Results for 'listening to the other'

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  1. Listening with the other, listening to the other.Donald L. Turner - 2008 - In D. E. Wittkower (ed.), Ipod and Philosophy: Icon of an Epoch. Open Court.
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  2. The Paradoxical Listening to the Other: Heidegger, Levinas, Derrida – And Gadamer.Carlos Gutiérrez - 2016 - In Lisa Foran & Rozemund Uljée (eds.), Heidegger, Levinas, Derrida: The Question of Difference. Cham: Springer Verlag.
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  3.  4
    Listening to the Whispers: Re-Thinking Ethics in Healthcare.Christine Sorrell Dinkins & Jeanne Merkle Sorrell (eds.) - 2006 - University of Wisconsin Press.
    _Listening to the Whispers_ gives voice to scholars in philosophy, medical anthropology, physical therapy, and nursing, helping readers re-think ethics across the disciplines in the context of today's healthcare system. Diverse voices, often unheard, challenge readers to enlarge the circle of their ethical concerns and look for hidden pathways toward new understandings of ethics. Essays range from a focus on the context of corporatization and managed care environments to a call for questioning the fundamental values of society as these values (...)
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  4. Listening to the Cicadas: A Study of Plato's Phaedrus.G. R. F. Ferrari - 1987 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This full-length study of Plato's dialogue Phaedrus, now in paperback, is written in the belief that such concerted scrutiny of a single dialogue is an important part of the project of understanding Plato so far as possible 'from the inside' - of gaining a feel for the man's philosophy. The focus of this account is on how the resources both of persuasive myth and of formal argument, for all that Plato sets them in strong contrast, nevertheless complement and reinforce each (...)
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  5.  19
    To the Other as Other—Hearing, Listening, Understanding.Stephen Pluhacek - 2002 - Paragraph 25 (3):45-56.
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  6.  12
    Listening to the Universe.Igor Klyukanov - 2022 - Claridades. Revista de Filosofía 14 (2):141-154.
    The present article focuses on listening conceptualized as an active process of perception, with no fixed boundaries, directly connected to thought, and highlighting the ethical underpinnings of communication. Overall, listening is discussed as the primary and authentic characteristic of being with a double movement – towards the Other and towards oneself. A close link between obedience and listening is emphasized, which is demonstrated by emplying the Russian equivalent of the verb ‘to obey’ and the peculiarities of (...)
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  7.  19
    Listening to the World: Prophetic Anger and Sapiential Compassion.Felix Wilfred - 2014 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 34:63-66.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Listening to the World:Prophetic Anger and Sapiential CompassionFelix WilfredPope Benedict XVI has insisted all along how the absence of reference to God has caused dehumanization in our world. Unfortunately, what does not seem to occur to him and those who think along these lines is how the absence of concern and engagement with the issue of suffering—poverty, oppression, racism, and sexism—causes dehumanization. Suffering epitomizes the condition of our (...)
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  8.  10
    Listening to the World: Engagement with Those Who Suffer.Ouyporn Khuankaew - 2014 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 34:59-62.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Listening to the World:Engagement with Those Who SufferOuyporn KhuankaewBefore talking about listening to the world I would like to review what brought us to the need to listen. Riane Eisler, a thinker and peace activist who authored the book The Power of Partnership, summarizes the main characteristics of dominant culture as authoritarian, men over women, masculinity valued over femininity, hierarchical and centralized power of a few privileged (...)
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  9.  35
    The difficulty of thinking Listening to the voices of students in early childhood education.Camilla Kronqvist, Birgit Schaffar & Marina Lundkvist - 2020 - Journal of Philosophy in Schools 7 (1):68.
    This paper addresses the question of how to conceptualise the kind of difficulties students in early childhood education encountered in articulating their thoughts and in listening to others in the initial stages of a CoI. With examples from their course diaries, we illustrate what sense it makes to consider the thinking the CoI promotes as centrally embodied, extended, embedded and enacted. We consider their difficulties, not as external obstacles to expressing their thought, but as difficulties that are internal to (...)
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  10.  8
    Listening to the Cicadas: A Study of Plato's "Phaedrus" (review). [REVIEW]Michael L. Morgan - 1990 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 28 (1):121-123.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:BOOK REVIEWS 121 her hermeneutical enterprise. I agree that the Hippolytean interpretation is interesting (how could any interpretation of Heraclitus be without interest?) but I am not convinced that it is new. Here I must be brief: as early as Plato a case can be made for awareness of the moral implications of Heraclitus's cosmological views. The interconnection which Plato sees between Protagorean relativism (moral as well as epistemological (...)
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  11.  19
    The Ethos of Poetry: Listening to Poetic and Schizophrenic Expressions of Alienation and Otherness.Cathrine Bjørnholt Michaelsen - 2021 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 52 (4):334-351.
    In the Letter of Humanism, Heidegger reinterprets the Greek notion of ethos as designating the way in which human beings dwell in the world through a “unifying” language. Through various down strokes in the autobiographical and psychopathological literature on schizophrenia as well as in literary texts and literary criticism, this paper, experimental in its effort, argues that the language productions of schizophrenia and poetry, each in its own way, seem to fall outside this unification of a language in common. Furthermore, (...)
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  12.  22
    Listening to difference: J.G. Herder’s aural theory of cultural diversity in the ‘Treatise on the Origin of Language’ (1772).Tanvi Solanki - 2022 - History of European Ideas 48 (7):930-947.
    In this article, I develop the concept and practice of ‘listening to difference,’ examining J.G. Herder’s aural theory of cultural diversity as primarily worked out in the ‘Treatise on the Origin of Language’ (1772). I examine the sources Herder critiqued to outline his aural theory of linguistic and cultural difference, which have thus far only been summarily mentioned if at all in scholarship despite the prominence of the ‘Treatise’ in intellectual history and philosophy. These sources comprise the travelogues of (...)
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  13.  20
    Listening to Others: Music and the Phenomenology of Hearing.Felix Ó Murchadha - 2021 - In Anna Bortolan & Elisa Magrì (eds.), Empathy, Intersubjectivity, and the Social World: The Continued Relevance of Phenomenology. Essays in Honour of Dermot Moran. Berlin: DeGruyter. pp. 243-260.
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  14.  41
    The violence of the ethical encounter: listening to the suffering subject as a speaking body.Dorothée Legrand - 2017 - Continental Philosophy Review 51 (1):43-64.
    How does the clinical encounter work? To tackle this question, the present study centers on the paradigmatic clinical encounter, namely, psychoanalysis, paradigmatic in that it is structured by the encounter itself. Our question thus becomes: how does the clinical encounter work, when its only modality is speech? By reading Jacques Lacan and Emmanuel Levinas together, we better identify how speech sets up as subjects those who address one another and how this subjectivation touches the suffering body specifically. In this framework, (...)
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  15.  12
    Hand to hand: listening to the work of art.Jean-Louis Chrétien - 2003 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    A leading philosopher and theologian, Jean-Louis Chrétien uses poetry and painting to explore a theme that runs through all of his work: how human life is shaped by the experience of call and response. For Chrétien, we live by responding to the call of experience with words, gestures, expressions, and silence. In luminous meditations on Rembrandt, Delacroix, Manet, Verlaine, Keats, and other artists, Chrétien shows how “talking hands of painters” and the “secretly lucid” voices of poets confront the finitude (...)
  16.  90
    Listening to Reason”: The Role of Persuasion in Aristotle’s Account of Praise, Blame, and the Voluntary.Allen Speight - 2005 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 38 (3):213-225.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:“Listening to Reason”:The Role of Persuasion in Aristotle’s Account of Praise, Blame, and the VoluntaryAllen SpeightAristotle connects praise and blame closely to the voluntary, but the question of how his discussion of these terms should be construed more broadly in the context of a theory of responsibility has been much disputed. There are some well-known difficulties with the coherence of Aristotle's views in this regard: animals and children, (...)
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  17.  22
    Listening to Scientists—and Each Other.Michael K. Gusmano - 2020 - Hastings Center Report 50 (6):inside_front_cover-inside_front_.
    During the past two years, colleagues and I at The Hastings Center have worked on a project, funded by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, that seeks to improve the quality of public deliberation, particularly about science. Specifically, we seek to improve the public's capacity for civic learning, which is our term for the ability of people living in a democracy to learn at least the basics of complex policy issues, discuss them, and make civically responsible decisions about (...)
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  18. Listening to Other Minds: A Phenomenology of Pop Songs.Enrico Terrone - 2020 - British Journal of Aesthetics 60 (4):435-453.
    This paper explores some phenomenological consequences of the ontological affinity between films and pop songs. Given the central place of the recording technology in both films and pop songs, one can wonder whether pop songs can elicit from their listeners the same kind of experience that films elicit from their spectators. In other words, one can wonder whether pop songs encourage us to play a ‘game of make-believe’ analogous to that we play when we engage with films. The main (...)
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  19.  30
    (1 other version)Listening to students about the Umbrella Movement of Hong Kong.James Partaken - 2017 - Educational Philosophy and Theory:1-11.
    This article gives voice to student activists who participated in the 2014 Hong Kong pro-democracy Occupy movement, also known as the Umbrella Movement. It provides an alternative perspective from which to view those events. We want to examine how the activism impacted students’ understanding of their involvement and identity. We argue that it is necessary to interpret the experiences and voices of the leaders of the movement in light of other Asian student movements. We start by establishing parallels with (...)
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  20.  42
    Listening to what cannot be said: Broken narratives and the lived body.Renata Kokanović & Meredith Stone - 2018 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 17 (1):20-31.
    The core of this special issue of Arts and Humanities in Higher Education emerged from the Broken Narratives and the Lived Body conference held in 2016. The ‘Broken Narrative’ essays included in this issue open up a critical space for understanding and theorising illness narratives that defy a conventional cognitive ordering of the self as a bounded spatial and temporal entity. Here, we discuss how narratives might be ‘broken’ by discourse, trauma, ‘ill’ lived bodies and experiences that exceed linguistic representation. (...)
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  21. Listening. The Other Side of Transcendental Poetics.Holger Schmid - 2002 - Phainomena 41.
    The adopted directedness of Western thinking to the visible and visibility as the Platonist heritage has been explored frequently enough; the issue of how to reflect upon the crisis of this directedness through philosophy of language has been tackled in the last third of the 20th century primarily by means of hermeneutic theory. Reflecting the status of thinking and human constitution of the world as a whole in their dependence on language, which followed the hermeneutic requirement for universality, has led (...)
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  22.  10
    (1 other version)Listening Without a Listener – Understanding the Self and the Activity of Listening to Music Through Nishitani Keiji’ Philosophy.Anttoni Kuusela - 2025 - Journal of East Asian Philosophy 4 (2):123-136.
    In our everyday life, music is taken as an object – an object that is helpful in one sense or the other: Music can help alleviate sadness, lift the mood if life seems a bit dull, or enhance an already great atmosphere. In other words, music is often approached as an instrument of so-called affective scaffolding. Yet music is more than an instrument which can be used to gain desired affective states. In the present paper, the possibility of (...)
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  23.  6
    Listening for the Secret: The Grateful Dead and the Politics of Improvisation.Nicholas Meriwether (ed.) - 2017 - University of California Press.
    _Listening for the Secret_ is a critical assessment of the Grateful Dead and the distinct culture that grew out of the group’s music, politics, and performance. With roots in popular music traditions, improvisation, and the avant-garde, the Grateful Dead provides a unique lens through which we can better understand the meaning and creation of the counterculture community. Marshaling the critical and aesthetic theories of Adorno, Benjamin, Foucault and others, Ulf Olsson places the music group within discourses of the political, specifically (...)
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  24.  1
    Haunted words, haunted selves: listening to otherness within Western thought.Colby Dickinson - 2024 - Eugene, Oregon: Cascade Books.
    We are all haunted by things we fear, repress, and those things of which we have no conscious knowledge. We are thus haunted by a variety of "ghosts" in our lives so that, at times, we might notice those things we have ignored, and so too allow the repressed elements of our world a chance to speak more directly to us. Being honest with ourselves means listening better to what haunts us, and to wrestle with our own ghosts, as (...)
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  25.  15
    Listening through the Iron Curtain: RFE and Polish Radio in the “fog of war”.Joanna Walewska-Choptiany - 2019 - Centaurus 61 (3):200-231.
    In Polish historiography on radio in the Stalinist period, the official propaganda broadcast by Polish Radio is very often juxtaposed with the free and unbiased broadcasting of Radio Free Europe (RFE), which can create the impression that RFE was the only source of information in Poland and tends to diminish the importance of Polish Radio. In fact, both broadcasting institutions were crucial players in Cold War warfare, which was described by George F. Kennan in terms of Clausewitz's “fog of war.” (...)
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  26.  34
    Interdisciplinary atomism? Exploring twentieth-century culture through Einstein Marcia Bartusiak,Einstein's Unfinished Symphony: Listening to the Sounds of Space–Time. Washington, DC: Joseph Henry Press, 2000. Pp. xii+249. ISBN 0-309-06987-4. £17.95 . Alice Calaprice , The Expanded Quotable Einstein. With a foreword by Freeman Dyson. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2000. Pp. xliii+407. ISBN 0-691-07021-0. £11.95, $18.95 . Klaus Hentschel , Physics and National Socialism: An Anthology of Primary Sources. Ann M. Hentschel, Editorial Assistant and Translator. Erwin Hiebert and Hans Wussing , Science Networks: Historical Studies, 18. Basel, Boston and Berlin: Birkhäuser, 1996. Pp. ci+406+civ. ISBN 3-7643-5312-0. DM 178.00, SFR 148.00, €98.00 . Gerald Holton,Einstein, History, and Other Passions: The Rebellion Against Science at the End of the Twentieth Century. Cambridge and London: Harvard University Press, 2000. Pp. xii+240. ISBN 0-674-00433-7. £12.50 . Don Howard and J. [REVIEW]Richard Staley - 2003 - British Journal for the History of Science 36 (2):221-230.
  27. Listening as embracing the other: Martin Buber's philosophy of dialogue.Mordechai Gordon - 2011 - Educational Theory 61 (2):207-219.
    In this essay, Mordechai Gordon interprets Martin Buber's ideas on dialogue, presence, and especially his notion of embracing in an attempt to shed some light on Buber's understanding of listening. Gordon argues that in order to understand Buber's conception of listening, one needs to examine this concept in the context of his philosophy of dialogue. More specifically, his contention is that closely examining Buber's notion of embracing the other is critical to making sense of his conception of (...)
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  28.  13
    Listening to children: being and becoming.Bronwyn Davies - 2014 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    Through a series of exquisite encounters with children, and through a lucid opening up of new aspects of poststructuralist theorizing, Bronwyn Davies opens up new ways of thinking about, and intra-acting with, children. This book carefully guides the reader through a wave of thought that turns the known into the unknown, and then slowly, carefully, makes new forms of thought comprehensible, opening, through all the senses, a deep understanding of our embeddedness in encounters with each other and with the (...)
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  29.  44
    Talk about Pop Muzik: Discussion of Enrico Terrone, ‘Listening to Other Minds: A Phenomenology of Pop Songs’, BJA 60 (2020), 435–453.Nicholas Wiltsher - 2021 - British Journal of Aesthetics 61 (4):471-483.
    In ‘Listening to Other Minds’, Enrico Terrone provides an account of the mental activity in which we ought to engage to appreciate pop music. He argues that we should ‘play a game of make-believe’ in which we imagine that we can ‘hear … the mind’ of a fictional character. We should use this ability to grasp the thoughts and feelings that the mind contains, and thus undertake ‘exploration’ of the character’s ‘inner life’. This article argues, first, that only (...)
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  30.  34
    Listening for the sounds of silence: a nursing consideration of caring for the politically tortured.Twilla Racine-Welch & Mark Welch - 2000 - Nursing Inquiry 7 (2):136-141.
    Listening for the sounds of silence: a nursing consideration of caring for the politically tortured In 1997 Amnesty International reported that 115 out of 251 countries surveyed practised torture on their citizens. Many of these victims have been forced to flee their country of origin and become refugees in the West, in countries such as Australia, Canada, the UK and the United States. However, torture itself remains an unspoken and covert problem. In addition to the obvious traumatic effects, it (...)
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  31.  19
    Listening in the Mix: Lead Vocals Robustly Attract Auditory Attention in Popular Music.Michel Bürgel, Lorenzo Picinali & Kai Siedenburg - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Listeners can attend to and track instruments or singing voices in complex musical mixtures, even though the acoustical energy of sounds from individual instruments may overlap in time and frequency. In popular music, lead vocals are often accompanied by sound mixtures from a variety of instruments, such as drums, bass, keyboards, and guitars. However, little is known about how the perceptual organization of such musical scenes is affected by selective attention, and which acoustic features play the most important role. To (...)
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  32. On the Distinctiveness of Listening to Music.Giulia Lorenzi - 2023 - Dissertation, University of Warwick
    Traditionally, philosophers of perception have focused their attention nearly exclusively on vision. Recently, however, the scientific and philosophical interest in studying other sensory modalities and their interaction has grown. Auditory perception has become an important field of research (O’Callaghan 2007, Nudds & O’Callaghan 2009). In this context, listening to music is usually presented as one variety of auditory perception (O’Callaghan 2021). Nevertheless, at the moment, there is no satisfactory explanation for this classification. The aim of my thesis is (...)
     
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  33.  28
    From the Radio Shack to the Cosmos: Listening to Sputnik during the International Geophysical Year (1957–1958).Veronica Della Dora - 2023 - Isis 114 (1):123-149.
    Whereas literature on satellites and outer space exploration has usually been dominated by vision, humankind’s initial encounter with the Earth’s first artificial satellite, Sputnik I, was overwhelmingly sonic. Tracking was originally enabled by the signal continuously transmitted by its radio beacon. Embedded in the International Geophysical Year (IGY) citizen science programs, radio amateurs played a crucial role in receiving the signal and assisting professional scientists in tracking the satellite in its initial phases. Their established existence as a distinctive worldwide community (...)
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  34.  37
    Coping with the Conflict-of-Interest Pandemic by Listening to and Doubting Everyone, Including Yourself.Lynn T. Kozlowski - 2016 - Science and Engineering Ethics 22 (2):591-596.
    In light of the widespread existence of financial and non-financial issues that contribute to the appearance or fact of conflict of interest, it is proposed that conflict of interest should generally be assumed, no matter the source of financial support or the expressed declarations of conflicts and even with respect to one’s own work. No new model is advanced for modification of peer-review processes or for elaboration of author declarations of interest. Researchers should be assessing the quality of published work (...)
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  35.  50
    Listening to Animalities, Materialities and Shipwrecks.Linus Lancaster & Frederick Young - 2012 - Technoetic Arts 9 (2-3):143-151.
    In these collaborative, theoretical and performative pieces our aim is towards radical expansions of various formal parameters in western philosophy through art praxis that de-centres the roles played by the animal subject, industrial technologies, and soil in modernist paradigms. Exceeding these conventions demands pushing against/past blockages (aporias) to broader engagement with whatever refigured subjectivities are called into constellative gathering in the process. The immanent multiplicity of constellative (Soilogic) analysis ‘cuts in all directions’ in its insistence on attempting to ‘upend’ multiple (...)
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  36.  25
    Listening, Acting, and the Quest for Alternatives: A Response to Charland and Bracken.Erica Lilleleht - 2002 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 9 (2):189-191.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology 9.2 (2002) 189-191 [Access article in PDF] Listening, Acting, and the Quest for AlternativesA Response to Charland and Bracken Erica Lilleleht The challenge is not to replace one certitude... with another but to cultivate an attention to the conditions under which things become 'evident,'... ceasing to be objects of our attention and therefore seeming fixed, necessary, and unchangeable. (Rabinow on Foucault 1997, p. XIX) (...)
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  37. Listening to People or Listening to Prozac?: Another Consideration of Causal Classifications.Jennifer Hansen - 2003 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 10 (1):57-62.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology 10.1 (2003) 57-62 [Access article in PDF] Listening to People Or Listening to Prozac?Another Consideration of Causal Classifications Jennifer Hansen Keywords causal classification, descriptivism, melancholia, neurasthenia, depression, cultural relativism. The shape and detail of depression have gone through a thousand cartwheels, and the treatment of depression has alternated between the ridiculous and the sublime, but the excessive sleeping, inadequate eating, suicidiality, withdrawal from (...)
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  38.  49
    Listening to prayers: an analysis of prayers left in a country church in rural England.Tania Ap Siôn - 2007 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 29 (1):199-226.
    This study builds on a long-established tradition within the psychology of religion concerned with the analysis and interpretation of prayer. Drawing on 917 prayer-cards le in one rural church over a sixteenth-month period, the analysis distinguishes between three aspects of intercessory and supplicatory prayer defined as reference, intention, and objective. Results of the analysis showed that only 4% of prayer requests had the prayer author as a key focus, and that there was a preference to pray for other people (...)
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  39.  43
    Listening to Foucault.Patrick Bracken - 2002 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 9 (2):187-188.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology 9.2 (2002) 187-188 [Access article in PDF] Listening to Foucault Patrick J. Bracken ERICA LILLELEHT'S INTERESTING PAPER combines philosophy, history, service analysis, and social commentary. The philosophical themes are below the surface, implicit rather than explicit. As such the paper echoes the work of Foucault himself. The subjects of his books and other writings ranged from histories of madness and psychiatry, hospitals and (...)
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  40.  11
    Dude, Listen to Reason!Robert Arp - 2013 - In Robert Arp & Kevin S. Decker (eds.), The Ultimate South Park and Philosophy. Wiley. pp. 41–52.
    This chapter offers a short logic lesson as an introduction to what philosophers and other critical thinkers do when they offer and criticize arguments. Logic is the study of the principles of correct reasoning associated with the formation and analysis of arguments. The creators of South Park, for the most part, know these logical principles. They purposely violate them, though, to show the absurdities contained in certain beliefs, opinions, ideas, and arguments. In fact, much of South Park's humor concerns (...)
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  41. "Listen to What You Say": Rwanda's Postgenocide Language Policies.Lynne Tirrell - 2015 - New England Journal of Public Policy 27 (4).
    Freedom of expression is considered a basic human right, and yet most countries have restrictions on speech they deem harmful. Following the genocide of the Tutsi, Rwanda passed a constitution (2003) and laws against hate speech and other forms of divisionist language (2008, 2013). Understanding how language shaped “recognition harms” that both constitute and fuel genocide also helps account for political decisions to limit “divisionist” discourse. When we speak, we make expressive commitments, which are commitments to the viability and (...)
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  42.  37
    Reclaiming Rhetorica: Women in the Rhetorical Tradition, and: Listening to Their Voices: The Rhetorical Activities of Historical Women, and: The Changing Tradition: Women in the History of Rhetoric (review).Martha Watson - 2000 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 33 (3):294-298.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Rhetoric 33.3 (2000) 294-298 [Access article in PDF] Book Review Reclaiming Rhetorica: Women in the Rhetorical Tradition Listening to Their Voices: The Rhetorical Activities of Historical Women The Changing Tradition: Women in the History of Rhetoric Reclaiming Rhetorica: Women in the Rhetorical Tradition. Ed. Andrea A. Lunsford. Pittsburgh Series in Composition, Literacy, and Culture. Pittsburgh: U of Pittsburgh P, 1995. Pp. xiv + 354. $22.95 paperback; (...)
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  43.  4
    Beyond Judicial Solitude: Listening in the Politics of Criminal Sentencing.Jeffrey Kennedy - 2024 - Criminal Justice Ethics 43 (3):225-258.
    Criminal sentencing has grown into an increasingly interactive process featuring a multiplicity of potential actors—prosecution, defence, the individual convicted of the crime, probation officers and case workers, victims or their families, the police, community representatives, community workers, and even academics. The philosophical foundations of sentencing scholarship, however, regularly assume a model of judicial solitude in which sentencing judges are separate and apart from other actors. This article suggests the need to take sentencing’s interactivity and its politics seriously and draws (...)
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  44.  2
    Listening “At the Bedside”: Podcasts as an Emerging Tool for Medical Ethics Education.Tamar Schiff, Margot Hedlin & Jafar Al-Mondhiry - forthcoming - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics:1-12.
    Medical ethics education is crucial for medical students and trainees, helping to shape attitudes, beliefs, values, and professional identities. Exploration of ethical dilemmas and approaches to resolving them provides a broader understanding of the social and cultural contexts in which medicine is practiced, as well as the ethical implications of medical decisions, fostering critical thinking and self-reflection skills imperative to providing patient-centered care. However, exposure to medical ethics topics and their clinical applications can be limited by curricular constraints and the (...)
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  45.  15
    Mnemonic accessibility affects statement believability: The effect of listening to others selectively practicing beliefs.Madalina Vlasceanu & Alin Coman - 2018 - Cognition 180:238-245.
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  46.  91
    Listening to Different Texts: Between Reich and Eco with Nycz.Małgorzata A. Szyszkowska - 2019 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 3 (3):5-13.
    In this essay, the author considers intertextuality in contemporary musical work, conceptualizing it not only as a critical category and as an artistic convention, but also as an aesthetic strategy. Listening for texts, as it were, opens the work for influences and gives it new purposes. The multiple texts, which are mutually interdependent, alter each other’s meaning and are “read” and “re-read” during aesthetic experience. Depending on the listener, these meanings are more or less pronounced; some are seen (...)
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    Creative Listening and the Psychoanalytic Process: Sensibility, Engagement and Envisioning.Fred L. Griffin - 2016 - Routledge.
    Contemporary psychoanalytic thinking about the interdependence of subjectivity and intersubjectivity has reenvisioned the analytic process, and with it the very nature of creative and engaged psychoanalytic listening. Yet few systematic writings on psychoanalytic listening or technique provide comprehensive instruction that would prepare the analyst for the kind of analytic listening needed to participate imaginatively in this sort of intersubjective experience.Offering a short course in analytic listening, _Creative Listening and the Psychoanalytic Process_ provides a guide for (...)
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  48.  41
    Why Listen to Philosophers? A Constructive Critique of Disciplinary Philosophy.Samuel Loncar - 2016 - Metaphilosophy 47 (1):3-25.
    This article articulates a fundamental crisis of disciplinary philosophy—its lack of disciplinary self-consciousness and the skeptical problems this generates—and, through that articulation, exemplifies a means of mitigating its force. Disciplinary philosophy organizes itself as a producer of specialized knowledge, with the apparatus of journals, publication requirements, and other professional standards, but it cannot agree on what constitutes knowledge, progress, or value, and evinces ignorance of its history and alternatives. This situation engenders a skepticism that threatens the legitimacy of disciplinary (...)
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  49.  57
    Speaking and Listening to Acts of Political Dissent.Graham Hubbs & Matthew Chrisman - 2018 - In Casey Rebecca Johnson (ed.), Voicing Dissent: The Ethics and Epistemology of Making Disagreement Public. New York: Routledge. pp. 164-81.
    In the past few years, the United States has seen violent street protests in response to police killing unarmed people of color, angry protests by university students concerned about the racist legacy of their institutions, and verbally disruptive protests inside rallies of the (then) Republican nominee for president, Donald Trump. Some of these acts of protest have been clearly legal, protected by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution; others, by contrast, have not, but may nevertheless be be defensible (...)
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  50.  25
    Effects of listening to Quran recitation on anxiety reduction in elective surgeries: A systematic review and meta-analysis.Vahideh Zarea Gavgani, Mortaza Ghojazadeh, Fatemeh Sadeghi-Ghyassi & Tahmineh Khodapanah - 2022 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 44 (2):111-126.
    Anxiety is a common unpleasant reaction among patients undergoing surgery. Many non-pharmacological methods such as spiritual strength are effective in preoperative anxiety management. This study aimed to assess the effects of listening to Quran recitation on reducing preoperative anxiety. A systematic review was performed in Medline, EMBASE, Cochrane Library, PsycINFO, Arab World Research Source, and other relevant databases to collect the data. Randomized controlled trials about the effects of listening to Quran recitation on preoperative anxiety reduction in (...)
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