery: Lessons for Medical Students and Junior Trainees.Eric Kodish, Michael S. O’Connor, Alejandro Bribriesco & August A. Culbert - 2023 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 34 (3):278-281.
    In the operating room, patient safety is of paramount importance. Medical students and junior trainees, despite their primary role as students, may play active roles in assessing patient safety and reporting suspected errors. Active consent is one layer of patient safety that is continuously assessed by several team members. This article examines an instance where patient consent may have been violated. Through the lens of trainee and senior perspectives, we discuss the ethical principles at stake and provide recommendations for medical (...)
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  24. Ambiguity Is Kinda Good Sometimes.Cailin O’Connor - 2014 - Philosophy of Science 82 (1):110-121.
    In a recent article, Carlos Santana shows that in common interest signaling games when signals are costly and when receivers can observe contextual environmental cues, ambiguous signaling strategies outperform precise ones and can, as a result, evolve. I show that if one assumes a realistic structure on the state space of a common interest signaling game, ambiguous strategies can be explained without appeal to contextual cues. I conclude by arguing that there are multiple types of cases of payoff-beneficial ambiguity, some (...)
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  25. Brian O'Connor, Adorno's Negative Dialectic: Philosophy and the Possibility of Critical Rationality. [REVIEW]Patrick O'Connor - 2006 - Philosophy in Review 26 (2):114-116.
     
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  26. Free will.Timothy O'Connor & Christopher Evan Franklin - 2018 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    “Free Will” is a philosophical term of art for a particular sort of capacity of rational agents to choose a course of action from among various alternatives. Which sort is the free will sort is what all the fuss is about. (And what a fuss it has been: philosophers have debated this question for over two millenia, and just about every major philosopher has had something to say about it.) Most philosophers suppose that the concept of free will is very (...)
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  27.  70
    A randomised controlled trial of an Intervention to Improve Compliance with the ARRIVE guidelines (IICARus).Ezgi Tanriver-Ayder, Laura J. Gray, Sarah K. McCann, Ian M. Devonshire, Leigh O’Connor, Zeinab Ammar, Sarah Corke, Mahmoud Warda, Evandro Araújo De-Souza, Paolo Roncon, Edward Christopher, Ryan Cheyne, Daniel Baker, Emily Wheater, Marco Cascella, Savannah A. Lynn, Emmanuel Charbonney, Kamil Laban, Cilene Lino de Oliveira, Julija Baginskaite, Joanne Storey, David Ewart Henshall, Ahmed Nazzal, Privjyot Jheeta, Arianna Rinaldi, Teja Gregorc, Anthony Shek, Jennifer Freymann, Natasha A. Karp, Terence J. Quinn, Victor Jones, Kimberley Elaine Wever, Klara Zsofia Gerlei, Mona Hosh, Victoria Hohendorf, Monica Dingwall, Timm Konold, Katrina Blazek, Sarah Antar, Daniel-Cosmin Marcu, Alexandra Bannach-Brown, Paula Grill, Zsanett Bahor, Gillian L. Currie, Fala Cramond, Rosie Moreland, Chris Sena, Jing Liao, Michelle Dohm, Gina Alvino, Alejandra Clark, Gavin Morrison, Catriona MacCallum, Cadi Irvine, Philip Bath, David Howells, Malcolm R. Macleod, Kaitlyn Hair & Emily S. Sena - 2019 - Research Integrity and Peer Review 4 (1).
    BackgroundThe ARRIVE (Animal Research: Reporting of In Vivo Experiments) guidelines are widely endorsed but compliance is limited. We sought to determine whether journal-requested completion of an ARRIVE checklist improves full compliance with the guidelines.MethodsIn a randomised controlled trial, manuscripts reporting in vivo animal research submitted to PLOS ONE (March–June 2015) were randomly allocated to either requested completion of an ARRIVE checklist or current standard practice. Authors, academic editors, and peer reviewers were blinded to group allocation. Trained reviewers performed outcome adjudication (...)
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  28.  17
    Patients with DNR Orders in the Operating Room: Surgery, Resuscitation, and Outcomes.Neil S. Wenger, Nancy L. Greengold, Robert K. Oye, Peter Kussin, Russell S. Phillips, Norman A. Desbiens, Honghu Liu, Jonathan R. Hiatt, Joan M. Teno & Alfred F. Connors Jr - 1997 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 8 (3):250-257.
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  29.  15
    Thomas M. Alexander, The Human Eros: Eco-ontolo.Connor Morris - 2015 - European Journal of Pragmatism and American Philosophy 7 (1).
    Introduction Like most scholars of Dewey’s aesthetics, Thomas Alexander (who may be counted foremost under that banner), has a tendency to see in Dewey’s work an inextricable tendency toward unity. Aesthetic experience in Dewey’s Art as Experience, turns on the concept of ‘fusion’ in which meanings are ‘fused’ into aesthetic wholes which can be embodied in art. Aesthetic experiences, taking in hand Dewey’s understanding of ‘experience’ as objective process involving the interplay of nature an...
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  30.  18
    Women Poets and the Origin of the Greek Hexameter.W. Robert Connor - 2019 - Arion 27 (2):85-102.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Women Poets and the Origin of the Greek Hexameter W. ROBERT CONNOR A very considerable question has arisen, as to what was the origin of poetry. —Pliny the Elder, Natural History 7.57 i. a road trip with pausanias Tennyson called the dactylic hexameter “the stateliest measure / ever moulded by the lips of man,” but he did not say whose lips first did the moulding. Despite much arguing (...)
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  31.  28
    Aristotle's Theory of Bodies by Christian Pfeiffer.Scott O'Connor - 2020 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 58 (1):167-168.
    Aristotle uses 'body' to describe the matter of animals, the elements and what they compose, as well as magnitudes extended in three-dimensions. These last bodies belong to the category of quantity, alongside surfaces and lines. It is this notion of body that interests Christian Pfeiffer, who presents Aristotle's various discussions of it as one exhaustive theory of body. According to this theory, magnitudes are form-matter composites, where boundaries are forms and extensions are matter. The boundary of a body is its (...)
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  32.  48
    Toward A Formal-Pragmatic Theory of Communicative Memory: Rethinking Habermas's Isolated Speech Situation.Connor Moran - 2024 - Res Philosophica 101 (2):271-297.
    This article argues that Habermas’s formal-pragmatics are better understood as a set of weak-universal dispositions susceptible to erosion over the course of a lifetime, if exposed to continual “disappointing” communicative experiences. Habermas’s rational-reconstructive project to explicate the intuitive rule-consciousness held by competent speakers retains immense theoretical value for analyzing both partisan and mass political discourse, if his emphasis on isolated speech situations is supplemented with a logic of communicative memory better accounting for how disagreement antecedes discourse on the formal-pragmatic register. (...)
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  33. Adorno's Kantian Epistemology Interpretation and Defence.Brian Patrick O'connor & Brian O'Connor - 1995 - Dissertation,
    This is a study of the epistemological theory of Theodor Adorno.
     
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  34. Play, Idleness and the Problem of Necessity in Schiller and Marcuse.Brian O'Connor - 2014 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 22 (6):1095-1117.
    The central concern of this paper is to explore the efforts of Schiller's post-Kantian idealism and Marcuse's critical theory to develop a new conception of free human experience. That conception is built on the notion of play. Play is said to combine the human capacities for physical pleasure and reason, capacities which the modern world has dualized. Analysis of their respective accounts of play reveals its ambivalent form in the work of both philosophers. Play supports the ideal of ‘freedom from (...)
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  35.  22
    Nicholas Winding Refn's Abject Male: Inhibiting Spectator-Identification in Bronson (2008) and Drive.Barry Nevin & Aoife O'Connor - 2022 - Substance 51 (2):38-60.
    Abstract:Nicholas Winding Refn regularly appears to offer men as his audience's main point of identification. Yet these men are predominantly transgressive characters who frequently, if not constantly, frustrate spectator-identification and consequently linger on the periphery of cinematic paradigms. In three stages, this article analyses how Refn's violent male characters affect spectatorship. First, it considers the unstable subject mechanisms for spectator-identification afforded by classical Hollywood cinema. Second, it examines Julia Kristeva's psychoanalytical theorization of the abject and outlines the relevance of her (...)
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  36. Red in Tooth and Claw No More: Animal Rights and the Permissibility to Redesign Nature.Connor K. Kianpour & Eze Paez - 2022 - Environmental Values 31 (2):211-231.
    Most non-human animals live in the wild and it is probable that suffering predominates in their lives due to natural events. Humans may at some point be able to engage in paradise engineering, or the modification of nature and animal organisms themselves, to improve the well-being of wild animals. We may, in other words, make nature 'red in tooth and claw' no more. We argue that this creates a tension between environmental ethics and animal ethics which is likely insurmountable. First, (...)
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  37.  7
    To Assess or Not to Assess? Physician-Patient Disagreement as the Primary Trigger for Capacity Testing in Clinical Practice.Matthew Cho, Connor T. A. Brenna, Stacy S. Chen, Liam G. McCoy & Sunit Das - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (8):98-100.
    In her article, “Affect, Values and Problems Assessing Decision-Making Capacity,” Hawkins proposes a novel framework for understanding patients’ decision-making capacity, accounting for situations...
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  38.  19
    Musical bonds are orthogonal to symbolic language and norms.Connor Wood - 2021 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 44.
    Both Mehr et al.'s credible signaling hypothesis and Savage et al.'s music and social bonding hypothesis emphasize the role of multilevel social structures in the evolution of music. Although empirical evidence preferentially supports the social bonding hypothesis, rhythmic music may enable bonding in a way uniquely fitted to the normative and language-based character of multilevel human societies.
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  39.  41
    Is God’s Necessity Necessary?Timothy O’Connor - 2010 - Philosophia Christi 12 (2):309 - 316.
    I briefly defend the following claims in response to my critics: (1) We cannot make a principled division between features of contingent reality that do and features that don’t "cry our for explanation." (2) The physical data indicating fine-tuning provide confirmation of the hypothesis of a personal necessary cause of the universe over against an impersonal necessary cause, notwithstanding the fact that the probability of either hypothesis, if true, would be 1. (3) Theism that commits to God’s necessary existence makes (...)
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  40.  20
    (1 other version)Publisher's Desk.Michael Connor - 2005 - Business Ethics 19 (1):4-4.
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  41.  28
    U.S. Catholic Bishops on Nutrition and Hydration: A Second Opinion.Russell B. Connors - 1993 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 4 (3):253-255.
  42.  70
    Derrida's Worldly Responsibility: The Opening between “Faith” and the “Sacred”.Patrick O'Connor - 2010 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 45 (2):303-334.
    This article will theorize how Derrida's deconstruction signifies a fundamental ontological alterity. We will examine the use of both the tropes of “sacred” and “faith” as tropes to express this possibility. We will articulate how deconstruction, as a development of phenomenology, provides a theoretical nexus where the alterity of things and persons may be thought. We will arrive at the paradoxical formulation of “ontological alterity” as a key moment in deconstructive thinking. Essentially we will argue that deconstruction offers the resources (...)
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  43.  9
    Should You Stick Around? Children’s Associational Rights and the Duties of Nonparental Caregivers.Connor K. Kianpour - forthcoming - The Journal of Ethics:1-19.
    Many believe that it is wrong for parents to prevent their children from associating with other adults. Many also believe that it is wrong for parents to prevent their children from continuing to associate with adults whose association with them is crucial to the children’s well-being. Call these adults the important associates of children. In this essay, I will argue that the considerations favoring the two judgments just mentioned also favor a further judgment. In particular, I will argue that important (...)
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  44.  63
    Sydney owenson's wild indian girl.Maureen O’Connor - 2005 - The European Legacy 10 (1):21-28.
    In 1811, Sydney Owenson (Lady Morgan) published a novel set in India, The Missionary: An Indian Tale, arguably the first Irish Orientalist text. If, as Madeline Dobie has recently argued, the discourse of Orientalism in France was used to avoid moral questions about colonialism and slavery, Owenson used the genre in order to confront the brutalities of British colonialism. Owenson's intertextuality drew on not only other works about the east, but also her own literary productions and experience of authorship as (...)
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  45.  14
    Cajetan's biblical commentaries: motive and method.Michael O'Connor - 2017 - Boston: Brill.
    In Cajetan's Biblical Commentaries, Michael O'Connor argues that Cajetan's motive was more 'Catholic Reform' than 'Counter-Reformation', and that his method was a bold hybrid of scholasticism and Renaissance humanism, correcting the Vulgate's errors and expounding the text according to the literal sense.
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  46.  25
    The Kids Aren't Alright.Connor K. Kianpour - 2023 - Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 25 (3).
    I first argue that forms of regulated parenting are presumptively justified whereas private parenting is not. Then, I argue that the reasons we have to believe that regulated parenting is justified give us reasons to believe that individuals who are objectionably intolerant—that is, they subscribe to prejudicial dogmas such as racism, sexism, and homophobia to such an extent that their ability to direct caring attitudes toward, for example, Black people, women, and/or gay people is significantly impaired—ought not to rear children. (...)
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  47.  9
    Worrying the Line.Kimberly R. Connor - 2011-12-09 - In Fritz Allhoff, Jesse R. Steinberg & Abrol Fairweather, Blues–Philosophy for Everyone. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 142–152.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Story Song Prayer.
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  48.  15
    Asphyxiations.Steven Connor - 2023 - Substance 52 (1):74-78.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:AsphyxiationsSteven Connor (bio)Recent events and sociorhetorical expatiations upon them have reaffirmed breathing as the ideal form of free and unimpeded life, that struggles against the throttlings of oppression. The root meaning of oppression, from the past participle of Latin opprimere, is to press, crush or bear down upon, and the word oppression has commonly been used to signify the feeling of the difficulty of breathing, through some constriction (...)
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  49.  9
    Force from Nietzsche to Derrida.Clare Connors - 2010 - London: Legenda, Modern Humanities Research Association and Maney Publishing.
    "What is the pervasive character of the world? The answer is force." But, as Heidegger asks next: "What is force?" Connors sets out to answer this question, tracing a genealogy of the idea of force through the writings of Nietzsche, Heidegger, Foucault and Derrida. These thinkers try to pin down what force is, but know too that it is something which cannot be neutrally described. Their vigorously literary writings must therefore be read as much for the stylistic and rhetorical ways (...)
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  50.  33
    It Only Affects Me: Pharmaceutical Regulation and Harm to Others.Connor K. Kianpour - 2022 - HEC Forum 34 (3):269-289.
    In her Pharmaceutical Freedom, Jessica Flanigan argues that antibiotics can be regulated consistent with her otherwise largely deregulatory view with respect to pharmaceuticals and recreational drugs. I contend in this essay that the reasons for justifying antibiotic regulation are reasons that can be offered to justify the regulation of many other drugs, both pharmaceutical and recreational. After laying out the specifics of Flanigan’s view, I suggest that it is amenable to the regulation of drugs like varenicline. Though such drugs can (...)
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