Results for 'Wilma A. Dunaway'

972 found
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  1.  14
    Diaspora History Construction and Slave Culture Formation on Small U.S. Plantations.Wilma A. Dunaway - 2004 - ProtoSociology 20:186-200.
    This analysis of enslavement in an American South subregion provides an historical microcosm for understanding the complexities of provincial culture formation in the modern world-system. Simultaneously rooted in multiple points of local and world-systemic origin, peoplehood is an historical product of the capitalist world-system. Despite widespread notions to the contrary, low black population density and geographical isolation did not forestall slave community building on small plantations. Despite extreme repression, slaves dialectically preserved and altered hidden transcripts in order to recapture pasts (...)
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  2.  6
    Book Review: Gendered Commodity Chains: Seeing Women’s Work and Households in Global Production by Wilma A. Dunaway[REVIEW]Francesca Degiuli - 2016 - Gender and Society 30 (3):542-544.
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  3.  35
    Two kinds of response priming in tachistoscopic recognition.Wilma A. Winnick & Stephen A. Daniel - 1970 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 84 (1):74.
  4.  73
    The intrinsic memorability of face photographs.Wilma A. Bainbridge, Phillip Isola & Aude Oliva - 2013 - Journal of Experimental Psychology: General 142 (4):1323.
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  5.  32
    Role of positional cues in serial rote learning.Wilma A. Winnick & Rhea L. Dornbush - 1963 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 66 (4):419.
  6.  19
    Ordinal position in serial learning.Wilma A. Winnick & Rhea L. Dornbush - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 78 (3p1):536.
  7.  26
    Role of apparent slant in shape judgments.Wilma A. Winnick & Ilana Rogoff - 1965 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 69 (6):554.
  8.  16
    Effect of instructional set and amount of first learning on negative transfer.Wilma A. Winnick - 1966 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 71 (6):920.
  9.  17
    Signal detection approach to the study of retinal locus in tachistoscopic recognition.Wilma A. Winnick & Gerard E. Bruder - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 78 (3p1):528.
  10.  15
    The effect of an extra stimulus upon strength of response during acquisition and extinction.Wilma A. Winnick & J. Mcvicker Hunt - 1951 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 41 (3):205.
  11.  34
    Tachistoscopic recognition thresholds, paired-associate learning, and free recall as a function of abstractness-concreteness and word frequency.Wilma A. Winnick & Kenneth Kressel - 1965 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 70 (2):163.
  12.  21
    Free recall as a function of type of evoking stimulus.Wilma A. Winnick, Fae Kooper & Joyce Sprafkin - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 103 (2):269.
  13.  18
    Encoding effects in one priming paradigm.Wilma A. Winnick & Raymond Penko - 1989 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 27 (5):413-416.
  14.  42
    Quadri-stability of a spatially ambiguous auditory illusion.Constance M. Bainbridge, Wilma A. Bainbridge & Aude Oliva - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  15.  29
    Short-term intentional and incidental learning.Rhea L. Dornbush & Wilma A. Winnick - 1967 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 73 (4p1):608.
  16.  23
    Instructional control of serial-learning strategies.Wesley A. Kayson & Wilma A. Winnick - 1974 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 102 (4):670.
  17.  23
    Influence of set in tachistoscopic threshold determination.Peter A. Ornstein & Wilma A. Winnick - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 77 (3p1):504.
  18.  22
    Predicting visual memory across images and within individuals.Cheyenne D. Wakeland-Hart, Steven A. Cao, Megan T. deBettencourt, Wilma A. Bainbridge & Monica D. Rosenberg - 2022 - Cognition 227 (C):105201.
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  19.  2
    Drawings reveal changes in object memory, but not spatial memory, across time.Emma Megla, Samuel R. Rosenthal & Wilma A. Bainbridge - 2025 - Cognition 254 (C):105988.
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  20.  56
    Comparison of two methods for performing treatment reviews by pharmacists and general practitioners for home‐dwelling elderly people.Wilma Denneboom, Maaike G. H. Dautzenberg, Richard Grol & Peter A. G. M. De Smet - 2008 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 14 (3):446-452.
  21. Reference Magnetism as a Solution to the Moral Twin Earth Problem.Billy Dunaway & Tristram McPherson - 2016 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 3.
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  22.  28
    Reality and Morality.Billy Dunaway - 2020 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    Billy Dunaway develops and defends a framework for realism about morality. He defends the idea that moral properties are privileged parts of reality which are the referents for our moral terms. He suggests how it is that we can know about morality, and what the limits to moral disagreement are.
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  23.  30
    A Daoist perspective: An opportunity after postmodernism.Wilma J. Maki - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (14):1443-1444.
  24.  8
    A Viagem à Itália e a estética goethiana.Wilma Patricia Maas - 2017 - Discurso 47 (1):263-282.
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  25. Child assent and parental permission in pediatric research.Wilma C. Rossi, William Reynolds & Robert M. Nelson - 2003 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 24 (2):131-148.
    Since children are considered incapable ofgiving informed consent to participate inresearch, regulations require that bothparental permission and the assent of thepotential child subject be obtained. Assent andpermission are uniquely bound together, eachserving a different purpose. Parentalpermission protects the child from assumingunreasonable risks. Assent demonstrates respectfor the child and his developing autonomy. Inorder to give meaningful assent, the child mustunderstand that procedures will be performed,voluntarily choose to undergo the procedures,and communicate this choice. Understanding theelements of informed consent has been theparadigm for (...)
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  26. Minimalist semantics in meta-ethical expressivism.Billy Dunaway - 2010 - Philosophical Studies 151 (3):351 - 371.
    James Dreier (Philos Perspect 18: 23-44, 2004) states what he calls the "Problem of Creeping Minimalism": that metaethical Expressivists can accept a series of claims about meaning, under which all of the sentences that Realists can accept are consistent with Expressivism. This would allow Expressivists to accept all of the Realist's sentences, and as Dreier points out, make it difficult to say what the difference between the two views is. That Expressivists can accept these claims about meaning has been suggested (...)
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  27. Scepticism.Billy Dunaway & John Hawthorne - 2017 - In Frederick D. Aquino & William J. Abraham (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the Epistemology of Theology. New York, New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 290-308.
    To what extent are the answers to theological questions knowable? And if the relevant answers are knowable, which sorts of inquirers are in a position to know them? In this chapter we shall not answer these questions directly but instead supply a range of tools that may help us make progress here. The tools consist of plausible structural constraints on knowledge. After articulating them, we shall go on to indicate some ways in which they interact with theological scepticism. In some (...)
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  28.  96
    Ethical Vagueness and Practical Reasoning.Billy Dunaway - 2017 - Philosophical Quarterly 67 (266):38-60.
    This paper looks at the phenomenon of ethical vagueness by asking the question, how ought one to reason about what to do when confronted with a case of ethical vagueness? I begin by arguing that we must confront this question, since ethical vagueness is inescapable. I then outline one attractive answer to the question: we ought to maximize expected moral value when confronted with ethical vagueness. This idea yields determinate results for what one rationally ought to do in cases of (...)
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  29.  30
    The cadence of nature for educating: Uncovering a path to knowing in a comparative study of Daoism and lost gospels.Wilma J. Maki - 2019 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (12):1216-1226.
    This article compares the two worldviews of Daoism and selected lost gospels, and considers the pedagogical implications. It explores their core concepts and how each applies these concepts...
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  30.  26
    Expressivism and Normative Metaphysics.Billy Dunaway - 2016 - Oxford Studies in Metaethics 11.
    Quasi-realist Expressivists offer accounts of normative truth, normative facts, and normative properties which make their view apparently indistinguishable from Realist views on these subjects. This chapter explores the idea that there is still a substantial metaphysical difference between Realism and Quasi-realism, since they differ over the extent to which normative properties are metaphysically elite in David Lewis’s sense. Eliteness is an explanatory notion, and Realists need the explanatory features of eliteness to explain how different communities refer to the same property (...)
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  31. Modal Quantification Without Worlds.Billy Dunaway - 2013 - In Karen Bennett & Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.), Oxford Studies in Metaphysics, Volume 8. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press. pp. 151-186.
    This paper is about avoiding commitment to an ontology of possible worlds with two primitives: a hyperintensional connective like ‘in virtue of’, and primitive quantification into predicate position. I argue that these tools (which some believe can be independently motivated) render dispensable the ontology of possible worlds needed by traditional anaylses of modality. They also shed new light on the notion of truth-at-a-world.
     
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  32.  72
    Epistemological motivations for anti-realism.Billy Dunaway - 2018 - Philosophical Studies 175 (11):2763-2789.
    Anti-realism is often claimed to be preferable to realism on epistemological grounds: while realists have difficulty explaining how we can ever know claims if we are realists about it, anti-realism faces no analogous problem. This paper focuses on anti-realism about normativity to investigate this alleged advantage to anti-realism in detail. I set up a framework in which a version of anti-realism explains a type of modal reliability that appears to be epistemologically promising, and plausibly explains the appearance of an epistemological (...)
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  33.  34
    A Reader in Manichaean Middle Persian and Parthian.Wilma Heston & Mary Boyce - 1978 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 98 (2):164.
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  34.  67
    Connecting emotions and words: the referential process.Wilma Bucci, Bernard Maskit & Sean Murphy - 2016 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 15 (3):359-383.
    This paper outlines the process of verbal communication of emotion as this occurs through the phases of the referential process, including arousal of an emotion schema; detailed and specific descriptions of images and episodes that are exemplars of emotion schemas; and reflection and reorganization, which may include emotion labels and other types of categorical terms. The concepts of emotion schemas and the referential process are defined in the theoretical framework of multiple code theory which includes subsymbolic sensory, visceral and motoric (...)
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  35.  59
    Luck: Evolutionary and epistemic.Billy Dunaway - 2017 - Episteme 14 (4):441-461.
    This paper advances two theses about evolutionary debunking arguments in ethics. The first is that, while such arguments are often motivated with the rhetoric of ‘luck', proponents of these arguments have not distinguished between the kinds of luck that might lead to the formation of a true belief. Once we make the needed distinctions, the relevance of the kind of luck which can be derived from broadly evolutionary explanations to the epistemological conclusions debunkers draw is suspect. The second thesis is (...)
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  36.  29
    Kojève, Hyppolite et Bourgeois. Trois voies de l’hégélianisme.Wilma Pilati - 2022 - Les Etudes Philosophiques 140 (1):89-104.
    Cet article cherche à mettre en avant certains parcours s’ouvrant après Hegel à travers trois figures hégéliennes. L’essai se concentre sur un point de la Phénoménologie jugé équivoque par Kojève, ambigu par Hyppolite et porteur d’interrogations par Bourgeois, en voulant d’abord répondre à la question suivante : peut‑on parler d’un seul héritage de la pensée hégélienne ou faut‑il plutôt reconnaître qu’il y en a plusieurs? Les différentes lectures proposées par chaque interprète ouvrent à trois conceptions différentes du rapport entre le (...)
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  37.  29
    The beauty that saves: essays on aesthetics and language in Simone Weil.John M. Dunaway & Eric O. Springsted (eds.) - 1996 - Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press.
    The Beauty That Saves, a collection of essays by many of the most prominent American and European scholars on Weil, begins with a foreword by well-known writer ...
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  38.  20
    Knowledge and Theological Predication: Lessons from the Medieval Islamic Tradition.Billy Dunaway - 2021 - Res Philosophica 98 (2):353-376.
    This article sketches how the debate over divine predications should be informed by the medieval Islamicate tradition. We emphasize the focus not only on the metaphysics and language of divine predications by al-Ghazali, Maimonides, and others, but also on the epistemology of divine predications. In particular, we emphasize the importance of a theory that explains not only what it takes to make a divine predication true, but also whether these predications are knowable. The epistemological element is central, because traditional views (...)
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  39. Meaning, Decision, and Norms: Themes From the Work of Allan Gibbard.Billy Dunaway & David Plunkett (eds.) - 2022 - Ann Arbor, Michigan: Maize Books.
    It is not an exaggeration to say that Allan Gibbard is one of the most significant contributors to philosophy over the last five decades. Gibbard's work covers an impressive number of subfields within philosophy, including ethics, philosophy of language, decision theory, epistemology, and metaphysics. It also engages with, and makes significant contributions to, work from the natural and social sciences. This volume is not a collection of artifacts from past decades of philosophy. Instead, it is a collection of essays that (...)
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  40.  34
    Zoological Illustration: An Essay towards a History of Printed Zoological Pictures. David Knight.Wilma George - 1979 - Isis 70 (1):166-167.
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  41.  23
    Han Tomb Art of West China. A Collection of First- and Second-Century Reliefs.Wilma Fairbank, Richard C. Rudolph & Wen Yu - 1951 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 71 (4):282.
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  42.  61
    A matter of focus: Detailed memory in the intentional autobiographical recall of older and younger adults.Alaitz Aizpurua & Wilma Koutstaal - 2015 - Consciousness and Cognition 33:145-155.
  43. The Folk Probably do Think What you Think They Think.David Manley, Billy Dunaway & Anna Edmonds - 2013 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 91 (3):421-441.
    Much of experimental philosophy consists of surveying 'folk' intuitions about philosophically relevant issues. Are the results of these surveys evidence that the relevant folk intuitions cannot be predicted from the ‘armchair’? We found that a solid majority of philosophers could predict even results claimed to be 'surprising'. But, we argue, this does not mean that such experiments have no role at all in philosophy.
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  44.  35
    Dewey’s Link with Daoism: Ideals of nature, cultivation practices, and applications in lessons.Wilma J. Maki - 2016 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 48 (2):150-164.
    This article explores the pedagogical implications of John Dewey’s claim that his definition of experience is shared by Daoists. It compares characteristics of experience with those in Daoism, and then considers the similarities and differences between key cultivation practices each proposes, focusing on the roles of the teacher and sage. My main reference to Daoism is the translation of the Daodejing by Roger Ames and David Hall, who use Dewey’s conception of experience to explain the character of Daoism. There are (...)
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  45.  8
    História das mulheres em tempos de pandemia.Wilma de Lara Bueno - 2021 - Filosofia E Educação 12 (3):1544-1564.
    Este artigo pretende refletir sobre a condição feminina em tempos da pandemia provocada pela Covid-19. A historiografia evidencia o papel das mulheres como sujeitos da história, o qual durante muito tempo foi relevado ao esquecimento por concepções que as condicionavam à reclusão e às tarefas do lar. No entanto, nas entrelinhas dos discursos masculinos, os historiadores têm encontrado indícios de que, no lar ou no espaço público, elas buscaram sua realização pessoal e profissional. Em tempos de pandemia, o cotidiano revela (...)
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  46.  34
    Realism, Metasemantics, and Risk.Billy Dunaway - 2021 - Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 20 (3).
    It is often claimed that realism about normativity entails that it is difficult for us to know anything about it. I refine this thought by characterizing realism as a thesis which is committed to explaining a semantic thesis about possible uses of normative language: that normative terms like ‘ought’ are semantically stable, in the sense that the term refers to the same property even if it is used differently. There are independent arguments which show that a realist view, if it (...)
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  47. On the semiosphere.Juri Lotman & Wilma Clark - 2005 - Sign Systems Studies 33 (1):205-226.
    This article, first published in Russian in 1984 in Sign Systems Studies, introduces the concept of semiosphere and describes its principal attributes. Semiosphere is the semiotic space, outside of which semiosis cannot exist. The ensemble of semiotic formations functionally precedes the singular isolated language and becomes a condition for the existence of the latter. Without the semiosphere, language not only does not function, it does not exist. The division between the core and the periphery is a law of the internal (...)
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  48.  22
    The Epistemology of Theological Predication.Billy Dunaway - 2022 - Essays in Philosophy 23 (1):83-104.
    Philosophers and theologians have traditionally been impressed with arguments which purport to show that predicates such as ‘wise,’ ‘good,’ and ‘powerful’ cannot, when applied to God, mean what they ordinarily mean when applied to everyday creatures. Theological predications, according to these arguments, cannot be univocal with ordinary predications. Philosophers in the Jewish, Christian, and Islamic traditions presented accounts of how non-univocal theological predications could be true of God. These are commonly known as analogical and apophatic accounts of the divine predicates. (...)
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  49. Preparing the Next Generation of Oral Historians: An Anthology of Oral History Education.Lisa Krissoff Boehm, Michael Brooks, Patrick W. Carlton, Fran Chadwick, Margaret Smith Crocco, Jennifer Braithwait Darrow, Toby Daspit, Joseph DeFilippo, Susan Douglass, David King Dunaway, Sandy Eades, The Foxfire Fund, Amy S. Green, Ronald J. Grele, M. Gail Hickey, Cliff Kuhn, Erin McCarthy, Marjorie L. McLellan, Susan Moon, Charles Morrissey, John A. Neuenschwander, Rich Nixon, Irma M. Olmedo, Sandy Polishuk, Alessandro Portelli, Kimberly K. Porter, Troy Reeves, Donald A. Ritchie, Marie Scatena, David Sidwell, Ronald Simon, Alan Stein, Debra Sutphen, Kathryn Walbert, Glenn Whitman, John D. Willard & Linda P. Wood (eds.) - 2006 - Altamira Press.
    Preparing the Next Generation of Oral Historians is an invaluable resource to educators seeking to bring history alive for students at all levels. Filled with insightful reflections on teaching oral history, it offers practical suggestions for educators seeking to create curricula, engage students, gather community support, and meet educational standards. By the close of the book, readers will be able to successfully incorporate oral history projects in their own classrooms.
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  50.  31
    History of Biological Sciences and Medicine Georges Cuvier, Zoologist: A Study in the History of Evolution Theory. By William Coleman. Pp. 212. Harvard University Press; London: Oxford University Press, 1964. 40s. net. [REVIEW]Wilma George - 1966 - British Journal for the History of Science 3 (1):90-90.
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