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Results for 'Christopher L. Zerr'

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  1.  54
    A healthy heart is not a metronome: an integrative review of the heart's anatomy and heart rate variability.Fred Shaffer,Rollin McCraty &Christopher L.Zerr -2014 -Frontiers in Psychology 5:108292.
    Heart rate variability (HRV), the change in the time intervals between adjacent heartbeats, is an emergent property of interdependent regulatory systems that operate on different time scales to adapt to challenges and achieve optimal performance. This article briefly reviews neural regulation of the heart, and its basic anatomy, the cardiac cycle, and the sinoatrial and atrioventricular pacemakers. The cardiovascular regulation center in the medulla integrates sensory information and input from higher brain centers, and afferent cardiovascular system inputs to adjust heart (...) rate and blood pressure via sympathetic and parasympathetic efferent pathways. This article reviews sympathetic and parasympathetic influences on the heart, and examines the interpretation of HRV and the association between reduced HRV, risk of disease and mortality, and the loss of regulatory capacity. This article also discusses the intrinsic cardiac nervous system and the heart-brain connection, through which afferent information can influence activity in the subcortical and frontocortical areas, and motor cortex. It also considers new perspectives on the putative underlying physiological mechanisms and properties of the ultra-low-frequency (ULF), very-low-frequency (VLF), low-frequency (LF), and high-frequency (HF) bands. Additionally, it reviews the most common time and frequency domain measurements as well as standardized data collection protocols. In its final section, this article integrates Porges' polyvagal theory, Thayer and colleagues' neurovisceral integration model, Lehrer et al.'s resonance frequency model, and the Institute of HeartMath's coherence model. The authors conclude that a coherent heart is not a metronome because its rhythms are characterized by both complexity and stability over longer time scales. Future research should expand understanding of how the heart and its intrinsic nervous system influence the brain. (shrink)
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  2.  103
    The phenomena of inner experience.Christopher L. Heavey &Russell T. Hurlburt -2008 -Consciousness and Cognition 17 (3):798-810.
    This study provides a survey of phenomena that present themselves during moments of naturally occurring inner experience. In our previous studies using Descriptive Experience Sampling we have discovered five frequently occurring phenomena—inner speech, inner seeing, unsymbolized thinking, feelings, and sensory awareness. Here we quantify the relative frequency of these phenomena. We used DES to describe 10 randomly identified moments of inner experience from each of 30 participants selected from a stratified sample of college students. We found that each of the (...) five phenomena occurred in approximately one quarter of sampled moments, that the frequency of these phenomena varied widely across individuals, that there were no significant gender differences in the relative frequencies of these phenomena, and that higher frequencies of inner speech were associated with lower levels of psychological distress. (shrink)
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  3.  38
    Mixed Emotions: Toward a Phenomenology of Blended and Multiple Feelings.Christopher L. Heavey,Noelle L. Lefforge,Leiszle Lapping-Carr &Russell T. Hurlburt -2017 -Emotion Review 9 (2):105-110.
    After using descriptive experience sampling to study randomly selected moments of inner experience, we make observations about feelings, including blended and multiple feelings. We observe that inner experience usually does not contain feelings. Sometimes, however, feelings are directly present. When feelings are present, most commonly they are unitary. Sometimes people experience separate emotions as a single experience, which we call a blended feeling. Occasionally people have multiple distinct feelings present simultaneously. These distinct multiple feelings can be of opposite valence, with (...) one pleasant and the other unpleasant. We provide examples that inform theories of emotions and discuss the important role observational methodology plays in the effort to understand inner experience including feelings. (shrink)
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  4.  82
    L’ordre juridique de la société multinationale.Christopher L. Baker -2013 -Archives de Philosophie du Droit 56:71-90.
    Les États cheminent entre concurrence et convergence, les entreprises trans-nationales entre opportunisme et autorégulation. Il est futile d’imaginer qu’un ordre unifié et stable émerge de cette tension. Le monde normatif des entreprises transnationales doit plutôt être compris en appréhendant la direction de ses changements, et non pas en cher-chant à trouver un état d’équilibre. Pour l’auteur, les convections essentielles relèvent tant des efforts des États pour ajuster leur pouvoir normatif et promouvoir leur attractivité dans un monde globalisé, que de la (...) perméabilité croissante des entreprises et de leurs dirigeants à certains objectifs sociétaux qui vont au-delà du juridique et qui viennent se rajouter à la performance financière comme indicateurs complémentaires de la vitalité d’une entreprise. (shrink)
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  5. Protecting Without Favoring Religiously Motivated Conduct.Christopher L. Eisgruber &Lawrence G. Sager -1997 -Nexus 2:103.
     
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  6.  59
    Who are we? The Demographic and Professional Identity of Social Studies Teacher Educators.Christopher L. Busey &Stewart Waters -2016 -Journal of Social Studies Research 40 (1):71-83.
    Growth in racial and ethnic diversity among public school P-12 students stands in stark contrast to the teaching population who tend to be monolingual, White females. Secondary social studies teachers defy demographic teacher trends, as they tend to be male, albeit White males who still are not representative of the students they teach. What is missing from the discourse of student–teacher imbalance however is discussion surrounding diversity among social studies teacher educators. The purpose of this study was to examine racial, (...) ethnic, and gender demographics for social studies teacher educators using a framework of critical teacher demography. Findings revealed that social studies teacher educators tend to reflect the population of social studies teachers with many being White males. Furthermore, social studies teacher educators tend to focus their research on concepts such as democratic citizenship with little focus dedicated to critical multicultural issues. The paucity of diversity in demographics and research is critical for social studies teacher educators to consider if we are to reflect multiculturalism in 21st century schools. (shrink)
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  7.  8
    Wonder Woman perseveres.Christopher L. Harbo -2019 - North Mankato, MN: Picture Window Books. Edited by Gregg Schigiel.
    "Using important themes from school character education programs, this picture book features vivid illustrations to teach young readers all about perseverance."--Provided by publisher.
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  8. Should constitutional judges be philosophers?Christopher L. Eisgruber -2006 - In Scott Hershovitz,Exploring law's empire: the jurisprudence of Ronald Dworkin. New York: Oxford University Press.
  9.  34
    Spatial Working Memory Deficits Represent a Core Challenge for Rehabilitating Neglect.Christopher L. Striemer,Susanne Ferber &James Danckert -2013 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  10.  80
    Raskolnikov in the Classroom.Christopher L. Doyle -2016 -Teaching Ethics 16 (1):91-102.
    This essay argues for the efficacy of teaching Feodor Dostoyevsky’s Crime and Punishment as a hedge against cultural predispositions to legitimize violence in history, contemporary society, and popular entertainment. Describing how high school students have been conditioned to accept certain kinds of violence, the essay also shows how a class of high school students responds to four key scenes from the novel. The essay asserts that both the historical context of Crime and Punishment and Dostoyevsky’s creative brilliance make this novel (...) a particularly potent work for encouraging students to rethink casual acceptance and uses of violence. (shrink)
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  11. Ageism and the deployments of “age”. A constructionist view.Christopher L. Bodily -1994 - In Theodore R. Sarbin & John I. Kitsuse,Constructing the social. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications. pp. 174--94.
     
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  12.  35
    Cesare ripa and the Sala clementina.Christopher L. C. E. Witcombe -1992 -Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 55 (1):277-282.
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  13.  51
    Theories of Africans: The Question of Literary Anthropology.Christopher L. Miller -1986 -Critical Inquiry 13 (1):120-139.
    Literary criticism at the present moment seems ready to open its doors once again to the outside world, even if that world is only a series of other academic disciplines, each cloistered in its own way. For the reader of black African literature in French, the opening comes none too soon. The program for reading Camara Laye, Ahmadou Kourouma, and Yambo Ouologuem should never have been the program prescribed for Rousseau, Wordsworth, or Blanchot. If one is willing to read a (...) literature that might not be a rewriting of Hegel , and if the negative knowledge of recent theoretical criticism is questioned in the universality of its applications, then what is really open to a Western reader of non-Western literature? Claiming a break with his/her own culture and critical upbringing, can he/she the Other, the African, as if from an authentically African point of view, interpreting Africa in African terms, perceiving rather than projecting?The goal of breaking through the nets of Western criticism, of reading African literature in a nonethnocentric, nonprojective fashion, will remain both indisputably desirable and ultimately unattainable. No matter how many languages I learn or ethnologies I study, I cannot make myself into an African. The Western scholar’s claim to mastery of things African, albeit motivated by xenophilia rather than xenophobia, risks subjugation of the object to a new set of Western models. J. P. Makouta-M’Boukou rightly scolds Western critics who refuse to take into account the distance between themselves and African culture, and who read African literature only in function of their own cultural context.1 Wole Soyinka, more forbiddingly, complains: “We black Africans have been blandly invited to submit ourselves to a second epoch of colonisation—this time by a universal-humanoid abstraction defined and conducted by individuals whose theories and prescriptions are derived from the apprehension of their world and their history, their social neuroses and their value systems.”2 1. See J. P. Makouta-M’Boukou, Introduction à l’étude du roman négro-africain de langue française , p. 9.2. Wole Soyinka, Myth, Literature, and the African World , p. x.Christopher L. Miller, Charles B. G. Murphy Assistant Professor of French and of African and Afro-American Studies at Yale University, is author of Blank Darkness: Africanist Discourse in French . He is working at present on a study of francophone black African literature, for which he will have a Fulbright Africa Research grant. (shrink)
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  14.  49
    Towards quantification of the role of materials innovation in overall technological development.Christopher L. Magee -2013 -Complexity 18 (1):10-25.
  15.  43
    The postidentitarian predicament in the footnotes of A Thousand Plateaus: nomadology, anthropology, and authority.Christopher L. Miller -1993 -Diacritics 23 (3):6-35.
  16.  1
    :A Book of Waves.Christopher L. Pastore -2025 -Isis 116 (1):208-210.
  17.  86
    Measuring the Frequency of Inner-Experience Characteristics by Self-Report: The Nevada Inner Experience Questionnaire.Christopher L. Heavey,Stefanie A. Moynihan,Vincent P. Brouwers,Leiszle Lapping-Carr,Alek E. Krumm,Jason M. Kelsey,Dio K. Turner &Russell T. Hurlburt -2019 -Frontiers in Psychology 9.
  18. The slave trade, la françafrique, and the globalization of French.Christopher L. Miller -2010 - In Christie McDonald & Susan Rubin Suleiman,French Global: A New Approach to Literary History. Columbia University Press.
     
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  19.  11
    The Ferries of Tenedos.Christopher L. H. Barnes -2006 -História 55 (2):167-177.
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  20.  13
    Combined Action Observation and Motor Imagery Neurofeedback for Modulation of Brain Activity.Christopher L. Friesen,Timothy Bardouille,Heather F. Neyedli &Shaun G. Boe -2017 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10.
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  21.  60
    Revolutionary, advocate, agent, or authority: context-based assessment of the democratic legitimacy of transnational civil society actors.Christopher L. Pallas -2010 -Ethics and Global Politics 3 (3):217-238.
    The literature on transnational civil society encompasses a number of conflicting views regarding civil society organizations’ (CSOs) behavior and impacts and the desirability of civil society involvement in international policymaking. This piece suggests that this lack of consensus arises from the diverse range of contexts in which CSOs operate and the wide variety of activities in which it engages. This article seeks to organize and analyze the disparate data on civil society by developing a context-based standard of democratic legitimacy for (...) CSOs. The article disaggregates democracy into input, throughput, and output components, and shows how CSOs must support or manifest different aspects of democracy in order to be democratically legitimate in a given context. Applying this standard to existing works, the article identifies several problems in current research, including a failure to recognize ways the democratic imperatives of transnational advocacy differ from national advocacy, and the potential for international civil society interventions to undermine local democratic processes. Keywords: transnational civil society; democracy; global governance; NGOs; international policymaking (Published: 1 September 2010) Citation: Ethics & Global Politics, Vol. 3, No. 3, 2010, pp. 217-238. DOI: 10.3402/egp.v3i3.4882. (shrink)
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  22.  44
    Truly Intensive Clinical Ethics Immersion at the Washington Hospital Center.Christopher L. Church &Thalia Arawi -2012 -Journal of Clinical Ethics 23 (2):152-155.
    Opportunities for practical, hospital-based training in those skills demanded by clinical ethics consultation (CEC) have been limited. Given the number of individuals who provide part-time CEC, greater access to condensed, practical training such as the clinical ethics immersion course offered by the Washington Hospital Center, is necessary.Two participants in the initial cohort evaluate their CE training at a busy, urban referral center, exploring prior expectations, perceptions of its utility and suggestions for improvement. Such training will prove valuable not only for (...) bioethicists who lack practical CEC experience “at the bedside” but also for ethics consultants whose ethics services have a low consult volume who wish to sharpen their skills. (shrink)
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  23. Ageism and the deployments of "age" : a constructionist view.Christopher L. Bodily -1994 - In Theodore R. Sarbin & John I. Kitsuse,Constructing the social. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications. pp. 12--174.
     
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  24.  48
    On the Use of Response Chunking as a Tool to Investigate Strategies.Christopher L. Blume,Alexander P. Boone &Nelson Cowan -2015 -Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  25.  66
    Spatially embedded dynamics and complexity.Christopher L. Buckley,Seth Bullock &Lionel Barnett -2010 -Complexity 16 (2):29-34.
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  26.  29
    Deficits in reflexive covert attention following cerebellar injury.Christopher L. Striemer,David Cantelmi,Michael D. Cusimano,James A. Danckert &Tom A. Schweizer -2015 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  27.  130
    When is it selectively advantageous to have true beliefs? Sandwiching the better safe than sorry argument.Christopher L. Stephens -2001 -Philosophical Studies 105 (2):161-189.
    Several philosophers have argued that natural selection will favor reliable belief formation; others have been more skeptical. These traditional approaches to the evolution of rationality have been either too sketchy or else have assumed that phenotypic plasticity can be equated with having a mind. Here I develop a new model to explore the functional utility of belief and desire formation mechanisms, and defend the claim that natural selection favors reliable inference methods in a broad, but not universal, range of circumstances.
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  28.  48
    Religious liberty and the moral structure of constitutional rights.Christopher L. Eisgruber &Lawrence G. Sager -2000 -Legal Theory 6 (3):253-268.
  29.  26
    Recurrent, nonequilibrium systems and the Markov blanket assumption.Miguel Aguilera &Christopher L. Buckley -2022 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 45:e184.
    Markov blankets – statistical independences between system and environment – have become popular to describe the boundaries of living systems under Bayesian views of cognition. The intuition behind Markov blankets originates from considering acyclic, atemporal networks. In contrast, living systems display recurrent, nonequilibrium interactions that generate pervasive couplings between system and environment, making Markov blankets highly unusual and restricted to particular cases.
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  30.  68
    Comparing personal insight gains due to consideration of a recent dream and consideration of a recent event using the Ullman and Schredl dream group methods.Christopher L. Edwards,Josie E. Malinowski,Shauna L. McGee,Paul D. Bennett,Perrine M. Ruby &Mark T. Blagrove -2015 -Frontiers in Psychology 6.
  31.  76
    Toward a phenomenology of inner speaking.Russell T. Hurlburt,Christopher L. Heavey &Jason M. Kelsey -2013 -Consciousness and Cognition 22 (4):1477-1494.
  32.  815
    Talents and Interests: A Hegelian Moral Psychology.Christopher L. Yeomans -2013 -Hegel Bulletin 34 (1):33-58.
    One of the reasons why there is no Hegelian school in contemporary ethics in the way that there are Kantian, Humean and Aristotelian schools is because Hegelians have been unable to clearly articulate the Hegelian alternative to those schools’ moral psychologies, i.e., to present a Hegelian model of the motivation to, perception of, and responsibility for moral action. Here it is argued that in its most basic terms Hegel's model can be understood as follows: the agent acts in a responsible (...) and thus paradigmatic sense when she identifies as reasons those motivations which are grounded in his or her talents and support actions that are likely to develop those talents in ways suggested by his or her interests. (shrink)
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  33. Mary Kate mcgowan/privileging properties 1–23 Crawford L. elder/the problem of harmonizing laws 25–41 Gary ebbs/is skepticism about self-knowledge coherent? 43–58 David braun/russellianism and prediction 59–105. [REVIEW]Christopher L. Stephens,Janine Jones &What Could Turn Out -2001 -Philosophical Studies 105:309-310.
     
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  34.  39
    The Science of Shallow Waters: Connecting and Classifying the Early Modern Atlantic.Christopher L. Pastore -2021 -Isis 112 (1):122-129.
    Histories of ocean science have emphasized the ways that state-sponsored deep-sea expeditions ushered in a new age of oceanic understanding during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. This essay, on the other hand, examines the ways that shallow waters played host to less formal but nevertheless important efforts to create oceanic natural knowledge, often centuries earlier. By documenting the legends and experiences of people who worked on and lived by the ocean—divers, sailors, and fishermen, among others—and corroborating their stories (...) with firsthand observation, seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century natural historians built a nascent science of the sea. In its close focus on “sea beans” and “barnacle geese,” subjects of wide conjecture and earnest curiosity, the essay shows how shallow waters welcomed new actors onto the scientific stage and decentered the geographies of knowledge production, thereby advancing contemporary knowledge of oceanic circulation as well as the taxonomies and ecologies of coastal creatures. (shrink)
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  35.  37
    Hemispheric interaction and consciousness: Degree of handedness predicts the intensity of a sensory illusion.Christopher L. Niebauer,Justin Aselage &Christian Schutte -2002 -Laterality 7 (1):85-96.
  36.  33
    Investigating pristine inner experience: Implications for experience sampling and questionnaires.Russell T. Hurlburt &Christopher L. Heavey -2015 -Consciousness and Cognition 31:148-159.
  37.  66
    Karl Rahner and the extra-terrestrial intelligence question.Christopher L. Fisher &David Fergusson -2006 -Heythrop Journal 47 (2):275–290.
    The prospect of extra‐terrestrial intelligence has become a central topic of scientific investigation and popular speculation. This has generated questions of ethical and theological significance that now receive growing coverage. Throughout his writings, Karl Rahner remained open to the prospect that the process of cosmic evolution had yielded sentient life form in other galaxies. He argued against any theological veto on this notion, while also distinguishing the existential significance of such life forms from that of angels. Furthermore, the possibility of (...) multiple incarnations is raised though not affirmed. With its christological intensity, his theology seems to militate against any repetition of the incarnation. This essay examines some of the arguments for and against the possibility of multiple incarnations, before assessing the current state of the extra‐terrestrial intelligence debate. In the light of inconclusive scientific findings, the cautionary position of Rahner is re‐affirmed. (shrink)
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  38.  62
    Embracing the tyranny of distance: space as an enabling constraint.Seth Bullock &Christopher L. Buckley -2009 -Technoetic Arts 7 (2):141-152.
    Architectural design is typically limited by the constraints imposed by physical space. If and when opportunities to attenuate or extinguish these limits arise, should they be seized? Here it is argued that the limiting influence of spatial embedding should not be regarded as a frustrating tyranny to be escaped wherever possible, but as a welcome enabling constraint to be leveraged. Examples from the natural world are presented, and an appeal is made to some recent results on complex systems and measures (...) of interaction complexity. (shrink)
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  39.  27
    Shores of Enlightenment: George Berkeley and the Moral Geography of Hybrid Nature.Christopher L. Pastore -2017 -Environment, Space, Place 9 (2):1-26.
    Abstract:This paper examines the American sojourn of the Enlightenment philosopher and theologian George Berkeley. While living in coastal Rhode Island between 1729 and 1731, Berkeley penned his longest philosophical tract, Alciphron: Or, the Minute Philosopher (1732), which criticized “freethinking,” mechanical conceptions of nature in favor of those that emphasized God's providence. To illustrate these two ways of knowing nature, Berkeley, a careful prose stylist, evoked nearby coastal landscapes for contrast. Accordingly, his work broke down dichotomies between ideas and matter and, (...) by extension, culture and nature, which could, this paper argues, inform an environmental ethic for a “hybrid” world. (shrink)
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  40. Of bows and pipelines : can the Bhagavad Gītā direct us to climate justice?Christopher L. Fici -2024 - In Jeffery D. Long & Steven Rosen,Ahiṃsā in the Indic traditions: explorations and reflections. Lanham: Lexington Books.
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  41. Cyborgs, utopias, and other science fictions.Christopher L. Robinson -2020 - In Gabrielle Kennedy,In/search re/search: imagining scenarios through art and design. Amsterdam: Sandberg Instituut.
     
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  42.  18
    The legacies of Ursula K. Le Guin: science, fiction, ethics.Christopher L. Robinson,Sarah Bouttier &Pierre-Louis Patoine (eds.) -2021 - Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    The Legacies of Ursula K. Le Guin explores how Le Guins fiction and essays have built a speculative ethical practice engaging indigenous knowledge and feminism, while crafting utopias in which human and other-than-human life forms enter into new relations. Her work also delineates new ways of making sense of the "science" of science fiction. The authors of this collection provide up-to-date discussions of well-known works as well as more experimental writings. Written in an accessible style, Legacies will appeal to any (...) readers interested in literature, science fiction and fantasy, as well as specialists of science and technology studies, philosophy of science, ethics, gender studies, indigenous studies and posthumanism."--Publisher's description. (shrink)
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  43.  20
    The ultrasonic motion detector: A conditioned stimulus for rats in the CER paradigm.Christopher L. Cunningham -1974 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 4 (4):441-444.
  44.  21
    The Other ArchivistBlank Darkness: Africanist Discourse in French.Manthia Diawara &Christopher L. Miller -1988 -Diacritics 18 (1):66.
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  45.  34
    The bishops' dilemma with capitalism: A critical analysis. [REVIEW]Christopher L. Pines -1988 -Journal of Business Ethics 7 (6):445 - 452.
    One of the major criticisms of contemporary capitalist society which the bishops' pastoral letter raises is the increasing economic, political and social marginalization resulting from the concentration of wealth and power in the form of monopoly capital. The bishops condemn these contemporary inequalities as unjust, undemocratic and antithetical to the teachings of the Church and Catholic humanism. Given this criticism, we can better understand the bishops' policy prescriptions as intended to show how monopoly capital can be reconciled with the common (...) good, the problem as explicitly posed in section 281 of their pastoral. Hence, their proposal for economic democracy and economic planning can be seen as one possible solution to this general problem of monopoly concentration and marginalization.However, as I criticize in my paper, the bishops' policy prescriptions are undermined by contradictions in their position as well as questionable assumptions implicit to their model for economic democracy. On the one hand and as motivated by the bishops' desire to promote greater democracy and social justice for marginalized groups, the bishops' propose greater state intervention in the economy, particularly in areas concerning the planning and control over investment decisions. On the other hand and on behalf of the rights and liberties of private property owners, the bishops' want to preserve a measure of laissez-faire and private initiative in the marketplace. In short, the bishops' seem undecided about which of their social sentiments should have priority — their egalitarian or libertarian sentiments. Apparently, and as I demonstrate in my paper, the bishops fear more the imagined threats of social democracy to the status quo of private property than the actual marginalizing effects of private monopoly capital. (shrink)
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  46.  27
    Hallucinations of France and Africa in the Colonial Exhibition of 1931 and Ousmane Socé's Mirages de Paris.Christopher L. Miller -1995 -Paragraph 18 (1):39-63.
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  47. Visual extinction and awareness: The importance of binding dorsal and ventral pathways.Gordon C. Baylis,Christopher L. Gore,P. Dennis Rodriguez &Rebecca J. Shisler -2001 -Visual Cognition. Special Issue 8 (3):359-379.
     
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  48.  17
    A New World In A Small Place: Church And Religion In The Diocese Of Rieti, 1188–1378. [REVIEW]Christopher L. Brooke -1995 -Speculum 70 (1):124-127.
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  49.  33
    Hsiang-Ke Chao's Representation and structure in economics: the methodology of econometric models of the consumption function. London: Routledge, 2008, 176 pp. [REVIEW]Christopher L. Gilbert -2010 -Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics 3 (2):136.
  50.  94
    Sensory awareness.Russell Hurlburt &Christopher L. Heavey -2009 -Journal of Consciousness Studies 16 (10-12):10-12.
    Sensory awareness -- the direct focus on some specific sensory aspect of the body or outer or inner environment -- is a frequently occurring yet rarely recognized phenomenon of inner experience. It is a distinct, complete phenomenon; it is not merely, for example, an aspect of a perception. Sensory awareness is one of the five most common forms of inner experience, according to our results . Despite its high frequency, many people do not notice its appearance nor recognize its theoretical (...) import. We describe sensory awareness and distinguish it from other aspects of experience. We give examples and discuss how it appears when moments of inner experience are examined carefully. We note that there are large individual differences in the observed frequency of sensory awareness and consider its relationship to mental health and other aspects of psychological functioning. (shrink)
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