Results for 'Stina Bergman Blix'

384 found
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  1.  31
    A Sociological Perspective on Emotions in the Judiciary.Stina Bergman Blix & Åsa Wettergren - 2016 - Emotion Review 8 (1):32-37.
    Introducing a sociological perspective on judicial emotions, we argue that previous studies underemphasize structural and interactional dimensions. Through key concepts in the sociology of emotions we relate professional court actors’ emotion management to the emotional regime of the judiciary. Examples from the Swedish judiciary illustrate three main arguments: (a) The idea of rational justice as nonemotional must be investigated as a joint accomplishment including collective emotion management; (b) Judicial objectivity requires situated emotion management and empathy, orientated by emotions of pride/shame; (...)
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  2.  37
    Researching Emotion in Courts and the Judiciary: A Tale of Two Projects.Sharyn Roach Anleu, Stina Bergman Blix & Kathy Mack - 2015 - Emotion Review 7 (2):145-150.
    The dominant image of judicial authority is emotional detachment; however, judicial work involves emotion. This presents a challenge for researchers to investigate emotions where they are disavowed. Two projects, one in Australia and another in Sweden, use multiple sociological research methods to study judicial experience, expression, and management of emotion. In both projects, observational research examines judicial officers’ display of emotion in court, while interviews investigate judicial emotional experiences. Surveys in Australia identify emotions judicial officers generally find important in their (...)
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  3.  22
    Working Memory Training is Associated with Long Term Attainments in Math and Reading.Stina Söderqvist & Sissela Bergman Nutley - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  4.  17
    How Is Working Memory Training Likely to Influence Academic Performance? Current Evidence and Methodological Considerations.Sissela Bergman Nutley & Stina Söderqvist - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  5. Skill, Drill, and Intelligent Performance: Ryle and Intellectualism.Stina Bäckström & Martin Gustafsson - 2017 - Journal for the History of Analytical Philosophy 5 (5).
    In this paper, we aim to show that a study of Gilbert Ryle’s work has much to contribute to the current debate between intellectualism and anti-intellectualism with respect to skill and know-how. According to Ryle, knowing how and skill are distinctive from and do not reduce to knowing that. What is often overlooked is that for Ryle this point is connected to the idea that the distinction between skill and mere habit is a category distinction, or a distinction in form. (...)
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  6.  53
    Nurses as Guests or Professionals in Home Health Care.Stina Öresland, Sylvia Määttä, Astrid Norberg, Marianne Winther Jörgensen & Kim Lützén - 2008 - Nursing Ethics 15 (3):371-383.
    The aim of this study was to explore and interpret the diverse subject of positions, or roles, that nurses construct when caring for patients in their own home. Ten interviews were analysed and interpreted using discourse analysis. The findings show that these nurses working in home care constructed two positions: `guest' and `professional'. They had to make a choice between these positions because it was impossible to be both at the same time. An ethics of care and an ethics of (...)
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  7.  26
    Retrieval-induced forgetting after trauma: A study with victims of sexual assault.Ines Blix & Tim Brennen - 2012 - Cognition and Emotion 26 (2):321-331.
  8.  34
    Imagining What Could Have Happened: Types and Vividness of Counterfactual Thoughts and the Relationship With Post-traumatic Stress Reactions.Ines Blix, Alf Børre Kanten, Marianne Skogbrott Birkeland & Siri Thoresen - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  9.  80
    Nurses as 'guests'– a study of a concept in light of Jacques Derrida's philosophy of hospitality.Stina Öresland, Kim Lutzén, Astrid Norberg, Birgit H. Rasmussen & Sylvia Määttä - 2013 - Nursing Philosophy 14 (2):117-126.
  10.  9
    Decent Policing: Police Professionalism Beyond the Legalism-Autonomy-Axis.Stina Bäckström & Eva Schwarz - forthcoming - Human Studies:1-19.
    The status of the police as a profession in democratic societies is a contested issue. At stake is whether the police have an autonomous field of action related to a set of important values, or whether they are simply upholding and executing a set of given rules. In recent research, this issue has been framed in terms of two opposing sets of attitudes among police officers: legalism and autonomy. Even though their precise definitions vary the terms have recently, perhaps most (...)
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  11.  30
    Home-based nursing: An endless journey.Stina Öresland, Sylvia Määttä, Astrid Norberg & Kim Lützén - 2011 - Nursing Ethics 18 (3):408-417.
    The aim of this study was to explore metaphors for discovering values and norms held by nurses in home-based nursing care. Ten interviews were analysed and interpreted in accordance with a metaphor analytical method. In the analysis, metaphoric linguistic expressions and two entailments emerged, grounded in the conceptual metaphor ‘home-based nursing care is an endless journey’, which were created in a cross-domain mapping between the two conceptual domains of home-based nursing care and travel. The metaphor exposed home-based nursing care as (...)
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  12.  94
    Quasi-realism and normative certitude.Stina Björkholm, Krister Bykvist & Jonas Olson - 2020 - Synthese 198 (8):7861-7869.
    Just as we can be more or less certain that there is extraterrestrial life or that Goldbach’s conjecture is correct, we can be more or less certain about normative matters, such as whether euthanasia is permissible or whether utilitarianism is true. However, accommodating the phenomenon of degrees of normative certitude is a difficult challenge for non-cognitivist and expressivist views, according to which normative judgements are desire-like attitudes rather than beliefs. Several attempts have been made on behalf of non-cognitivism and expressivism (...)
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  13.  20
    Interview with Rebecca Bergman. Interview by Anne J. Davis.R. Bergman - 2002 - Nursing Ethics 9 (1):3-6.
  14.  43
    Patients as `Safeguard' and Nurses as `Substitute' in Home Health Care.Stina Öresland, Sylvia Määttä, Astrid Norberg & Kim Lützén - 2009 - Nursing Ethics 16 (2):219-230.
    One aim of this study was to explore the role, or subject position, patients take in the care they receive from nurses in their own home. Another was to examine the subject position that patients say the nurses take when giving care to them in their own home. Ten interviews were analysed and interpreted according to a discourse analytical method. The findings show that patients constructed their subject position as `safeguard', and the nurses' subject position as `substitute' for themselves. These (...)
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  15.  26
    Reading fiction to understand the Soviet Union: Soviet dissidents on orwell's 1984.Jay Bergman - 1997 - History of European Ideas 23 (5-6):173-192.
  16.  22
    The necessity and possibilities of playfulness in narrative care with older adults.Bodil H. Blix, Charlotte Berendonk, D. Jean Clandinin & Vera Caine - 2021 - Nursing Inquiry 28 (1):e12373.
    For us, narrative care is grounded in pragmatist philosophy and focused on experience. Narrative care is not merely about acknowledging or listening to people's experiences, but draws attention to practical consequences. We conceptualize care itself as an intrinsically narrative endeavour. In this article, we build on Lugones' understanding of playfulness, particularly to her call to remain attentive to a sense of uncertainty, and an openness to surprise. Playfulness cultivates a generative sense of curiosity that relies on a close attentiveness not (...)
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  17. Analysing responsibilisation in the context of development cooperation.Stina Hansson - 2014 - In Stina Hansson, Sofie Hellberg & Maria Stern (eds.), Studying the agency of being governed. New York: Routledge.
     
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  18. Power, freedom and the agency of being governed.Stina Hansson & Sofie Hellberg - 2014 - In Stina Hansson, Sofie Hellberg & Maria Stern (eds.), Studying the agency of being governed. New York: Routledge.
     
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  19.  8
    Studying the agency of being governed.Stina Hansson, Sofie Hellberg & Maria Stern (eds.) - 2014 - New York: Routledge.
    This edited volume seeks to provide guidance on how we can approach questions of governing and agency--particularly those who endeavour to embark on grounded empirical research--by rendering explicit some key challenges, tensions, dilemmas, and confluences that such endeavours elicit. Indeed, the contributions in this volume reflect the growing tendency in governmentality studies to shift focus to empirically grounded studies. The volume thus explicitly aims to move from theory to practice, and to step back from the more top-down governmentality studies approach (...)
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  20.  15
    Disclosing discourses: biomedical and hospitality discourses in patient education materials.Stina Öresland, Febe Friberg, Sylvia Määttä & Joakim Öhlen - 2015 - Nursing Inquiry 22 (3):240-248.
    Patient education materials have the potential to strengthen the health literacy of patients. Previous studies indicate that readability and suitability may be improved. The aim of this study was to explore and analyze discourses inherent in patient education materials since analysis of discourses could illuminate values and norms inherent in them. Clinics in Sweden that provided colorectal cancer surgery allowed access to written information and ‘welcome letters’ sent to patients. The material was analysed by means of discourse analysis, embedded in (...)
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  21.  16
    Critical Mass, Precarious Value?: Reflections on the Gender, Women's, and Feminist Studies PhD in Austere Times.Stina Soderling, Carly Thomsen & Melissa Autumn White - 2018 - Feminist Studies 44 (2):229.
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  22. Karl Mannheim and Viola Klein: Refugee Sociologists in Search of Social Democratic Practice.E. Stina Lyon - 2011 - In Stina Lyon E. (ed.), In Defence of Learning: The Plight, Persecution, and Placement of Academic Refugees, 1933-1980s. pp. 177.
  23.  13
    The Triviality Worry About Gender Terms and Epistemic Injustice.Stina Björkholm - forthcoming - Social Epistemology.
    According to contextualism, a gender term such as ‘woman’ does not invariantly refer to a specific social or biological kind. Instead, gender terms have different extensions depending on the context of utterance. Contextualism accommodates that speakers are perfectly able to use gender terms in very different ways and still be coherent and successful in their communicative exchanges. However, while the flexibility of contextualism is its primary asset, it has also turned out to be its potential demise. The worry is that (...)
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  24.  62
    What is it to Depsychologize Psychology?Stina Bäckström - 2017 - European Journal of Philosophy 25 (2):358-375.
    In this essay, I distinguish two ways of depsychologizing psychology: ‘anti-psychologism’ and ‘non-psychologism’. Both positions are responses to the Fregean sharp distinction between the logical and the psychological. But where anti-psychologism, which I find in John McDowell, attempts to overcome the sharp distinction by arguing that psychological states and their expressions are apt to be articulated into judgments, Stanley Cavell's non-psychologism, a powerful and neglected alternative, wants to overcome the sharp distinction by abandoning judgment as the paradigm expression of thought (...)
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  25. Common Grounds and Shared Purposes: On Some Pragmatic Ingredients of Communication: Fundamentos Comuns e Propósitos Compartilhados: Sobre Alguns Ingredientes Pragmáticos da Comunicação.Mats Bergman - 2007 - Cognitio 8 (1).
     
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  26.  35
    Charting the "transitional period": The emergence of modern time in the nineteenth century.Goran Blix - 2006 - History and Theory 45 (1):51–71.
    This paper seeks to chart a concept of historical experience that French Romantic writers first developed to describe their own relationship to historical time: the notion of the “transitional period.” At first, the term related strictly to the evolving periodic conception of history, one that required breaks, spaces, or zones of indeterminacy to bracket off periods imagined as organic wholes. These transitions, necessary devices in the new grammar of history, also began to attract interest on their own, conceived either as (...)
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  27.  60
    Our Relation to Our Own Expressions: Comment on Bar‐On, Green, and Finkelstein.Stina Maria Backstrom - 2013 - Analytic Philosophy 54 (4):466-476.
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  28.  18
    Agency and Bandura’s Model of Triadic Reciprocal Causation: An Exploratory Mobility Study Among Metrorail Commuters in the Western Cape, South Africa.Zinette Bergman, Manfred Max Bergman & Andrew Thatcher - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  29. Credibility of Common Sense Science.David L. Bergman & Charles W. Lucas Jr - 2003 - Foundations of Science 6 (2):1-10.
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  30. Hogim U-Ma Aminim Masot.Samuel Hugo Bergman - 1959 - Hotsa at Agudat Ha-Sofrim Ha- Ivrim le-Yad Devir.
     
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  31. Conclusion.Stina Hansson & Sofie Hellberg - 2014 - In Stina Hansson, Sofie Hellberg & Maria Stern (eds.), Studying the agency of being governed. New York: Routledge.
     
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  32. In Defence of Learning: The Plight, Persecution, and Placement of Academic Refugees, 1933-1980s.E. Stina Lyon - 2011
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  33.  41
    Theoretical foundations of narrative care: Turning towards relational ethics.Bodil H. Blix, Charlotte Berendonk & Vera Caine - 2019 - Nursing Ethics 26 (7-8):1917-1927.
    In the past decades, narrative practices have been developed, and care has been conceptualized as being narrative in nature. More recently, narrative care has been developing both as a practice and a field of study. It is necessary to make the theoretical foundations of narrative care visible to avoid the risk of narrowly defining narrative care as a matter of storytelling and listening. In this article, we develop an understanding of narrative care grounded in early feminist pragmatist philosophy, with a (...)
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  34. Seeing People and Knowing You: Perception, Shared Knowledge, and Acknowledgment.Stina Bäckström - 2013 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 5 (4):55--73.
    This article takes up the proposal that action and expression enable perceptual knowledge of other minds, a proposal that runs counter to a tradition of thinking that other minds are special in that they are essentially unobservable. I argue that even if we accept this proposal regarding perceptual knowledge, there is still a difference between knowing another person and knowing other things. I articulate this difference by pointing out that I can know another person by sharing knowledge with her. Such (...)
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  35. Brentano on the history of greek philosophy.Hugo Bergman - 1965 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 26 (1):94-99.
  36.  76
    A Dilemma for Neo-Expressivism—And How to Resolve It.Stina Bäckström - 2016 - Acta Analytica 31 (2):191-205.
    In this paper, I present a dilemma for neo-expressivist accounts of self-consciousness. Such accounts are united by the idea that we can elucidate self-consciousness by appreciating the thought that some self-ascriptions both function as expressions and are truth-evaluable statements. The dilemma, I argue, is that the neo-expressivists either have to accept a circular element into their accounts or else the accounts lose their appeal. I recommend embracing circularity and argue that this is a case where circularity—far from being a failure—is (...)
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  37.  73
    Expression and Self-Consciousness.Stina Bäckström - 2016 - Philosophical Topics 44 (1):163-182.
    This article argues that nonverbal spontaneous expressions of mental states in human beings involve self-consciousness. We—language-using rational creatures—are capable of knowing our smiles, winces, and frustrated frowns in a self-conscious way. This distinguishes expressions from mere reflexes and mere physiological responses. Such a capacity is, further, essential to such forms of behavior. This is shown by the difficulty of constructing a coherent scenario where we—keeping our rational and conceptual capacities otherwise intact—can nonverbally express our mental states but where we lack (...)
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  38.  91
    A social and ethical game-changer? An empirical ethics study of CRISPR in the salmon farming industry.Hannah Winther, Torill Blix, Lotte Holm, Anne Ingeborg Myhr & Bjørn Myskja - 2024 - Environmental Values 33 (5):476-494.
    The genome editing technology CRISPR is described as a technological game-changer because of its flexibility and precision, and as an ethical game-changer due to its ability to engineer traits in living organisms without crossing species, avoiding a significant objection to genetically modified organisms (GMOs). In salmon farming, applications of CRISPR in breeding hold the promise of handling environmental and fish welfare challenges yet require social acceptance. Adopting an empirical bioethics framework, this stakeholder interview study shows that respecting species borders is (...)
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  39.  10
    The philosophy of Solomon Maimon.Samuel Hugo Bergman - 1967 - Jerusalem,: Magnes Press, Hebrew University.
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  40.  9
    Lever vi skeptisisme i forhold til andre?Stina Bäckström - 2008 - Agora Journal for metafysisk spekulasjon 26 (1-2):66-83.
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  41.  22
    Vad är mat och vad är annat?Stina Bäckström - 2019 - Norsk Filosofisk Tidsskrift 54 (4):220-231.
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  42. Conflict of Atomism and Creation-Science in History.David L. Bergman - forthcoming - Foundations of Science.
  43. Commentary on Sub-Quantum Physics.David L. Bergman - forthcoming - Foundations of Science.
  44.  12
    Evolution and Irreducible Complexity.Jerry Bergman - 2010 - Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies 22 (1-2):89-114.
    The concept of inreducible complexity is central to the origins controversy. Ineducible complexity (IC) may be defined as any machine or system that requires two or more parts in order to function. Examples range from molecules to mousetraps, organelles, and organisms such as humans. This essay explores the relationship between IC and complexity, clarifying the levels of IC such as the irreducible core and its mode of function. IC has been used in a wide variety of disciplines for over a (...)
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  45. Origin of Inertial Mass.David L. Bergman - 1999 - Foundations of Science 2 (3):30076-7306.
  46.  21
    On the evolution of recombination in haploids and diploids: II. Stochastic models.Aviv Bergman, Sarah P. Otto & Marcus W. Feldman - 1995 - Complexity 1 (2):49-57.
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  47.  6
    Supplement to a Concordance to "The Anglo-Saxon Poetic Records".Madeleine M. Bergman - 1982 - Mediaevalia 8:9-52.
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  48.  4
    The Saussurean sign and its algebraic properties.Bruria Bergman - 1983 - Semiotica 46 (1).
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  49. Wil en daad.J. Bergmans - 1946 - Antwerpen,: De Sikkel. Edited by A. R. van Cauwelaert.
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  50.  68
    The Duality of Moral Language : On Hybrid Theories in Metaethics.Stina Björkholm - 2022 - Dissertation, Stockholm University
    Moral language displays a characteristic duality. On the one hand, moral claims seem to be similar to descriptive claims: To say that an act is right seems to be a matter of making an assertion, thus indicating that the speaker has a moral belief about which she can be correct or mistaken. On the other hand, moral claims seem to be different from descriptive claims: There is a sense in which, by claiming that an act is right, a speaker indicates (...)
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