Results for 'Silke Kruse-Weber'

952 found
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  1.  14
    Error management for musicians: an interdisciplinary conceptual framework.Silke Kruse-Weber & Richard Parncutt - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  2.  62
    When the Sound Becomes the Goal. 4E Cognition and Teleomusicality in Early Infancy.Andrea Schiavio, Dylan van der Schyff, Silke Kruse-Weber & Renee Timmers - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
  3.  34
    Psychocentricity and participant profiles: implications for lexical processing among multilinguals.Gary Libben, Kaitlin Curtiss & Silke Weber - 2014 - Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  4.  26
    Volker Kruse, Uwe Barrelmeyer: Max Weber. Eine Einführung.Matthias Neuber - 2012 - Philosophischer Literaturanzeiger 65 (4):312-318.
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  5.  86
    What is Shared in Joint Action? Issues of Co-representation, Response Conflict, and Agent Identification.Dorit Wenke, Silke Atmaca, Antje Holländer, Roman Liepelt, Pamela Baess & Wolfgang Prinz - 2011 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 2 (2):147-172.
    When sharing a task with another person that requires turn taking, as in doubles games of table tennis, performance on the shared task is similar to performing the whole task alone. This has been taken to indicate that humans co-represent their partner’s task share, as if it were their own. Task co-representation allows prediction of the other’s responses when it is the other’s turn, and leads to response conflict in joint interference tasks. However, data from our lab cast doubt on (...)
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  6.  74
    Public Moralities Concerning Donation and Disposition of Organs: Results from a Cross-European Study.Mark Schweda & Silke Schicktanz - 2008 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 17 (3):308-317.
    There are not many international consensuses in the governance of biomedicine. One that exists concerns a general reluctance toward a commercialization of organ procurement. However, with reference to the problem of there is an increasingly louder call in ethical and legal discourse to and to establish a debate on financial incentives Other ethicists and jurists criticize this development, and warn of injustice, exploitation of the poor, and a commodification of the human body.
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  7. The "spare parts person"? Conceptions of the human body and their implications for public attitudes towards organ donation and organ sale.Mark Schweda & Silke Schicktanz - 2009 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 4:4-.
    BackgroundThe increasing debate on financial incentives for organ donation raises concerns about a "commodification of the human body". Philosophical-ethical stances on this development depend on assumptions concerning the body and how people think about it. In our qualitative empirical study we analyze public attitudes towards organ donation in their specific relation to conceptions of the human body in four European countries (Cyprus, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden). This approach aims at a more context-sensitive picture of what "commodification of the body" (...)
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  8.  69
    Post-Truth, the Future of Democracy and the Public Sphere.Silke van Dyk - 2022 - Theory, Culture and Society 39 (4):37-50.
    The rise of authoritarian and nationalist forces is currently accompanied by a change in the way public opinion is formed and in the culture of debate, a phenomenon that has been described as a crisis of facticity. There is an urgent need to clarify the (factual) foundations and benchmarks for democratic negotiation, even if lies are nothing new in politics. The article analyses this shift and discusses to what extent the liberal problematization of post-factual politics is becoming a way of (...)
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  9. Natural selection and self-organization.Bruce H. Weber & David J. Depew - 1996 - Biology and Philosophy 11 (1):33-65.
    The Darwinian concept of natural selection was conceived within a set of Newtonian background assumptions about systems dynamics. Mendelian genetics at first did not sit well with the gradualist assumptions of the Darwinian theory. Eventually, however, Mendelism and Darwinism were fused by reformulating natural selection in statistical terms. This reflected a shift to a more probabilistic set of background assumptions based upon Boltzmannian systems dynamics. Recent developments in molecular genetics and paleontology have put pressure on Darwinism once again. Current work (...)
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  10.  51
    Why Public Moralities Matter—The Relevance of Socioempirical Premises for the Ethical Debate on Organ Markets.Mark Schweda & Silke Schicktanz - 2014 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 39 (3):217-222.
    The ongoing bioethical debate about organ markets rests not only on theoretical premises, but also on assumptions regarding public views of and attitudes toward organ donation that need closer socioempirical examination. Summarizing results from our previous qualitative social research in this field, this paper illustrates the ethical significance of such public moralities in two respects: On one hand, it analyzes the implicit bias of the common rhetoric of “organ scarcity” which motivates much of the commercialization debate. On the other hand, (...)
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  11. What Is an Inconsistent Truth Table?Zach Weber, Guillermo Badia & Patrick Girard - 2016 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 94 (3):533-548.
    ABSTRACTDo truth tables—the ordinary sort that we use in teaching and explaining basic propositional logic—require an assumption of consistency for their construction? In this essay we show that truth tables can be built in a consistency-independent paraconsistent setting, without any appeal to classical logic. This is evidence for a more general claim—that when we write down the orthodox semantic clauses for a logic, whatever logic we presuppose in the background will be the logic that appears in the foreground. Rather than (...)
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  12. What German experts expect from individualized medicine: problems of uncertainty and future complication in physician–patient interaction.Arndt Heßling & Silke Schicktanz - 2012 - Clinical Ethics 7 (2):86-93.
    ‘Individualized medicine’ is an emerging paradigm in clinical life science research. We conducted a socio-empirical interview study in a leading German clinical research group, aiming at implementing ‘individualized medicine’ of colorectal cancer. The goal was to investigate moral and social issues related to physician–patient interaction and clinical care, and to identify the points raised, supported and rejected by the physicians and researchers. Up to now there has been only limited insight into how experts dedicated to individualized medicine view its problems. (...)
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  13.  27
    The emergence of temporality in attitudes towards cryo-fertility: a case study comparing German and Israeli social egg freezing users.Nitzan Rimon-Zarfaty & Silke Schicktanz - 2022 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 44 (2):1-26.
    Assistive reproductive technologies are increasingly used to control the biology of fertility and its temporality. Combining historical, theoretical, and socio-empirical insights, this paper aims at expanding our understanding of the way temporality emerges and is negotiated in the contemporary practice of cryopreservation of reproductive materials. We first present an historical overview of the practice of cryo-fertility to indicate the co-production of technology and social constructions of temporality. We then apply a theoretical framework for analysing cryobiology and cryopreservation technologies as creating (...)
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  14. Incommensurability and theory comparison in experimental biology.Marcel Weber - 2002 - Biology and Philosophy 17 (2):155-169.
    Incommensurability of scientific theories, as conceived by Thomas Kuhnand Paul Feyerabend, is thought to be a major or even insurmountable obstacletothe empirical comparison of these theories. I examine this problem in light ofaconcrete case from the history of experimental biology, namely the oxidativephosphorylation controversy in biochemistry (ca. 1961-1977). After a briefhistorical exposition, I show that the two main competing theories which werethe subject of the ox-phos controversy instantiate some of the characteristicfeatures of incommensurable theories, namely translation failure,non-corresponding predictions, and different (...)
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  15. Which Kind of Causal Specificity Matters Biologically?Marcel Weber - 2017 - Philosophy of Science 84 (3):574-585.
    Griffiths et al. (2015) have proposed a quantitative measure of causal specificity and used it to assess various attempts to single out genetic causes as being causally more specific than other cellular mechanisms, for example, alternative splicing. Focusing in particular on developmental processes, they have identified a number of important challenges for this project. In this discussion note, I would like to show how these challenges can be met.
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  16. Unification: What is it, how do we reach and why do we want it?Erik Weber - 1999 - Synthese 118 (3):479-499.
    This article has three aims. The first is to give a partial explication of the concept of unification. My explication will be partial because I confine myself to unification of particular events, because I do not consider events of a quantitative nature, and discuss only deductive cases. The second aim is to analyze how unification can be reached. My third aim is to show that unification is an intellectual benefit. Instead of being an intellectual benefit unification could be an intellectual (...)
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  17.  71
    Explaining, understanding and scientific theories.Erik Weber - 1996 - Erkenntnis 44 (1):1 - 23.
    One of the functions of scientific knowledge is to provide the theories and laws we need in order to understand the world. My article deals with the epistemic aspect of understanding, i.e., with understanding as unification. The aim is to explicate what we have to do in order to make our scientific knowledge contribute to an increase of the degree to which the particular events we have observed, fit into our world-picture. The analysis contains two parts. First I define the (...)
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  18.  19
    Exploring the Ethical Issues in Organ Transplantation.Solveig Lena Hansen & Silke Schicktanz - 2021 - In Solveig Lena Hansen & Silke Schicktanz, Ethical Challenges of Organ Transplantation. Transcript Verlag. pp. 11-20.
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  19. Life after Kant: Natural purposes and the autopoietic foundations of biological individuality. [REVIEW]Andreas Weber & Francisco J. Varela - 2002 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 1 (2):97-125.
    This paper proposes a basic revision of the understanding of teleology in biological sciences. Since Kant, it has become customary to view purposiveness in organisms as a bias added by the observer; the recent notion of teleonomy expresses well this as-if character of natural purposes. In recent developments in science, however, notions such as self-organization (or complex systems) and the autopoiesis viewpoint, have displaced emergence and circular self-production as central features of life. Contrary to an often superficial reading, Kant gives (...)
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  20. Naive Validity.Zach Weber - 2014 - Philosophical Quarterly 64 (254):99-114.
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  21.  91
    Origins of order in dynamical models. A review of Stuart A. Kauffman, the origins of order: Self organization and selection in evolution.Bruce H. Weber - 1998 - Biology and Philosophy 13 (1):133-144.
  22.  23
    Editorial: Gendered Paths into STEM. Disparities Between Females and Males in STEM Over the Life-Span.Bernhard Ertl, Silke Luttenberger, Rebecca Lazarides, M. Gail Jones & Manuela Paechter - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  23.  41
    The Persistence of the Leveling Down Objection.Michael Weber - 2019 - Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics 12 (1):1-25.
    According to the Leveling Down Objection, some, if not all, egalitarians must concede that leveling down can make things better in a respect—in terms of equality. I argue, first, that if this is true, then it is hard for such egalitarians to avoid the even more disturbing result that leveling down can be better all-things-considered. I then consider and reject two attempts to take this particular sting out of being an egalitarian. The first is Tom Christiano’s argument that the egalitarian (...)
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  24.  79
    Metaphysics of the Common World: Whitehead, Latour, and the Modes of Existence.Tomas Weber - 2016 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 30 (4):515-533.
    ABSTRACT We exist only because we inhabit a world in common, embedded within networks of associations between humans and nonhumans. This is endlessly disclosed by our experience of the world. And yet, despite its palpability, it is clear that we have failed to mobilize a notion of the common world into something capable of guiding our modes of thought and collective forms of activity—our attitudes, our affective lives, our politics. How have we arrived here? Bruno Latour's work suggests that an (...)
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  25.  34
    Physicians’ communication patterns for motivating rectal cancer patients to biomarker research: Empirical insights and ethical issues.Sabine Wöhlke, Julia Perry & Silke Schicktanz - 2018 - Clinical Ethics 13 (4):175-188.
    In clinical research – whether pharmaceutical, genetic or biomarker research – it is important to protect research participants’ autonomy and to ensure or strengthen their control over health-related decisions. Empirical–ethical studies have argued that both the ethical concept and the current legalistic practice of informed consent should be adapted to the complexity of the clinical environment. For this, a better understanding of recruitment, for which also the physician–patient relationship plays an important role, is needed.Our aim is to ethically reflect communication (...)
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  26.  9
    Kinder- und Erwachsenenanalyse im Dialog.Bürgin Dieter, Pless Silke & Staehle Angelika - 2016 - Psyche 70 (11):1041-1066.
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  27.  27
    Organizational Sensemaking of Non-ethical Consumer Behavior: Case Study of a French Mutual Insurance Company.Bernard Cova, Gerald Gaglio, Juliette Weber & Philippe Chanial - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 148 (4):783-799.
    Researchers and managers alike are becoming increasingly interested in the topic of unethical consumer behavior. Where most studies view unethical behavior as something that is identifiable per se, the authors of the present article believe that it only exists because it has been constructed by people operating within a specific context. Hence the efforts made by this paper to explore, at the level of one specific organization, how interactions between employees and consumers might lead to the construct of unethical consumers. (...)
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  28.  47
    Applications of the adaptive logic for causal discovery.Leen De Vreese & Erik Weber - 2004 - Logique Et Analyse 185 (188):33-51.
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  29. Philosophy’s Future.Eric Dietrich & Zach Weber - 2011
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  30. Liang," Lowness and Π20 nullsets".Rod& Nies Downey, André Weber & Rebecca Yu - 2006 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 71:3.
     
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  31. On the generation of antisaccades in different conditions.B. Fischer & H. Weber - 1996 - In Enrique Villanueva, Perception. Ridgeview Pub. Co. pp. 12-12.
     
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  32.  31
    Revising the diagnosis of congenital amusia with the Montreal Battery of Evaluation of Amusia.Jasmin Pfeifer & Silke Hamann - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  33.  59
    Evolutionary plasticity in prokaryotes: A panglossian view.Marcel Weber - 1996 - Biology and Philosophy 11 (1):67-88.
    Enzyme directed genetic mechanisms causing random DNA sequence alterations are ubiquitous in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes. A number of molecular geneticist have invoked adaptation through natural selection to account for this fact, however, alternative explanations have also flourished. The population geneticist G.C. Williams has dismissed the possibility of selection for mutator activity on a priori grounds. In this paper, I attempt a refutation of Williams' argument. In addition, I discuss some conceptual problems related to recent claims made by microbiologists on (...)
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  34.  28
    Allocating Remdesivir Under Scarcity: Social Justice or More Systemic Racism.Eli Weber & Mark J. Bliton - 2020 - American Journal of Bioethics 20 (9):31-33.
    Volume 20, Issue 9, September 2020, Page 31-33.
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  35.  50
    On the Emergence of Living Systems.Bruce H. Weber - 2009 - Biosemiotics 2 (3):343-359.
    If the problem of the origin of life is conceptualized as a process of emergence of biochemistry from proto-biochemistry, which in turn emerged from the organic chemistry and geochemistry of primitive earth, then the resources of the new sciences of complex systems dynamics can provide a more robust conceptual framework within which to explore the possible pathways of chemical complexification leading to living systems and biosemiosis. In such a view the emergence of life, and concomitantly of natural selection and biosemiosis, (...)
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  36.  8
    Notes to Literature, Volume 2.Rolf Tiedemann & Shierry Weber Nicholson (eds.) - 1992 - Cambridge University Press.
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  37.  55
    Symbolism, Its Meaning and Effect: The Universal Algebra of Culture.Michel Weber - 2016 - Cosmos and History 12 (1):350-377.
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  38.  19
    The King of pain: Aeneas, achates and 'achos'in aeneid 1.G. B. Achates & T. Weber - 2008 - Classical Quarterly 58:181-189.
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  39.  8
    Adornos Minima Moralia.Shierry Weber Nicholsen - 2017 - In Martin Niederauer & Gerhard Schweppenhäuser, „Kulturindustrie“: Theoretische Und Empirische Annäherungen an Einen Populären Begriff. Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden. pp. 63-86.
    Adorno und Horkheimer zufolge prägt die Kulturindustrie alle Facetten des gesellschaftlichen Lebens und reicht bis in die tiefsten Fasern der subjektiven Erfahrung des Individuums hinein. Entsprechend hielt Adorno im Vorwort der Minima Moralia fest: „Was einmal den Philosophen Leben hieß, ist zur Sphäre des Privaten und dann bloß noch des Konsums geworden, die als Anhang des materiellen Produktionsprozesses, ohne Autonomie und ohne eigene Substanz, mitgeschleift wird.“ Seit Adorno und Horkheimer diese prägende Wirkung der Kulturindustrie auf die subjektive Erfahrung erstmals beschrieben (...)
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  40.  3
    Menschenwürde. Eine philosophische Debatte über Dimensionen ihrer Kontingenz.Eva Weber-Guskar - 2016 - Münster: Mentis.
    Slightly revised version of the author's habilitation--Universitèat Gèottingen, 2014.
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  41.  88
    Irreducible complexity and the problem of biochemical emergence.Bruce H. Weber - 1999 - Biology and Philosophy 14 (4):593-605.
  42.  38
    Can the repeated prisoner's dilemma game be used as a tool to enhance moral reasoning?Stephen E. Rau & James Weber - 2003 - Teaching Business Ethics 7 (4):395-416.
  43.  17
    Moving up with Kin and community:: Upward social mobility for Black and white women.Lynn Weber & Elizabeth Higginbotham - 1992 - Gender and Society 6 (3):416-440.
    The major aim of this research is to reopen the study of the subjective experience of upward mobility and to incorporate race and gender into our vision of the process. It examines evidence from a social science study of upward mobility among 200 Black and white professional-managerial women in the Memphis, Tennessee metropolitan area. The experiences of the women paint a different picture from the image of the mobility process that remains from scholarship conducted 20 to 30 years ago on (...)
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  44.  15
    Creativity and Its Discontents: The Response to Whitehead's Process and Reality.Alan Wyk & Michel Weber (eds.) - 2009 - De Gruyter.
    "I do not expect a good reception from professional philosophers" wrote Whitehead in 1929, immediately after the publication of Process and Reality. Indeed, it took nearly thirty years before scholars seriously started to try to decipher the book taken as a whole. And there remains today "professional" Whiteheadians who claim that this work can - or even should - be bracketed by anyone wishing to get a clear picture of Whitehead's true speculative agenda. Creativity and Its Discontents aims to provide (...)
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  45.  42
    Task-dependent neural bases of perceiving emotionally expressive targets.Jamil Zaki, Jochen Weber & Kevin Ochsner - 2012 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 6.
  46.  66
    A Systemic Reading of Whitehead's Organic Philosophy.Michel Weber - 2020 - Process Studies 49 (1):115-142.
    The aim of this article is to explore the importance of biological and social networks in Whitehead's philosophy. This exploration will involve a consideration of pluridisciplinarity in Whitehead, including a consideration of the relationship between scientific understanding and philosophical thinking, the question of method in Whitehead's thought, and the crucial distinctions between mechanism and organicism and between nature lifeless and nature alive.
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  47. What is it like to encounter an autonomous artificial agent?Karsten Weber - 2013 - AI and Society 28 (4):483-489.
    Following up on Thomas Nagel’s paper “What is it like to be a bat?” and Alan Turing’s essay “Computing machinery and intelligence,” it shall be claimed that a successful interaction of human beings and autonomous artificial agents depends more on which characteristics human beings ascribe to the agent than on whether the agent really has those characteristics. It will be argued that Masahiro Mori’s concept of the “uncanny valley” as well as evidence from several empirical studies supports that assertion. Finally, (...)
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  48.  20
    Risikoadaptierte Prävention: Governance Perspective Für Leistungsansprüche Bei Genetischen (Brustkrebs-)Risiken.Friedhelm Meier, Anke Harney, Kerstin Rhiem, Anja Neumann, Silke Neusser, Matthias Braun, Jürgen Wasem, Rita Schmutzler, Stefan Huster & Peter Dabrock - 2018 - Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden.
    Die vorliegende Studie empfiehlt, Leistungsansprüche für Personen mit interventionsfordernden Risiken anhand einer neuen Rechtskategorie, der ‚risikoadaptieren Prävention‘, abzubilden. Spätestens seit dem bioinformatischen Innovationsschub kann eine risikoadaptierte Anwendung von prophylaktischen Maßnahmen umfassend gewährleistet werden. Jedoch können die gegebenen Rechtskategorien das medizinische Anwendungsfeld nicht adäquat steuern. Die Autoren Friedhelm Meier, Anke Harney, Kerstin Rhiem, Anja Neumann, Silke Neusser, Matthias Braun, Jürgen Wasem, Rita Schmutzler, Stefan Huster und Peter Dabrock haben zusammen im BMBF geförderten Projekt SYSKON. Re-Konfiguration von Gesundheit und Krankheit. Ethische, (...)
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  49. Intergenerational justice : promotion of renewables and the water protection objective.Karolis Gudas & Simona Weber - 2019 - In Thomas Cottier, Shaheeza Lalani & Clarence Siziba, Intergenerational equity: environmental and cultural concerns. Boston: Brill Nijhoff.
     
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  50.  11
    The Love of Nature and the End of the World: The Unspoken Dimensions of Environmental Concern.Shierry Weber Nicholsen - 2002 - MIT Press (MA).
    A psychological exploration of how the love of nature can coexist in our psyches with apathy toward environmental destruction.
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