Results for 'Susan Stall'

963 found
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  1.  24
    Community organizing or organizing community?: Gender and the crafts of empowerment.Randy Stoecker & Susan Stall - 1998 - Gender and Society 12 (6):729-756.
    This article looks at two strains of urban community organizing, distinguished by philosophy and often by gender, and influenced by the historical division of American society into public and private spheres. The authors compare the well-known Alinsky model, which focuses on communities organizing for power, and what they call the women-centered model, which focuses on organizing relationships to build community. These models are rooted in somewhat distinct traditions and vary along several dimensions, including conceptions of human nature and conflict, power (...)
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  2.  5
    The Dignity of Resistance: Women Residents' Activism in Chicago Public Housing. By Roberta M. Feldman and Susan Stall. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2004, 388 pp., $43.99. [REVIEW]Clare Weber - 2007 - Gender and Society 21 (2):300-302.
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  3.  41
    How do healthcare professionals respond to ethical challenges regarding information management? A review of empirical studies.Cornelius Ewuoso, Susan Hall & Kris Dierickx - 2021 - Global Bioethics 32 (1):67-84.
    Aim This study is a systematic review that aims to assess how healthcare professionals manage ethical challenges regarding information within the clinical context.Method and Materials We carried out searches in PubMed, Google Scholar and Embase, using two search strings; searches generated 665 hits. After screening, 47 articles relevant to the study aim were selected for review. Seven articles were identified through snowballing, and 18 others were included following a system update in PubMed, bringing the total number of articles reviewed to (...)
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  4.  42
    Categories and induction in young children.Susan A. Gelman & Ellen M. Markman - 1986 - Cognition 23 (3):183-209.
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  5. (1 other version)Women in Western Political Thought.Susan Moller Okin - 1979 - Princeton University Press.
    Susan Moller Okin. AFTERWORD or greater weighting of these over “masculine" values. For how are women to continue to assume all of the nurturing activities that allegedly both follow from and reinforce their “naturally” superior virtues, and  ...
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  6.  91
    On subjective back-referral and how long it takes to become conscious of a stimulus: A reinterpretation of Libet's data.Susan Pockett - 2002 - Consciousness and Cognition 11 (2):141-61.
    The original data reported by Benjamin Libet and colleagues are reinterpreted, taking into account the facilitation which is experimentally demonstrated in the first of their series of articles. It is shown that the original data equally well or better support a quite different set of conclusions from those drawn by Libet. The new conclusions are that it takes only 80 ms for stimuli to come to consciousness and that “subjective back-referral of sensations in time” to the time of the stimulus (...)
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  7. Manifesto of a Passionate Moderate: Unfashionable Essays.Susan Haack - 1998 - University of Chicago Press.
    Forthright and wryly humorous, philosopher Susan Haack deploys her penetrating analytic skills on some of the most highly charged cultural and social debates of recent years. Relativism, multiculturalism, feminism, affirmative action, pragmatisms old and new, science, literature, the future of the academy and of philosophy itself—all come under her keen scrutiny in _Manifesto of a Passionate Moderate_. "The virtue of Haack's book, and I mean _virtue_ in the ethical sense, is that it embodies the attitude that it exalts... Haack's (...)
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  8.  67
    Moral Voices, Moral Selves: Carol Gilligan and Feminist Moral Theory.Susan J. Hekman - 1995 - University Park, Pa.: Polity.
    This book is an original discussion of key problems in moral theory. The author argues that the work of recent feminist theorists in this area, particularly that of Carol Gilligan, marks a radically new departure in moral thinking. Gilligan claims that there is not only one true, moral voice, but two: one masculine, one feminine. Moral values and concerns associated with a feminine outlook are relational rather than autonomous; they depend upon interaction with others. In a far-reaching examination and critique (...)
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  9. Spinoza on Philosophy, Religion, and Politics: The Theologico-Political Treatise.Susan James - 2012 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
    Susan James explores the revolutionary political thought of one of the most radical and creative of modern philosophers, Baruch Spinoza. His Theologico-Political Treatise of 1670 defends religious pluralism, political republicanism, and intellectual freedom. James shows how this work played a crucial role in the development of modern society.
  10.  39
    Public Bioethics and Publics: Consensus, Boundaries, and Participation in Biomedical Science Policy.Susan E. Kelly - 2003 - Science, Technology and Human Values 28 (3):339-364.
    Public bioethics bodies are used internationally as institutions with the declared aims of facilitating societal debate and providing policy advice in certain areas of scientific inquiry raising questions of values and legitimate science. In the United States, bioethical experts in these institutions use the language of consensus building to justify and define the outcome of the enterprise. However, the implications of public bioethics at science-policy boundaries are underexamined. Political interest in such bodies continues while their influence on societal consensus, public (...)
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  11.  48
    The Material of Knowledge: Feminist Disclosures.Susan J. Hekman (ed.) - 2010 - Indiana University Press.
    Susan Hekman believes we are witnessing an intellectual sea change. The main features of this change are found in dichotomies between language and reality, discourse and materiality. Hekman proposes that it is possible to find a more intimate connection between these pairs, one that does not privilege one over the other. By grounding her work in feminist thought and employing analytic philosophy, scientific theory, and linguistic theory, Hekman shows how language and reality can be understood as an indissoluble unit. (...)
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  12. Are Voluntary Movements Initiated Proconsciously? The Relationships between Readiness Potentials, Urges, and Decisions.Susan Pockett & Suzanne C. Purdy - 2011 - In Susan Pockett & Suzanne C. Purdy, [no title]. pp. 34--46.
  13.  16
    Hermeneutics and the sociology of knowledge.Susan J. Hekman - 1986 - Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press.
  14. [no title].Susan Pockett & Suzanne C. Purdy - 2011
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  15.  95
    A cross-linguistic comparison of generic noun phrases in English and Mandarin.Susan A. Gelman & Twila Tardif - 1998 - Cognition 66 (3):215-248.
    Generic noun phrases (e.g. 'bats live in caves') provide a window onto human concepts. They refer to categories as 'kinds rather than as sets of individuals. Although kind concepts are often assumed to be universal, generic expression varies considerably across languages. For example, marking of generics is less obligatory and overt in Mandarin than in English. How do universal conceptual biases interact with language-specific differences in how generics are conveyed? In three studies, we examined adults' generics in English and Mandarin (...)
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  16.  38
    Adding dynamic consent to a longitudinal cohort study: A qualitative study of EXCEED participant perspectives.Susan E. Wallace & José Miola - 2021 - BMC Medical Ethics 22 (1):1-10.
    Background Dynamic consent has been proposed as a process through which participants and patients can gain more control over how their data and samples, donated for biomedical research, are used, resulting in greater trust in researchers. It is also a way to respond to evolving data protection frameworks and new legislation. Others argue that the broad consent currently used in biobank research is ethically robust. Little empirical research with cohort study participants has been published. This research investigated the participants’ opinions (...)
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  17.  67
    Hypnosis and the death of "subjective backwards referral".Susan Pockett - 2004 - Consciousness and Cognition 13 (3):621-25.
  18.  43
    Young infants’ actions reveal their developing knowledge of support variables: Converging evidence for violation-of-expectation findings.Susan J. Hespos & Renée Baillargeon - 2008 - Cognition 107 (1):304-316.
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  19. Hope for the future: Achieving the original intent of advance directives.Susan E. Hickman, Bernard J. Hammes, Alvin H. Moss & Susan W. Tolle - 2005 - Hastings Center Report 35 (6):s26-s30.
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  20.  28
    Feminist perspectives in medical ethics.Susan Sherwin, Helen Bequartes Holmes & Lyn Purdy - 1992 - In Helen B. Holmes & Laura Martha Purdy, Feminist Perspectives in Medical Ethics. Indiana University Press.
  21.  76
    Respecting Autonomy Over Time: Policy and Empirical Evidence on Re‐Consent in Longitudinal Biomedical Research.Susan E. Wallace, Elli G. Gourna, Graeme Laurie, Osama Shoush & Jessica Wright - 2015 - Bioethics 30 (3):210-217.
    Re-consent in research, the asking for a new consent if there is a change in protocol or to confirm the expectations of participants in case of change, is an under-explored issue. There is little clarity as to what changes should trigger re-consent and what impact a re-consent exercise has on participants and the research project. This article examines applicable policy statements and literature for the prevailing arguments for and against re-consent in relation to longitudinal cohort studies, tissue banks and biobanks. (...)
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  22. Multiculturalism and feminism: no simple question, no simple answers.Susan Moller Okin - 2005 - In Avigail Eisenberg & Jeff Spinner-Halev, minorities within minorities: equality, rights and diversity. cambridge university press.
  23. Pussy Panic versus Liking Animals: Tracking Gender in Animal Studies.Susan Fraiman - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 39 (1):89-115.
    Pioneering work in interdisciplinary animal studies, much of it under the rubric of ecofeminism, dates back to the 1970s. Yet animal studies remained an idiosyncratic backwater until its twenty-first-century reinvention as a high-profile area of humanities research. This essay ties the soaring cachet of the new animal studies to a revamped origin story—one beginning in 2002 and claiming Derrida as founding father. In readings of Derrida and leading animal studies theorist Cary Wolfe, I examine the gender politics of animal studies (...)
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  24.  21
    Language, Communication and the Gift Economy: A Semioethic Approach.Susan Petrilli - 2022 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 35 (4):1615-1654.
    Maternal gift-giving sustains life and creates positive human relations. Addressing important issues in the theory of language and communication, Genevieve Vaughan associates language and mothering to the free gift economy. A fundamental hypothesis is that maternal gift-giving, mothering/being-mothered forms a non-essentialist, but fundamental core process of material and verbal communication that has been neglected by the Western view of the world. The mothering/being-mothered paradigm is thematized in the framework of gift logic, which is otherness logic. Restoring such a paradigm offers (...)
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  25. Initiation of intentional actions and the electromagnetic field theory of consciousness.Susan Pockett - 2011 - Humana Mente 4 (15):159-175.
     
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  26.  72
    Action as a text: Gadamer's hermeneutics and the social scientific analysis of action.Susan Hekman - 1984 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 14 (3):333–354.
    This paper argues that Gadamer's hermeneutics offers a methodological perspective for social and political theory that overcomes the impasse created by the dichotomy between the positivist and humanist approaches to social action. Both the positivists’attempt to replace the actors’subjective concepts with the objective concepts of the social scientist and the humanists’attempt to describe meaningful action strictly in the social actors’terms have been called into question in contemporary discussions. Gadamer's approach, which is based on the hermeneutical method of textual interpretation, offers (...)
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  27.  15
    The role of exceptions in children's and adults' judgments about generic statements.Ella Simmons & Susan A. Gelman - 2025 - Cognition 255 (C):106016.
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  28.  53
    Creativity and the Childbirth Metaphor: Gender Difference in Literary Discourse.Susan Stanford Friedman - 1987 - Feminist Studies 13 (1):49-82.
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  29.  34
    Occlusion Is Hard: Comparing Predictive Reaching for Visible and Hidden Objects in Infants and Adults.Susan Hespos, Gustaf Gredebäck, Claes Von Hofsten & Elizabeth S. Spelke - 2009 - Cognitive Science 33 (8):1483-1502.
    Infants can anticipate the future location of a moving object and execute a predictive reach to intercept the object. When a moving object is temporarily hidden by darkness or occlusion, 6‐month‐old infants’ reaching is perturbed, but performance on darkness trials is significantly better than occlusion trials. How does this reaching behavior change over development? Experiment 1 tested predictive reaching of 6‐ and 9‐month‐old infants. While there was an increase in the overall number of reaches with increasing age, there were significantly (...)
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  30.  74
    Cultural Codes and Sex Role Ideology.Susan B. Kaiser, Howard G. Schutz & Joan L. Chandler - 1987 - American Journal of Semiotics 5 (1):13-33.
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  31. Reasons, Explanation, and Saramago's Bell.Susan E. Babbitt - 2000 - Hypatia 20 (4):144-163.
    In this essay, I suggest that significant insights of recent feminist philosophy lead, among other things, to the thought that it is not always better to choose than to be compelled to do what one might have done otherwise. However, few feminists, if any, would defend such a suggestion. I ask why it is difficult to consider certain ideas that, while challenging in theory, are, nonetheless, rather unproblematic in practice. I suggest that some questions are not pursued seriously enough by (...)
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  32.  72
    The great subjective back-referral debate: Do neural responses increase during a train of stimuli?Susan Pockett - 2006 - Consciousness and Cognition 15 (3):551-559.
    Evidence is summarised for and against the hypothesis that potentiation or facilitation of neural responses during a train of threshold-level stimuli occurred in the experiments reported by Libet et al. . It is concluded that such potentiation probably did occur. Since the main arguments for the existence of subjective backwards referral take it as given that such potentiation did not occur, it is further concluded that the main arguments for the existence of subjective backwards referral fail.
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  33.  30
    Embryonic stem cell funding: California, here I come?Susan Cartier Poland - 2004 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 14 (4):407-409.
  34.  10
    More than ‘A Woman's Right to Choose’?Susan Himmelweit - 1988 - Feminist Review 29 (1):38-56.
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  35.  15
    The Logical Status of Conditionalization and its Role in Confirmation.Susan Vineberg - 2000 - Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 71:77-94.
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  36. Kant on Punishment.Susan Meld Shell - 1997 - Kantian Review 1:115-135.
    Unlike that of most liberal thinkers, Kant's theory of punishment is unabashedly retributive. For classical liberals punishment is justified only by the harms it can prevent, not by any allegedly intrinsic good served by making the guilty suffer. Here Hobbes' blunt insistence that the aim of punishment ‘is not a revenge, but terror’ is prototypical in substance, if not in style. Hobbes, Locke, Mill, Bentham and Beccaria, for all their differences, agree that punishment must look to future good rather than (...)
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  37.  17
    The case against newborn imitation grows stronger.Susan S. Jones - 2017 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40.
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  38.  50
    Developmental changes in short-term memory: A revised working memory perspective.Susan E. Gathercole & Graham J. Hitch - 1993 - In A. Collins, Martin A. Conway & P. E. Morris, Theories of Memory. Lawrence Erlbaum. pp. 1--189.
  39.  76
    Interdisciplinary Contributions to Public Health Law.Susan Allan, Sana Loue, Howard Markel, Charity Scott & Martin P. Wasserman - 2004 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 32 (S4):92-96.
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  40.  19
    The Sinews of power: war, money and the english state, 1688–1783.Susan Dwyer Amussen - 1993 - History of European Ideas 17 (5):678-679.
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  41. A Philosophical Analysis of the Phenomenon of Multiple Personality in Connection with the Problem of Personal Identity.Susan Leigh Anderson - 1974 - Dissertation, University of California, Los Angeles
     
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  42.  71
    A Picture of the Self Which Supports Moral Responsibility.Susan Leigh Anderson - 1991 - The Monist 74 (1):43-54.
    Let us assume that we can hold at least some people morally responsible for at least some of their actions. What sort of picture of the self is compatible with that assumption? In particular, we need to ask the question of whether we can hold people responsible for actions which follow inevitably from their characters being what they are.
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  43.  18
    The Status of Frozen Embryos.Susan Leigh Anderson - 1990 - Public Affairs Quarterly 4 (4):311-322.
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  44.  42
    Discipline and Pleasure: The pedagogical work of Disneyland.Susan L. Aronstein & Laurie A. Finke - 2013 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 45 (6):610-624.
    Disneyland is work disguised as play; school disguised as vacation. While Walt Disney’s curriculum deploys across all of its products, it literally engulfs the approximately 50 million ‘guests’ who visit the Disney Parks each year. Drawing on Sarah Ahmed’s phenomenological reading of orientation in Queer phenomenology, this article investigates the ways in which Disney’s didacticism is made material through practices and procedures designed to orient the park’s visitors, to ensure that those visitors always know where they are and who they (...)
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  45.  97
    (1 other version)Analyzing the Different Voice: Feminist Psychological Theory and Literary Texts (review).Susan Babbitt - 2001 - Hypatia 16 (1):91-94.
  46.  6
    A Crisis in Feminist Scholarship in France? Catherine Rihoit on Simone de Beauvoir.Susan Bainbrigge - 1995 - Simone de Beauvoir Studies 12 (1):159-161.
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  47.  29
    The Levinasian teacher.Susan Bailey - 2023 - New York: Peter Lang.
    Recent years have seen educationalists turning to Emmanuel Levinas when considering the relationship between ethics and education. While it is true that Levinas never speaks of ethics in relation to the practice of classroom education, nonetheless, for Levinas, ethics is a teaching, and learning can only take place in the presence of the Other. This book considers how, within the constraints of the Irish primary school education system, teachers can develop a Levinasian approach to teaching, that affords both them and (...)
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  48.  78
    Memory as a Freeze-Frame: Extracts from 'Looking at War'.Susan Sontag - 2004 - Diogenes 51 (1):113-118.
    Susan Sontag’s talk at the UNESCO meeting on which the French edition of Diogëne 201 was based has been replaced in this English edition of Diogenes 201 by extracts from her published work: her article ‘Looking At War’ in The New Yorker (December 2002).
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  49.  32
    Glass Ceilings and Iron Bars: Women, Gender, and Poverty in the Post-2015 Development Agenda.Susan P. Murphy - 2015 - Global Justice: Theory Practice Rhetoric 8 (1).
    This paper argues that it is necessary to focus on gender rather than exclusively on women in discussions on global poverty eradication. It argues firstly, that the drivers of poverty are complex and multifaceted leading to a least two different forms of deprivation – transitory and structural poverty – each requiring different forms of analysis and treatment. Transitory poverty can arise as a consequence of an event or shock that would diminish an individual’s capacity to retain or secure employment and (...)
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  50.  27
    Race‐Based Parsing and Syntactic Disambiguation.Susan Weber McRoy & Graeme Hirst - 1990 - Cognitive Science 14 (3):313-353.
    We present a processing model that integrates same important psychological claims about the human sentence‐parsing mechanism: namely, that processing is influenced by limitations an working memory and by various syntactic preferences. The model uses time‐constraint information to resolve conflicting preferences in a psychologically plausible way. The starting paint far this proposal is the Sausage Machine model (Fodor & Frazier, 1980: Frazier & Fodor, 1978). From there, we attempt to overcome the original model's dependence an ad hoc aspects of its grammar, (...)
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