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  1.  31
    (1 other version)Intersectionality as a tool for clinical ethics consultation in mental healthcare.Mirjam Faissner,Lisa Brünig,Anne-Sophie Gaillard,Anna-TheresaJieman,Jakov Gather &Christin Hempeler -2024 -Philosophy, Ethics and Humanities in Medicine 19 (1):1-11.
    Bioethics increasingly recognizes the impact of discriminatory practices based on social categories such as race, gender, sexual orientation or ability on clinical practice. Accordingly, major bioethics associations have stressed that identifying and countering structural discrimination in clinical ethics consultations is a professional obligation of clinical ethics consultants. Yet, it is still unclear how clinical ethics consultants can fulfill this obligation. More specifically, clinical ethics needs both theoretical tools to analyze and practical strategies to address structural discrimination within clinical ethics consultations. (...) Intersectionality, a concept developed in Black feminist scholarship, is increasingly considered in bioethical theory. It stresses how social structures and practices determine social positions of privilege and disadvantage in multiple, mutually co-constitutive systems of oppression. This article aims to investigate how intersectionality can contribute to addressing structural discrimination in clinical ethics consultations with a particular focus on mental healthcare. To this end, we critically review existing approaches for clinical ethics consultants to address structural racism in clinical ethics consultations and extend them by intersectional considerations. We argue that intersectionality is a suitable tool to address structural discrimination within clinical ethics consultations and show that it can be practically implemented in two complementary ways: 1) as an analytic approach and 2) as a critical practice. (shrink)
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  2.  33
    Embedded Ethics in Practice: A Toolbox for Integrating the Analysis of Ethical and Social Issues into Healthcare AI Research.Theresa Willem,Marie-Christine Fritzsche,Bettina M. Zimmermann,Anna Sierawska,Svenja Breuer,Maximilian Braun,Anja K. Ruess,Marieke Bak,Franziska B. Schönweitz,Lukas J. Meier,Amelia Fiske,Daniel Tigard,Ruth Müller,Stuart McLennan &Alena Buyx -2025 -Science and Engineering Ethics 31 (1):1-22.
    Integrating artificial intelligence (AI) into critical domains such as healthcare holds immense promise. Nevertheless, significant challenges must be addressed to avoid harm, promote the well-being of individuals and societies, and ensure ethically sound and socially just technology development. Innovative approaches like Embedded Ethics, which refers to integrating ethics and social science into technology development based on interdisciplinary collaboration, are emerging to address issues of bias, transparency, misrepresentation, and more. This paper aims to develop this approach further to enable future projects (...) to effectively deploy it. Based on the practical experience of using ethics and social science methodology in interdisciplinary AI-related healthcare consortia, this paper presents several methods that have proven helpful for embedding ethical and social science analysis and inquiry. They include (1) stakeholder analyses, (2) literature reviews, (3) ethnographic approaches, (4) peer-to-peer interviews, (5) focus groups, (6) interviews with affected groups and external stakeholders, (7) bias analyses, (8) workshops, and (9) interdisciplinary results dissemination. We believe that applying Embedded Ethics offers a pathway to stimulate reflexivity, proactively anticipate social and ethical concerns, and foster interdisciplinary inquiry into such concerns at every stage of technology development. This approach can help shape responsible, inclusive, and ethically aware technology innovation in healthcare and beyond. (shrink)
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  3.  3
    The Lesson of Sleeping Beauty: Person‐Centred Care for the Unconscious, Unresponsive ICU Patient in the Face of Levinas’ Radical Alterity.Theresa Clement,PeterAnna Zeillinger,Hanna Mayer &Brendan McCormack -2025 -Nursing Philosophy 26 (2):e70022.
    The development of person‐centred practice is inextricably linked with the debate about being a person and personhood. This debate takes on a particular relevance when certain prerequisites, which are often used as defining characteristics of persons, can no longer be autonomously fulfilled. This is the case, for example, with intensive care patients who are often (temporarily) impaired in their responsiveness and consciousness due to their critical state of health. Due to sedation, severity of illness and loss of voice, delivery of (...) person‐centred care in the intensive care setting is described as challenging. Despite far reaching implications on the therapeutic, ethical, and legal handling of patients in the intensive care setting, a definition of personhood at the stage of briefly diminished (by anesthetic measures), limited, or absent consciousness and ability to communicate has so far been discussed only superficially. To meet this challenge and to develop an understanding of person‐centred practice suitable for the context of intensive care, Emmanuel Levinas’ relational ethics and his understanding of radical alterity is discussed. We uncover the implications of Levinas Ethics of Radical Alterity on the care of the unconscious and unresponsive patient in the intensive care unit and further on the person‐centred approach to practice. The perspectives proposed in this paper provide an opportunity for the ontological embedding of a person‐centred care approach, which makes it possible to meet and care for these patients in a person‐centred manner. (shrink)
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  4.  241
    Monetary Intelligence and Behavioral Economics: The Enron Effect—Love of Money, Corporate Ethical Values, Corruption Perceptions Index, and Dishonesty Across 31 Geopolitical Entities.Thomas Li-Ping Tang,Toto Sutarso,Mahfooz A. Ansari,Vivien K. G. Lim,Thompson S. H. Teo,Fernando Arias-Galicia,Ilya E. Garber,Randy Ki-Kwan Chiu,Brigitte Charles-Pauvers,Roberto Luna-Arocas,Peter Vlerick,Adebowale Akande,Michael W. Allen,Abdulgawi Salim Al-Zubaidi,Mark G. Borg,Bor-Shiuan Cheng,Rosario Correia,Linzhi Du,Consuelo Garcia de la Torre,Abdul Hamid Safwat Ibrahim,Chin-Kang Jen,Ali Mahdi Kazem,Kilsun Kim,Jian Liang,Eva Malovics,Alice S. Moreira,Richard T. Mpoyi,Anthony Ugochukwu Obiajulu Nnedum,Johnsto E. Osagie,AAhad M. Osman-Gani,Mehmet Ferhat Özbek,Francisco José Costa Pereira,Ruja Pholsward,Horia D. Pitariu,Marko Polic,Elisaveta Gjorgji Sardžoska,Petar Skobic,Allen F. Stembridge,Theresa Li-Na Tang,Caroline Urbain,Martina Trontelj,Luigina Canova,Anna Maria Manganelli,Jingqiu Chen,Ningyu Tang,Bolanle E. Adetoun &Modupe F. Adewuyi -2018 -Journal of Business Ethics 148 (4):919-937.
    Monetary intelligence theory asserts that individuals apply their money attitude to frame critical concerns in the context and strategically select certain options to achieve financial goals and ultimate happiness. This study explores the dark side of monetary Intelligence and behavioral economics—dishonesty. Dishonesty, a risky prospect, involves cost–benefit analysis of self-interest. We frame good or bad barrels in the environmental context as a proxy of high or low probability of getting caught for dishonesty, respectively. We theorize: The magnitude and intensity of (...) the relationship between love of money and dishonest prospect may reveal how individuals frame dishonesty in the context of two levels of subjective norm—perceived corporate ethical values at the micro-level and Corruption Perceptions Index at the macro-level, collected from multiple sources. Based on 6382 managers in 31 geopolitical entities across six continents, our cross-level three-way interaction effect illustrates: As expected, managers in good barrels, mixed barrels, and bad barrels display low, medium, and high magnitude of dishonesty, respectively. With high CEV, the intensity is the same across cultures. With low CEV, the intensity of dishonesty is the highest in high CPI entities —the Enron Effect, but the lowest in low CPI entities. CPI has a strong impact on the magnitude of dishonesty, whereas CEV has a strong impact on the intensity of dishonesty. We demonstrate dishonesty in light of monetary values and two frames of social norm, revealing critical implications to the field of behavioral economics and business ethics. (shrink)
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  5.  15
    Patronizing the Public: American Philanthropy's Transformation of Culture, Communication, and the Humanities.Charles R. Acland,Jeffrey Brison,Gisela Cramer,Julia L. Foulkes,Johannes C. Gall,Anna McCarthy,Manon Niquette,Theresa Richardson,Haidee Wasson &Marion Wrenn (eds.) -2009 - Lexington Books.
    Patronizing the Public is the first detailed and comprehensive examination of how American philanthropy has transformed culture, communication, and the humanities. Drawing on an impressive range of archival and secondary sources, the chapters in the volume shed light on philanthropic foundations have shaped numerous fields, including film, television, radio, journalism, drama, local history, museums, as well as art and the humanities in general.
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  6.  41
    Behavioral economics and monetary wisdom: A cross‐level analysis of monetary aspiration, pay (dis)satisfaction, risk perception, and corruption in 32 nations.Thomas Li-Ping Tang,Zhen Li,Mehmet Ferhat Özbek,Vivien K. G. Lim,Thompson S. H. Teo,Mahfooz A. Ansari,Toto Sutarso,Ilya Garber,Randy Ki-Kwan Chiu,Brigitte Charles-Pauvers,Caroline Urbain,Roberto Luna-Arocas,Jingqiu Chen,Ningyu Tang,Theresa Li-Na Tang,Fernando Arias-Galicia,Consuelo Garcia De La Torre,Peter Vlerick,Adebowale Akande,Abdulqawi Salim Al-Zubaidi,Ali Mahdi Kazem,Mark G. Borg,Bor-Shiuan Cheng,Linzhi Du,Abdul Hamid Safwat Ibrahim,Kilsun Kim,Eva Malovics,Richard T. Mpoyi,Obiajulu Anthony Ugochukwu Nnedum,Elisaveta Gjorgji Sardžoska,Michael W. Allen,Rosário Correia,Chin-Kang Jen,Alice S. Moreira,Johnston E. Osagie,AAhad M. Osman-Gani,Ruja Pholsward,Marko Polic,Petar Skobic,Allen F. Stembridge,Luigina Canova,Anna Maria Manganelli,Adrian H. Pitariu &Francisco José Costa Pereira -2023 -Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 32 (3):925-945.
    Corruption involves greed, money, and risky decision-making. We explore the love of money, pay satisfaction, probability of risk, and dishonesty across cultures. Avaricious monetary aspiration breeds unethicality. Prospect theory frames decisions in the gains-losses domain and high-low probability. Pay dissatisfaction (in the losses domain) incites dishonesty in the name of justice at the individual level. The Corruption Perceptions Index, CPI, signals a high-low probability of getting caught for dishonesty at the country level. We theorize that decision-makers adopt avaricious love-of-money aspiration (...) as a lens and frame dishonesty in the gains-losses domain (pay satisfaction-dissatisfaction, Level 1) and high-low probability (CPI, Level 2) to maximize expected utility and ultimate serenity. We challenge the myth: Pay satisfaction mitigates dishonesty across nations consistently. Based on 6500 managers in 32 countries, our cross-level three-dimensional visualization offers the following discoveries. Under high aspiration conditions, pay dissatisfaction excites the highest- (third-highest) avaricious justice-seeking dishonesty in high (medium) CPI nations, supporting the certainty effect. However, pay satisfaction provokes the second-highest avaricious opportunity-seizing dishonesty in low CPI entities, sustaining the possibility effect—maximizing expected utility. Under low aspiration conditions, high pay satisfaction consistently leads to low dishonesty, demonstrating risk aversion—achieving ultimate serenity. We expand prospect theory from a micro and individual-level theory to a cross-level theory of monetary wisdom across 32 nations. We enhance the S-shaped Curve to three 3-D corruption surfaces across three levels of the global economic pyramid, providing novel insights into behavioral economics, business ethics, the environment, and responsibility. (shrink)
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  7.  168
    Monetary Intelligence and Behavioral Economics Across 32 Cultures: Good Apples Enjoy Good Quality of Life in Good Barrels.Thomas Li-Ping Tang,Toto Sutarso,Mahfooz A. Ansari,Vivien Kim Geok Lim,Thompson Sian Hin Teo,Fernando Arias-Galicia,Ilya E. Garber,Randy Ki-Kwan Chiu,Brigitte Charles-Pauvers,Roberto Luna-Arocas,Peter Vlerick,Adebowale Akande,Michael W. Allen,Abdulgawi Salim Al-Zubaidi,Mark G. Borg,Luigina Canova,Bor-Shiuan Cheng,Rosario Correia,Linzhi Du,Consuelo Garcia de la Torre,Abdul Hamid Safwat Ibrahim,Chin-Kang Jen,Ali Mahdi Kazem,Kilsun Kim,Jian Liang,Eva Malovics,Anna Maria Manganelli,Alice S. Moreira,Richard T. Mpoyi,Anthony Ugochukwu Obiajulu Nnedum,Johnsto E. Osagie,AAhad M. Osman-Gani,Mehmet Ferhat Özbek,Francisco José Costa Pereira,Ruja Pholsward,Horia D. Pitariu,Marko Polic,Elisaveta Gjorgji Sardžoska,Petar Skobic,Allen F. Stembridge,Theresa Li-Na Tang,Caroline Urbain,Martina Trontelj,Jingqiu Chen &Ningyu Tang -2018 -Journal of Business Ethics 148 (4):893-917.
    Monetary Intelligence theory asserts that individuals apply their money attitude to frame critical concerns in the context and strategically select certain options to achieve financial goals and ultimate happiness. This study explores the bright side of Monetary Intelligence and behavioral economics, frames money attitude in the context of pay and life satisfaction, and controls money at the macro-level and micro-level. We theorize: Managers with low love of money motive but high stewardship behavior will have high subjective well-being: pay satisfaction and (...) quality of life. Data collected from 6586 managers in 32 cultures across six continents support our theory. Interestingly, GDP per capita is related to life satisfaction, but not to pay satisfaction. Individual income is related to both life and pay satisfaction. Neither GDP nor income is related to Happiness. Our theoretical model across three GDP groups offers new discoveries: In high GDP entities, “high income” not only reduces aspirations—“Rich, Motivator, and Power,” but also promotes stewardship behavior—“Budget, Give/Donate, and Contribute” and appreciation of “Achievement.” After controlling income, we demonstrate the bright side of Monetary Intelligence: Low love of money motive but high stewardship behavior define Monetary Intelligence. “Good apples enjoy good quality of life in good barrels.” This notion adds another explanation to managers’ low magnitude of dishonesty in entities with high Corruption Perceptions Index. In low GDP entities, high income is related to poor Budgeting skills and escalated Happiness. These managers experience equal satisfaction with pay and life. We add a new vocabulary to the conversation of monetary intelligence, income, GDP, happiness, subjective well-being, good and bad apples and barrels, corruption, and behavioral ethics. (shrink)
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  8.  89
    Non-invasive Mapping of Face Processing by Navigated Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation.Stefanie Maurer,Katrin Giglhuber,Nico Sollmann,Anna Kelm,Sebastian Ille,Theresa Hauck,Noriko Tanigawa,Florian Ringel,Tobias Boeckh-Behrens,Bernhard Meyer &Sandro M. Krieg -2017 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 11.
  9.  53
    ‘Seeing’ with/in the world: Becoming-little.Theresa Magdalen Giorza &Karin Murris -2021 -Childhood and Philosophy 17:01-23.
    Critical posthumanism is an invitation to think differently about knowledge and educational relationality between humans and the more-than-human. This philosophical and political shift in subjectivity builds on, and is entangled with, poststructuralism and phenomenology. In this paper we read diffractively through one another the theories of Finnish architect Juhani Pallasmaa and feminist posthumanists Karen Barad and Rosi Braidotti. We explore the implications of the so-called ‘ontological turn’ for early childhood education. With its emphasis on a moving away from the dominant (...) role of human vision in educational research we show how videoing and photographing works as an apparatus in an analysis of data from an inner-city school in Johannesburg, South Africa. We are struck by children’s seeing with the ‘eyes of their skin’ and ‘seeing’ with/in the world, as their obvious distress is felt when a small tree sapling has been mowed down in a nearby park. We analyse the event with the help of a variation on Deleuze’s notion of ‘becoming-child’: ‘becoming-little’, andAnna Tsing’s ‘the arts of noticing’. ‘Becoming-little’ as a methodology disrupts the adult/child binary that positions ‘little’, younger humans as inferior to their ‘bigger’ fully human counterparts. We exemplify ‘becoming-little’ through 4 and 5 year-olds’ learning with the little tree and adopt Barad’s temporal diffraction to ‘see’ what is in/visible in the park: the extractive, exploitative, colonising mining practices of White settlers. These are still part of the land on which the park was created but are in/visible beneath the ‘skin’ of the earth. (shrink)
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  10. Update—PSSS Bibliography of the Philosophy of Sport—1988.JoyTheresa DeSensi -1988 -Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 15:95-96.
     
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  11.  1
    (1 other version)Logos of Phenomenology and Phenomenology of the Logos. Book One.Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka (ed.) -2005 - Dordrecht: Springer.
    During its century-long unfolding, spreading in numerous directions, Husserlian phenomenology while loosening inner articulations, has nevertheless maintained a somewhat consistent profile. As we see in this collection, the numerous conceptions and theories advanced in the various phases of reinterpretations have remained identifiable with phenomenology. What conveys this consistency in virtue of which innumerable types of inquiry-scientific, social, artistic, literary – may consider themselves phenomenological? Is it not the quintessence of the phenomenological quest, namely our seeking to reach the very foundations (...) of reality at all its constitutive levels by pursuing its logos? Inquiring into the logos of the phenomenological quest we discover, indeed, all the main constitutive spheres of reality and of the human subject involved in it, and concurrently, the logos itself comes to light in the radiation of its force (Tymieniecka). Papers by: Kristana Arp, Gary Backhaus, Mafalda Blanc, Piotr Blaszczyk, Manuel Bremer, Jonathan Lahey Dronsfield, Peter Abumhenre Egbe, Jesus Adrian Escudero, Wayne Froman, Jorge Garcia-Gomez, David Grunberg, Dasuke Kamei, Arion Kelkel, Filip Kolen, Tze-wan Kwan, Leonard Lawlor, Grahame Lock, Nancy Mardas, Nikolay Milkov, Cezary J. Olbromski, Helena De Preester,Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka, Gertrudis Van de Vijver, Luca Vanzago, Anatoly Zotov. (shrink)
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  12. Pasquier e Machiavelli.Anna Maria Battista -1961 -Rivista Internazionale di Filosofia Del Diritto 38:491-516.
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  13.  12
    „Brama piekła otwarta”.Anna Hajduk -2021 -Rocznik Filozoficzny Ignatianum 26 (2):89-106.
    This paper is an attempt to discuss the connections between Dante’s Divine Comedy and the poetic representations of the extermination of Jews during World War II. The work of the Italian master proves to be a point of reference for many Polish and Polish-Jewish poets in their search for the right language to describe the brutal reality of the Holocaust, to render the cruelty of this crime and the immense suffering of its victims, to testify about their own experience, and (...) to pay a tribute to the murdered. The poetry discussed in this text was written, among others, by Michał Maksymilian Borwicz, Izabela Gelbard, Janina Podlodowska, Krystyna Żywulska, and Andrzej Bursa. The references to the Divine Comedy are made in two ways and serve two basic purposes. Firstly, their aim is to portray the Holocaust as a reality confusingly similar to Dante’s inferno, secondly, they are to present the Holocaust as a reality far worse, more brutal and more gruesome than Dante’s hell. The second of the abovementioned ways of poetic presentation of the experience of the Shoah is very often connected with bitter irony, characteristic especially for Jewish art and sometimes directed against the sender of the message itself. In the course of analysis and interpretation, the phenomenon of universalization and partial decontextualization of originally religious motifs comes to the fore. The author argues that the reality of the Shoah can be compared to the devil’s abyss only if this abyss is no longer perceived as the place of eternal and just condemnation for sinners. The twentieth-century “hell” of concentration camps and ghettoes, though associated with Dante’s inferno, is not the place of deserved punishment, but of cruel crime and of immense, blameless and unjustifiable suffering. (shrink)
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  14.  6
    Vita e metodo nelle prime lezioni friburghesi di Martin Heidegger, 1919-1923.Anna Pia Ruoppo -2008 - Firenze: Le Cáriti.
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  15. Consumer Choice: Petit Bourgeois Tautology and Bourgeois Individualism in the Age of Globalization.Anna Seweryn -2007 - In Ewa Czerwińska-Schupp,Values and Norms in the Age of Globalization. Peter Lang. pp. 1--30.
     
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  16. Realistyczny minimalizm w kwestii prawdy.Anna Sierszulska -2006 -Filozofia Nauki 2.
    The paper presents three different Fregean approaches towards the question of truth, all of which can be classified as belonging to the category of minimalistic theories, namely the identity theory of McDowell and Hornsby, the 'modest' conception of truth proposed by Wolfgang Künne and the 'alethic realism' of William Alston. The conceptions are described as realistically biased, in spite of their refusal to accept 'objectual' facts as entities in the world. It is argued that a legitimate position can be distinguished (...) within the current truth-theoretical investigations that can be called 'realistic minimalism about truth'. It is emphasised that the conceptions of meaning which are assumed by Fregean truth theories have an essential impact upon the tendency of such minimalistic theories to gravitate either towards deflationism or towards realism. Four typical characteristics of realistically biased minimalistic theories of truth are distinguished, three of which are also accepted by deflationists of different kinds. These characterisctis are: (1) assuming indefinability of truth, (2) describing truth in terms of identity between the content of a proposition and the fact, (3) accepting the status of truth as a property (the status of truth as a property is questionable for most minimalists, but there are some who accept it), and (4) describing truth as a relational property of propositions with respect to "the ways things are" in reality. Accepting the latter thesis without rejecting the first two must be grounded in assuming a referential conception of meaning, i.e. a conception of meaning according to which separate expressions and the content of a proposition as a whole concern something that is independent of the subject and of the language. Such a semantic base makes it possible for a theory of truth to be minimalistic, in the sense of not trying to define the nature of truth, while remaining realistic with respect to the question of truth. This can only be the case because the assumed referential conception of meaning itself makes the claim that the contents of true propositions express the ways things are in reality. (shrink)
     
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  17.  5
    Mistyczne zaułki dyskursów: rzecz o słownikach niemożliwych.Anna Skibska -2019 - Poznań: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu im. Adama Mickiewicza.
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  18.  9
    Life and Letters of Hannah E. Pipe.Anna M. Stoddart -2018 - Cambridge University Press.
    The writerAnna M. Stoddart published biographies of Isabella Bird and the classical scholar John Stuart Blackie before this 1908 life of the educationalist Hannah E. Pipe. Pipe was sent in 1847 to Chorlton high school, run by William Ballantyne Hodgson, who mapped out for her a teaching career. This biography was written for, and at the urging of, Pipe's ex-pupils, concerned to record her life 'before it crumbles into oblivion'. She opened her first school in Manchester, but moved (...) to London in 1856: Stoddart herself was one of her staff; music was taught by Sterndale Bennett, and science by William Huggins. The school was enormously successful, and Pipe also became involved in other philanthropic causes, being a friend of Octavia Hill and F. D. Maurice. This is a fascinating account of an inspiring teacher and educational pioneer. (shrink)
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  19.  13
    Review Article: Law and Medical Practice: Rights, Duties, Claims and Defences [Book Review].Anna Stokes -1998 -Chisholm Health Ethics Bulletin 4 (1):7.
  20.  11
    Art in the life of mathematicians.Anna Kepes Szemeredi &Michael Francis Atiyah (eds.) -2015 - Providence, Rhode Island: American Mathematical Society.
    Why are mathematicians drawn to art? How do they perceive it? What motivates them to pursue excellence in music or painting? Do they view their art as a conveyance for their mathematics or an escape from it? What are the similarities between mathematical talent and creativity and their artistic equivalents? What are the differences? Can a theatrical play or a visual image capture the beauty and excitement of mathematics? Some of the world's top mathematicians are also accomplished artists: musicians, photographers, (...) painters, dancers, writers, filmmakers. In this volume, they share some of their work and reflect on the roles that mathematics and art have played in their lives. They write about creativity, communication, making connections, negotiating successes and failures, and navigating the vastly different professional worlds of art and mathematics. (shrink)
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  21.  41
    Be known, be available, be mutual: A qualitative ethical analysis of social values in rural palliative care.Anna-Greta Mamhidir,Mona Kihlgren &Venke Soerlie -2011 -BMC Medical Ethics (1):19-.
    Background: Although attention to healthcare ethics in rural areas has increased, specific focus on rural palliative care is still largely under-studied and under-theorized. The purpose of this study was to gain a deeper understanding of the values informing good palliative care from rural individuals' perspectives. Methods: We conducted a qualitative ethnographic study in four rural communities in Western Canada. Each community had a population of 10, 000 or less and was located at least a three hour travelling distance by car (...) from a specialist palliative care treatment centre. Data were collected over a 2-year period and included 95 interviews, 51 days of field work and 74 hours of direct participant observation where the researchers accompanied rural healthcare providers. Data were analyzed inductively to identify the most prevalent thematic values, and then coded using NVivo. Results: This study illuminated the core values of knowing and being known, being present and available, and community and mutuality that provide the foundation for ethically good rural palliative care. These values were congruent across the study communities and across the stakeholders involved in rural palliative care. Although these were highly prized values, each came with a corresponding ethical tension. Being known often resulted in a loss of privacy. Being available and present created a high degree of expectation and potential caregiver strain. The values of community and mutuality created entitlement issues, presenting daunting challenges for coordinated change. Conclusions: The values identified in this study offer the opportunity to better understand common ethical tensions that arise in rural healthcare and key differences between rural and urban palliative care. In particular, these values shed light on problematic health system and health policy changes. When initiatives violate deeply held values and hard won rural capacity to address the needs of their dying members is undermined, there are long lasting negative consequences. The social fabric of rural life is frayed. These findings offer one way to re-conceptualize healthcare decision making through consideration of critical values to support ethically good palliative care in rural settings. (shrink)
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  22.  24
    Neuromuscular transmission studied with SFEMG in migraine with aura: phenotypic correlations in 93 patients.AmbrosiniAnna,Di Lorenzo Cherubino,di Clemente Laura,Bohotin Valentin,Maertens De Noordhout Alain &Schoenen Jean -2014 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  23.  10
    Taking Care and Taking Over: Daughter’s Duty, Self-Employment, and Gendered Inheritance in Zacatecas, Mexico.Anna Veronica Banchik -2019 -Gender and Society 33 (2):296-320.
    Although disproportionate housework and care responsibilities ascribed to mothers and wives have been found to greatly impact women’s self-employment, less is known about how family-level labor structures may shape daughters’ entrepreneurship. Family business scholarship has shed partial light on this question by showing that household hierarchies and gender norms impede daughters’ recognition and inheritance within family firms in the United States. Drawing on interviews with 32 women microenterprise owners in Zacatecas, Mexico, this article builds on previous research by suggesting that (...) gendered mechanisms and labor structures may in fact position daughters to inherit businesses or business-related resources such as skills, financial capital, and property from their parents. Daughters acquire these assets by virtue of contributing to their parents’ enterprises as part of their childhood chores and maintaining a continued attachment to these businesses into adulthood. Daughters’ job prospects aside from inheritance were found to further shape their perceptions of business succession and inform their decision about whether to take over the family enterprise. Such acquisitions can be said to comprise instances of “gendered inheritance,” in which gendered institutions largely understood as disadvantaging women also may position them to attain valuable assets. (shrink)
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  24. In which Charlie makes a wish.Anna Bartlett -2011 -Agora (History Teachers' Association of Victoria) 46 (3):26.
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  25. Bertrand Russell i Ludwig Wittgenstein: Historia przyjaźni.Anna Maria Borzymowska -2002 -Przeglad Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria 44 (4):5-22.
     
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  26. Leszek Kołakowski o kulturze i micie.Anna Borowicz -1998 -Przeglad Filozoficzny - Nowa Seria 27 (3):133-151.
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  27.  20
    The Illustrated Life of Apollonius and Tarsia. A “Papyrus-style” Narrative in Ottonian Art.Anna Boreczky -2016 -Convivium 3 (1):76-91.
    Made around the turn of the first millennium the Apollonius pictus manuscript of the Hungarian National Library preserves the oldest known illustration cycle of a Late Antique adventure story, the Historia Apollonii regis Tyri. Until very recently the only art historian who recognized the importance of the manuscript was Kurt Weitzmann, who believed that the style of the thirty-eight red line-drawings of the manuscript revealed classical ancestors, which, within the theoretical framework Weitzmann constructed, meant that the images were derived from (...) a lost Late Antique original. Leaving aside the problems of a speculative archetype my paper is an attempt to unfold the textual and visual associations, both Late Antique and Ottonian, the manuscript evoked in the circle of its medieval readers. To this end I investigate the possible visual messages of the “papyrus-style” layout-structure of the manuscript, and that of the characteristic motifs of the single images. (shrink)
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  28.  32
    Features of Emotional Experiences in Individuals with Personality Disorders.Anna Gabińska &Ewa Trzebińska -2014 -Polish Psychological Bulletin 45 (2):147-155.
    Personality disorders are marked by significant disturbances in the way of experiencing oneself, others and the world around. Yet there is paucity of research on the nature of emotional experiences in these disorders. The aim of this study was to examine whether and how emotional experience of individuals with ten distinct forms of PDs distinguished in DSM differs from those without PDs. The study was conducted via the Internet on a large nonclinical sample. Participants were administered a PDs measure and (...) a performance task assessing three features of emotional experiences: emotional sensitivity, the valence of experienced emotions and the profile of five components constituting an emotion. As predicted, PDs sufferers experienced emotions differently from controls. Results demonstrated that individuals with all PDs were more receptive to emotional elicitation and displayed higher negative emotionality and a deficiency in the affective component of experienced emotions. (shrink)
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  29.  52
    Multicultural claims and equal respect.Anna Elisabetta Galeotti -2010 -Philosophy and Social Criticism 36 (3-4):441-450.
    In this article the author intends to provide general normative guidelines which ought to inform policies concerning the most controversial multicultural claims for a liberal democracy. In order to do that, she proposes a general reconsideration of the struggle of cultures and identities which makes up the stuff of multiculturalism. She suggests that instead of focusing on the issue of compatibility, the adequate viewpoint from which considering multicultural claims should be justice and, within justice, the principle of equal respect (ER). (...) The reference to ER is widespread in the literature on multiculturalism, but it does not specify what should be the object of ER: persons and their dignity, or cultures/religions/identities and their members? The alternative is then examined and the author argues in favour of an interpretation of ER for persons which considers persons as they are, given their identities and differences. Finally, the author provides a typology of multicultural claims, ranked on a scale of different levels of disrespect, which consequently require different kinds of response. As a result, one is invited to reflect on the how beside the what, on the procedures and attitudes beside the benefits and measures, and not only for the pragmatic reasons of finding a relatively easy way out, but also for principled reasons of justice. (shrink)
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  30.  34
    Tolleranza, ragionevolezza, diversità. A proposito di due libri recenti.Anna Elisabetta Galeotti -2004 -Iride: Filosofia e Discussione Pubblica 17 (3):657-670.
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  31.  45
    The Limits of Ecological Psychology.Anna Garr,Susan Curry,Jim Engle-Warnick,Paul Fedoroff,Natasha Knack,Rebekah Ranger &Ian Gold -2013 -American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 4 (2):21-22.
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  32. Etyka czytania i strategie narracji na podstawie powieści Toni Morrison „Umiłowana”.Anna Głąb -2013 -Analiza I Egzystencja 21:91-115.
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  33.  21
    Kartezjańska koncepcja zjednoczenia umysłu i ciała.Anna Głąb -2010 -Roczniki Filozoficzne 58 (1):27-50.
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  34.  15
    Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita and the Merited-Response Argument.Anna Głąb -2020 -Diametros 18 (70):26-47.
    In attempting to answer whether Nabokov’s Lolita can be described as an unethical novel, the author ponders on what basis one could make such a determination. At (1) the author analyzes the merited-response argument offered by Gaut (and previously Hume and Carroll), which provides a conceptual framework for the resolution of the controversy surrounding Lolita. Based on this analysis, (2) the author decides what constitutes the novel’s ethical foundation and what (3) prescriptions and (4) responses can follow from it.
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  35.  21
    Retroactive Attentional Shifts Predict Performance in a Working Memory Task: Evidence by Lateralized EEG Patterns.Anna Göddertz,Laura-Isabelle Klatt,Christine Mertes &Daniel Schneider -2018 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12:407906.
    Shifts of attention within working memory based on retroactive (retro-) cues were shown to facilitate performance in working memory tasks. Although posterior asymmetries in the EEG, such as the contralateral delay activity (CDA), have been used to study the active storage of lateralized working memory representations, results on the relation of such asymmetric effects to retro-cue benefits remain inconclusive. We recorded EEG in a retro-cue working memory task with lateralized items and a continuous performance response. Following either a selective or (...) neutral retro-cue, participants adjusted the orientation of a central memory probe to the cued item. Selective retro-cues elicited an early posterior contralateral negativity (PCN), anterior directing attention negativity (ADAN) and a later modulation of CDA indicating that active storage was concentrated on the cued information. By dividing all trials into three within-condition performance quantiles, we could further show that high working memory accuracy was associated with a sustained increase of the CDA effect following the retro-cue. These results suggest that focusing resources on the active storage of relevant representations is an important factor regarding retro-cue benefits in working memory tasks. (shrink)
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  36.  10
    Paranoia reveals the complexity in assigning individuals to groups on the basis of inferred intentions.Anna Greenburgh &Nichola Raihani -2022 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 45.
    We suggest that variation, error, and bias will be essential to include in a complete computational theory of groups – particularly given that formation of group representations must often rely on inferences of intentions. We draw on the case study of paranoia to illustrate that intentions that do not correspond to group-constitutive roles may often be perceived as such.
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  37.  23
    Correlation between Habituation of Visual Evoked Potentials and Magnetophosphene thresholds in migraine.AmbrosiniAnna,Kisialiou Aliaksei,Iezzi Ennio,Perrotta Armando,Nardella Andrea,Berardelli Alfredo,Pierelli Francesco &Schoenen Jean -2014 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  38.  44
    Visual and Auditory Evoked Potentials in migraine: sensitivity and specificity as diagnostic tools.AmbrosiniAnna,Kisialiou Aliaksei,Finos Livio,Afra Judit,Coppola Gianluca,Di Clemente Laura,Iezzi Ennio,Magis Delphine,Sandor Peter,Sasso D'Elia Tullia,Viganò Alessandro,Fataki Michel,Pierelli Francesco &Schoenen Jean -2014 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  39.  34
    I Quodlibeta teologici del XIII secolo: un contributo alla conoscenza del pensiero medievale.Anna Arezzo -2006 -Quaestio 6 (1):549-556.
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  40.  24
    Storia di una «leggenda tenace»: le vicende della «doppia verità».Anna Arezzo -2009 -Quaestio 9:417-422.
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  41.  30
    ÌNIN Holographic Evolving: Toward a Civilization of Symphony.Anna Bacchia -2016 -World Futures 72 (1-2):83-92.
    Until we make linear questions, we will receive linear answers. And when will we be able to see the nature of all that exists?This research proposes a new paradigm not based on new orders of ideas, but on essential human faculties and specifically on still unexplored qualities of intuition. Just as human beings started a new interrelation with reality within the shift from pre-linguistic to linguistic era, so today we can start to interface reality through an unexplored intuitive faculty, within (...) the shift from logic thinking into an ‘analogic-intuitive’ consciousness. (shrink)
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  42.  22
    The Core of Legal Rights as a Logical Necessity.Anna Baka -2018 -Proceedings of the XXIII World Congress of Philosophy 54:5-19.
    Analytical jurisprudence and the legal mainstream perceive legal rights in an interactionist fashion, pursuant to a right-obligation duality. The Paper suggests that this is principally because legal positivism and the analytical Anglo-Saxon legal tradition ground their theories on logical positivism and the Wittgensteinian premise that meaning is produced and asserted in social use, i.e. both consensually and contextually. The paper suggests that there is a surplus of meaning which exists beyond social use and which cannot be conceptualized within the sociolinguistic (...) confines of Wittgenstein’s logic of language. This surplus of meaning corresponds to the essential core of legal rights, which, following Aristotle’s induction and philosophy of the essences, constitutes a necessary property and τὸ τί ἦν εἶναι of legal rights, namely a state of affairs or a state of being that cannot be altered without their necessary breach or, indeed, the negation of their very meaning. The Paper discusses the shortcomings of the Wittgensteinian approach and revisits the philosophical foundations of legal rights by employing Aristotle’s induction and theory of the essences, which the Paper connects to the phenomenological method and particularly Ricoeur’s hermeneutics and Husserl’s transcedental phenomenology. This is a process of abstraction and insight, which aspires to induce a rational revisiting of the general theory of legal rights and address the surplus of meaning that Wittgensteinian logic leaves semantically uncovered. (shrink)
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  43.  25
    Contextualising Reform: Colette of Corbie's Relations with A Divided Church.Anna Campbell -2016 -Franciscan Studies 74:353-373.
    The Colettine reforms took place at a time of profound crisis in the Western Church, yet Colette successfully navigated the ecclesiastical politics of the early fifteenth-century in order to effect far-reaching reform of the Poor Clares and Friars Minor in France and Flanders.2 The politics of the ‘Great Western Schism’ strongly influenced the course of the events of Colette’s career. Not only was it not possible for any religious reforms to exist in a vacuum, but her close association with the (...) Dukes of Burgundy and their manipulation of ecclesiastical politics for their own ends, ensured that she was drawn into the complexity of events. She therefore had the task not only of negotiating the politics of the... (shrink)
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  44.  14
    Système d’Information Géographique d’Amathonte.Anna Cannavò -2016 -Bulletin de Correspondance Hellénique 139:1016-1021.
    Un nouveau programme scientifique de la mission archéologique française d’Amathonte (mission de l’École française d’Athènes en collaboration avec le ministère des Affaires étrangères et du Développement international) a été lancé en septembre 2013 : l’objectif de ce programme est la création d’un Système d’Information Géographique (SIG) sur la ville antique d’Amathonte. Le développement d’un SIG de ce type comporte plusieurs opérations scientifiques articulées en deux volets (ce qu’indiquent...
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  45.  10
    La verità della parola: ricerca sui fondamenti filosofici della metafora in Aristotele e nei contemporanei.Anna Cazzullo -1987 - Milano: Jaca Book.
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  46.  32
    Natur, Umwelt, Nachhaltigkeit: Perspektiven auf Sprache, Diskurse und Kultur.Anna Mattfeldt,Carolin Schwegler &Berbeli Wanning (eds.) -2021 - De Gruyter.
    Spannungsverhältnisse zwischen Natur und Mensch prägen unseren Alltag, unsere Sprache und öffentliche Diskurse im Themenspektrum der Nachhaltigkeit. Letztere entfaltet normatives Potential, steht bildungs- und wirtschaftspolitisch im Zentrum und bildet sich in der Literatur ab. Natur, Umwelt und Nachhaltigkeit sind Themen, die viele Wissensdomänen berühren – von naturwissenschaftlichen Fragen über rechtliche Aspekte bis zu Überlegungen der Sprachkritik. Sie bedürfen einer Betrachtung aus verschiedensten Fachdisziplinen, wie es etwa auch im Rahmen der Environmental Humanities gefordert wird. Um in diesem Zuge die Relevanz sprachbezogener (...) Zugänge und Wissenschaften zu stärken, führt dieser Band Perspektiven der Literaturwissenschaft, Didaktik, BNE, Human Animal Studies, Geschichte, Philosophie usw. mit Beiträgen aus verschiedenen neueren und auch traditionellen linguistischen Teilbereichen zusammen, wie beispielsweise der Ökolinguistik, der Diskurslinguistik oder der Nachhaltigkeitskommunikation. Der Band eröffnet somit für Wissenschaftler*innen aus Linguistik und anderen Fachdisziplinen sowie für interessierte Lehrkräfte Einblicke in interdisziplinäre Zugänge zu sprachlichen Perspektiven auf Nachhaltigkeit. (shrink)
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  47. Towards the Metaphysics of Humor and Laughter.Anna Matecka -2013 -Analecta Husserliana 114:291-302.
     
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  48.  13
    Milczenie Heideggera. Uwagi na marginesie fragmentów \"Bycia i czasu\".Anna Możdżeń -2007 -Filo-Sofija 7 (1(7)):163-172.
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  49.  41
    Group Membership and Morally Risky Epistemic Conditions.Anna Moltchanova -2008 -Social Philosophy Today 24:53-67.
    Johann Gottlieb Fichte argues that one semantic presupposition of claims about our entitlements is the idea that others are capable of autonomy. Individuals cannot demand anything from others, even submission, unless they also presuppose—although perhaps without acknowledging this to themselves—that others are free agents. Thus, the autonomy of others is a pre-condition of our exercise of autonomy. Why do individuals and groups often try to justify their own entitlement to rights at the expense of the freedom of others, thereby simultaneously (...) assuming and denying their freedom? This paper investigates what constitution of group agency gives individual members of the group the best chance to develop and sustain a moral character consistent with the ideal of equal autonomy. I argue that liberalism fosters the sort of group agency that improves individuals’ chances to acquire epistemically reliable beliefs about the moral status of others. I apply my findings to the discussion of court decisions in Gaines, Brown, and the race nuisance cases. (shrink)
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  50.  13
    The Politics of Race, Gender, and Emotional Distress in Meri Nana-Ama Danquah's Willow Weep for Me.Anna Mollow -1997 - In Lennard J. Davis,The Disability Studies Reader. Psychology Press. pp. 283.
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