Results for 'Summons'

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  1.  17
    of Medical Nutrition and Hydration.Thomas A. Summon & Iames I. Walter - forthcoming - Bioethics: Basic Writings on the Key Ethical Questions That Surround the Major, Modern Biological Possibilities and Problems.
  2.  31
    Ancient biomolecules: Their origins, fossilization, and role in revealing the history of life.Derek E. G. Briggs & Roger E. Summons - 2014 - Bioessays 36 (5):482-490.
    The discovery of traces of a blood meal in the abdomen of a 50‐million‐year‐old mosquito reminds us of the insights that the chemistry of fossils can provide. Ancient DNA is the best known fossil molecule. It is less well known that new fossil targets and a growing database of ancient gene sequences are paralleled by discoveries on other classes of organic molecules. New analytical tools, such as the synchrotron, reveal traces of the original composition of arthropod cuticles that are more (...)
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  3. Check and Summons (Anstoß and Aufforderung).Steven Hoeltzel - 2020 - In Marina F. Bykova (ed.), The Bloomsbury Handbook to Fichte. New York: Bloomsbury. pp. 353-61.
    Fichte offers separate analyses of the conditions for the possibility of representing or referring to (i) material objects and (ii) other minds – extra-subjective entities of importantly distinct sorts. These analyses are importantly akin, in that both postulate, as a necessary condition for the mental accomplishment under consideration, some sort of basic incapacity or limitation that is partly constitutive of human rationality. But the two accounts also involve interestingly different understandings of the nature and implications of the basic constraints in (...)
     
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  4.  18
    Summoning Knowledge in Plato's Republic.Nicholas D. Smith - 2019 - Oxford University Press.
    Nicholas D. Smith considers an original interpretation of the Republic, presenting it as a work about knowledge and education. Smith pays particular attention to Plato's use of images as representations of higher realities in education, as well as the power of knowledge in the Republic.
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  5. The summoner approach: A new method of Plato interpretation.Miriam Byrd - 2007 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 45 (3):365-381.
    : The traditional "doctrinal" approach to interpreting Plato's dialogues has been criticized in recent literature on grounds that it can neither account for the structural complexities of the dialogues nor resolve conflicts within or between dialogues. Accordingly, a non-doctrinal, dramatic approach has been offered in its place. In response to this literature, I argue that, though the doctrinal approach is flawed, the non-doctrinal, dramatic approach does not provide a viable alternative. Instead, I offer a revised doctrinal approach based upon Socrates' (...)
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  6.  24
    The Summons of Love.Mari Ruti - 2011 - Columbia University Press.
    We are conditioned to think that love heals wounds, makes us happy, and gives our lives meaning. When the opposite occurs and love causes fracturing, disenchantment, and existential turmoil, we suffer deeply, especially if we feel that love has failed us or that we have failed to experience what others seem so effortlessly to enjoy. In this eloquently argued, psychologically informed book, Mari Ruti portrays love as a much more complex, multifaceted phenomenon than we tend to appreciate--an experience that helps (...)
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  7.  21
    Summoning Sovereignty: Constituent Power and Poetic Prophecy in Ireland's 1916 Proclamation of the Republic.Catherine Frost - 2017 - Constellations 24 (1):76-88.
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  8. Fichte on Summons and Self-Consciousness.Michelle Kosch - 2021 - Mind 130 (517):215-249.
    J. G. Fichte held that a form of intersubjectivity—what he called a ‘summons’—is a condition of possibility of self-consciousness. This thesis is widely taken to be one of Fichte’s most influential contributions to the European philosophy of the last two centuries. But what the thesis actually states is far from obvious; and existing interpretations either are poorly supported by the texts or else render the thesis trivial or implausible. I propose a new interpretation, on which Fichte’s claim is that (...)
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  9.  42
    (1 other version)A summons to the consuming animal.John Desmond - 2010 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 19 (3):238-252.
    This paper considers Derrida's principal works on the animal as comprising a summons to the consuming animal, the human subject. It summarizes, firstly, Derrida's accusation that the entire Western philosophic tradition is guilty of a particularly pernicious disavowal of its repudiation of the animal. This disavowal underpins what he calls the 'carnophallogocentric order' that privileges the virile male adult as a transcendental subject. The paper shows how he calls this line of argument into question by challenging the purity of (...)
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  10. Summoned from the Margin: Homecoming of an African.[author unknown] - 2012
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  11. The Summoned Self: Ethics and Hermeneutics in Paul Ricoeur in Dialogue with Emmanuel Levinas.Mark Wallace - 2002 - In John Wall, William Schweiker & W. David Hall (eds.), Paul Ricoeur and contemporary moral thought. New York: Routledge. pp. 80--93.
     
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  12.  21
    Summoned to the Roman Courts: Famous Trials from Antiquity.Claudia Moatti - 2015 - The European Legacy 20 (5):566-567.
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  13.  33
    A Summons To Denationalise Society Pascal Salin's Liberal Antistatism.Robert Nef - 2000 - Journal des Economistes Et des Etudes Humaines 10 (4):625-630.
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  14.  19
    The Summoning of the Magna Mater to Rome (205 B.C).P. J. Burton - 1996 - História 45 (1):36-63.
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  15.  44
    Technology report: Intelligent summoner. [REVIEW]Robert E. Macneel - 1995 - Artificial Intelligence and Law 3 (4):277-285.
    Trial Courts all over the world have a common problem concerning how to regulate the number of jurors to summon so that there is a sufficient but not excess supply available for scheduled trials. Many trials end abruptly just before jurors are selected for voir dire. The reasons for this are diverse, including last minute settlements, guilty pleas, continuances, unavailability of witnesses, etc. This typically results in one-third to one-half of all summoned jurors never experiencing any activity at all — (...)
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  16.  15
    A Summons to Promote Professional Ethics in the Academy.James F. Keenan - 2013 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 33 (1):169-184.
    In this essay I make a fundamental claim about and a recommendation for professional ethics: the lack of professional ethics in the academy is noteworthy and members of the Society of Christian Ethics ought to begin to address this reality as a matter of what is right and just for the SCE and for the academic professions at large—it is time to get our personal and corporate house in order.
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  17. The divine summons.Souran Mardini - 2014 - Istanbul, Turkey: Murat Center.
     
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  18.  17
    Nicholas D. Smith, Summoning Knowledge in Plato's Republic.Lorenzo Giovannetti - 2020 - Ancient Philosophy Today 2 (1):70-75.
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  19. Priestly prophets at Qumran : summoning Sinai through the Songs of the Sabbath sacrifice.Judith H. Newman - 2008 - In George John Brooke, Hindy Najman & Loren T. Stuckenbruck (eds.), The significance of Sinai: traditions about Sinai and divine revelation in Judaism and Christianity. Boston: Brill.
     
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  20.  40
    "Peaks of Yemen I Summon": Poetry as Cultural Practice in a North Yemeni Tribe.Philip D. Schuyler & Stephen C. Caton - 1993 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 113 (3):467.
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  21.  27
    Summoning Knowledge in Plato’s Republic : Smith, Nicholas D., New York: Oxford University Press, 2019, pp. ix + 205, US$72 (hardback). [REVIEW]Whitney Schwab - 2022 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 100 (1):210-213.
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  22.  93
    Voice as Summons for Belief.Walter J. Ong - 1958 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 33 (1):43-61.
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  23.  73
    The poem as a summons to performance.William Craig Forrest - 1969 - British Journal of Aesthetics 9 (3):298-305.
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  24.  27
    If They Summon You.Maia C. Young - 2024 - Journal of Medical Humanities 45 (1):121-122.
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  25.  21
    “Hearability” Versus “Hearership”: Comparing Garfinkel’s and Schegloff’s Accounts of the Summoning Phone.Dušan Bjelić - 2019 - Human Studies 42 (4):695-716.
    This paper compares Harold Garfinkel’s phenomenologically informed “radical” ethnomethodology and Emanuel Schegloff’s “classical” Conversation Analysis, by focusing on their treatments of a ringing telephone as a summons. In their diverging accounts, Garfinkel and Schegloff use similar yet different terminologies in relation to the action of hearing. Garfinkel speaks of the “hearability” of the ringing phone, while Schegloff speaks of a recipient’s “hearership”. This lexical distinction is not irrelevant. “Hearership” stresses the obligations of parties to a phone call to speak (...)
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  26.  28
    Covenantal trust and semioethics: A reflection on interpersonal and intercultural summoning.Ionut Untea - 2020 - Semiotica 2020 (236-237):1-19.
    The article proposes a reflection on cultural sign production in social contexts dominated by the socially generalized fear of the unknown other and the obsession for vulnerability avoidance. This phenomenon has been reflected in the generalized tendency of reliance upon contractual trust, where the coherence of the signs legitimating a trustful relationship is maintained by external agencies backed by authoritative forums (e.g., religious, legal, political) and sanctioned by well-defined rewards and punishments. In contrast with the contractual model of trust, I (...)
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  27.  44
    Mari Ruti , The Summons of Love (New York: Columbia University Press, 2011), ISBN: 978-0-231-15816-9.David Sigler - 2013 - Foucault Studies 15:195-198.
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  28.  22
    Paul's Summons to Messianic Life: Political Theology and the Coming Awakening.L. L. Welborn - 2015 - Cambridge University Press.
    Taubes, Badiou, Agamben, Žižek, Reinhard, and Santner have found in the Apostle Paul's emphasis on neighbor-love a positive paradigm for politics. By thoroughly reexamining Pauline eschatology, L. L. Welborn suggests that neighbor-love depends upon an orientation toward the messianic event, which Paul describes as the "now time" and which he imagines as "awakening." Welborn compares the Pauline dialectic of awakening to attempts by Hellenistic philosophers to rouse their contemporaries from moral lethargy and to the Marxist idea of class consciousness, emphasizing (...)
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  29.  10
    The Mistress’s Midnight Summons: Propertius 3.16.Francis Cairns - 2010 - Hermes 138 (1):70-91.
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  30. The Cyclical Argument as Plato's Summoner.Miriam Byrd - 2008 - In Platonism, Neoplatonism, and American Thought. pp. 17-29.
  31.  17
    Paul's Summons to Messianic Life; Political Theology and the Coming Awakening. By L. L. Welborn. Pp. xx, 128, NY, Columbia University Press, 2015, $19.50. [REVIEW]Patrick Madigan - 2016 - Heythrop Journal 57 (4):721-722.
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  32.  58
    D. Liebs Summoned to the Roman Courts. Famous Trials from Antiquity. Translated by Rebecca L.R. Garber and Carole Gustely Cürten. Pp. viii + 274. Berkeley, Los Angeles and London: University of California Press, 2012. Cased, £41.95, US$60. ISBN: 978-0-520-25962-1. [REVIEW]Ari Z. Bryen - 2013 - The Classical Review 63 (2):534-536.
  33.  34
    ‘Apollo Musagetes Summons Me to Dance’ - The Oxyrhynchus Papyri. Part xxvi. Edited with notes by E. Lobel. Pp. xii+186; 20 plates. London: Egypt Exploration Society, 1961. Cloth and boards, £6. 10 s. net. [REVIEW]E. G. Turner - 1963 - The Classical Review 13 (3):268-270.
  34. (1 other version)Karl Barth’s Emergency Homiletic, 1932–1933: A Summons to Prophetic Witness at the Dawn of the Third Reich.[author unknown] - 2013
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  35.  46
    Postprandial Peirce: A Final Talk: A Special Séance with Peirce: His Spirit Summoned for an Entertaining Interview.André De Tienne - 2020 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 56 (2):279-290.
  36.  89
    Treating the mind to improve the heart: the summon to cardiac psychology.J. P. Ginsberg, Giada Pietrabissa, Gian Mauro Manzoni & Gianluca Castelnuovo - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  37. Plato's Two Cities in the Republic: A Summoner to Justice.Miriam Byrd - 2007 - In K. Bouderis (ed.), Values and Justice in the Global Era, Vol. 1. pp. 19-31.
     
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  38.  22
    The Resonance in Religious Language of the Word Summoning Human Desire to Symbolic Transformation.Thomas Acklin - 1984 - Bijdragen 45 (2):183-205.
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  39. Quali colombe dal disio chiamate Con l'ali alzate e ferme al dolce nido Vegnon per l'aere, dal voler portate As doves summoned by desire, with wings raised high and poised, glide.Mariolina Rizzi Salvatori - forthcoming - Intertexts: Reading Pedagogy in College Writing Classrooms.
     
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  40.  10
    Irascible friars and “inpossible” debates: Chaucer's Summoner's Tale and Utopia.Ethan Smilie - 2023 - Moreana 60 (1):88-94.
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  41.  34
    Responsibility in the Anthropocene: Paul Ricoeur and the Summons to Responsibility amid Global Environmental Degradation.Michael Le Chevallier - 2024 - Journal of Religious Ethics 52 (2):231-261.
    The nomenclature of the Anthropocene for this geological epoch marks in a novel way the global impact of human activity on the world. Consequently, it creatively raises the alarm bell of global environmental devastation. However, the narrative implicit in the Anthropocene presents challenges to use it as a departure point for developing an ethics of responsibility, as it contains morally relevant but ambiguous etiologies, phenomenological challenges to discrete human agency, and the potential erasure of both causes and victims of global (...)
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  42.  10
    The Pull of the Ethical that Shifts Narrative Identity: Paul Ricoeur’s Summons to Responsibility and Sympathy for the Other.Clarence W. Joldersma - 2019 - Philosophy of Education 75:147-152.
  43. Colloquium 6: When The Middle Comes Early: Puzzles And Perplexeties In Plato’s Dialogues.Miriam Byrd - 2013 - Proceedings of the Boston Area Colloquium of Ancient Philosophy 28 (1):187-209.
    In this paper I focus on the problem of accounting for apparent inconsistencies between Plato’s early and middle works. Developmentalism seeks to account for these variances by differentiating a Socratic philosophy in the early dialogues from a Platonic philosophy in the middle. In opposition to this position, I propose an alternative explanation: differences between these two groups are due to Plato’s depiction and use of middle period epistemology. I argue that, in the early dialogues, Plato depicts Socrates’ use of the (...)
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  44.  35
    Dream Things True: Nonviolent Movements as Applied Consciousness.Jack DuVall - 2014 - Cosmos and History 10 (1):106-117.
    Nonviolent movements have become a new form of human agency. Between 1900 and 2006, more than 100 such movements appeared, and more than half were successful in dissolving oppression or achieving people's rights. Movements self-organize to summon mass participation, develop cognitive unity in the midst of dissension, and build resilient force on the content of shared beliefs. Some movements may even be a new venue for consciousness that "grows to something of great constancy" as Shakespeare said about "minds transfigured so (...)
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  45.  16
    Zvipukanana: “Tiny Animals with No Bones”.Clapperton Chakanetsa Mavhunga - 2024 - Isis 115 (1):141-146.
    Summoning insights from dzimbahwe cultures of knowing—specifically indigenous ways of seeing, thinking, knowing, and doing as archived in local languages—this essay will first argue that the word “insect” did not exist among the author’s ancestors before the colonial moment and is too light and narrow to account for their sciences and what they did with and through them. Second, it proposes indigenous concepts that more adequately capture meanings of and human actions toward flying, crawling, burrowing, and swimming tiny animals, possible (...)
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  46.  47
    Testing Children for Genetic Predispositions: Is it in Their Best Interest?Diane E. Hoffmann & Eric A. Wulfsberg - 1995 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 23 (4):331-344.
    Researchers summoned a Baltimore County woman to an office at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health last spring to tell her the bad news. They had found a genetic threat lurking in her 7-year-old son's DNA—a mutant gene that almost always triggers a rare form of colon cancer. It was the same illness that led surgeons to remove her colon in 1979. While the boy, Michael, now 8, is still perfectly healthy, without surgery he is almost certain to develop (...)
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  47.  16
    By Friendship or Force.Samantha Noll - 2014 - In William Irwin & Christopher Robichaud (eds.), Dungeons & Dragons and Philosophy. Malden: Wiley. pp. 163–171.
    The skill of calling animals to fight brings up unique ethical questions. Mages usually interact with animals in two ways: First, the author can summon animals by using animal‐summoning or monster‐summoning spells. Second, a mage can summon animals to be familiar. A familiar was once a normal animal that has been transformed into magical beast with unique powers and abilities. Bats, cats, hawks, and rats are examples of common familiar companions. The rights ethicist Tom Regan argues that animals have particular (...)
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  48.  70
    A leg to stand on: Sir William Osler and Wilder penfield's "neuroethics".Joseph J. Fins - 2008 - American Journal of Bioethics 8 (1):37 – 46.
    If ever I summon before me my highest ideals of men and medicine, I find them sprung from the spirit of Osler. —Wilder Penfield, M.D. Neuroethics is a recently coined term that is shaping our cultu...
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  49.  40
    “Humanities are the Hormones:” Osler, Penfield and “Neuroethics” Revisited.Joseph J. Fins - 2008 - American Journal of Bioethics 8 (1):5-8.
    If ever I summon before me my highest ideals of men and medicine, I find them sprung from the spirit of Osler. —Wilder Penfield, M.D. Neuroethics is a recently coined term that is shaping our cultu...
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  50.  38
    Shattered Self.Stephen David Ross - 2010 - International Studies in Philosophy Monograph Series:207-231.
    the face summons me, calls for me, begs for me, ... calls me into question. (Levinas, EFP, 83)we are difference, ... our selves the difference of masks. (Foucault, AK, 130-1)There are no parts, moments, types, or stages of love. There is only an infinity of shatters. (Nancy, SL, 101)Only the body fulfills the concept of the words "exposition," "being exposed." And since the body is not a concept ... there is no "body." (Nancy, BP, 205)Sense is the singularity of (...)
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