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Results for 'Daniela S. Nunes'

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  1.  41
    Neuropsychological Assessment of Older Adults With Virtual Reality: Association of Age, Schooling, and General Cognitive Status.Camila R. Oliveira,Brandel J. P. Lopes Filho,Cristiane S. Esteves,Tainá Rossi,Daniela S.Nunes,Margarida M. B. M. P. Lima,Tatiana Q. Irigaray &Irani I. L. Argimon -2018 -Frontiers in Psychology 9:355603.
    The development of neuropsychological assessment methods using virtual reality (VR) is a valid and promising option for the detection of cognitive impairment in the older people, focusing on activities composed of tasks of multiple demands. This study verified the association of age, schooling, and general cognitive status on the performance of neurologically healthy older adults in ECO-VR, a virtual reality task of multiple demands for neuropsychological assessment. A total of 111 older adults answered a sociodemographic questionnaire, the Mini Mental State (...) Examination, the Vocabulary subtest of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Adults (third edition), and the ECO-VR. Correlation analyses, multiple linear regression, and comparisons between groups (effects by age and schooling groups) were used to evaluate the results. The ECO-VR total score was significantly associated with age, years of education, MMSE, and Vocabulary subtest. The linear regression models identified that age was the main predictor for total score and rule breaking of ECO-VR. According to the univariate analysis, it was identified the main effect of age group and schooling group in the total ECO-VR score, but there was no interaction effect. The results are discussed in order to understand the role of sociodemographic characteristics in the performance of older adults in a virtual reality task of multiple demands. It was also verified the possibility use of virtual reality for neuropsychological assessment of older adults. (shrink)
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  2.  34
    Editorial: Pathophysiology of the Basal Ganglia and Movement Disorders: Gaining New Insights from Modeling and Experimentation, to Influence the Clinic.Daniela S. Andres,Marcelo Merello &Olivier Darbin -2017 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 11.
  3.  32
    In Search of an Object: Organicist Sociology and the Reality of Society in Fin-De-SiËcle France.Daniela S. Barberis -2003 -History of the Human Sciences 16 (3):51-72.
    Through an examination of French organicism–one of the models proposed for the nascent science of sociology in the late 19th century–this article argues two main points: that organicism was crucial in the establishment of ‘society’ as a scientific object; and that the specific characteristics of this new object were retained by later sociology long after the organic analogies and evolutionary views that justified them had been explicitly abandoned. Organicism played a significant role in establishing a strong notion of society as (...) a concrete, real entity–a notion that had a lasting impact on sociological theory and became one of the most important ‘categories of thought’ of the 20th century. (shrink)
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  4.  24
    David A. West. Darwin’s Man in Brazil: The Evolving Science of Fritz Müller. xxii + 316 pp., figs., bibl., index. Gainesville: University Press Florida, 2016. $79.95. [REVIEW]Daniela S. Barberis -2017 -Isis 108 (3):711-712.
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  5.  15
    Figures of the Pre-Freudian Unconscious from Flaubert to Proust[REVIEW]Daniela S. Barberis -2018 -Isis 109 (4):872-873.
  6.  54
    Wiktor Stoczkowski. Anthropologies rédemptrices: Le monde selon Lévi‐Strauss. . 343 pp., bibl. Paris: Hermann Éditeurs, 2008. €32. [REVIEW]Daniela S. Barberis -2010 -Isis 101 (1):264-266.
  7.  28
    Jan Goldstein. Hysteria Complicated by Ecstasy: The Case of Nanette Leroux. xi + 246 pp., illus., apps. Princeton, N.J./Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2010. $29.95. [REVIEW]Daniela S. Barberis -2011 -Isis 102 (1):182-183.
  8.  61
    Development and validation of the Maladaptive Daydreaming Scale.Eli Somer,Jonathan Lehrfeld,Jayne Bigelsen &Daniela S. Jopp -2016 -Consciousness and Cognition 39:77-91.
  9.  42
    Detection of mental imagery and attempted movements in patients with disorders of consciousness using EEG.Petar Horki,Gã¼Nther Bauernfeind,Daniela S. Klobassa,Christoph Pokorny,Gerald Pichler,Walter Schippinger &Gernot R. Mã¼Ller-Putz -2014 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8.
  10.  17
    Implantação dos procedimentos operacionais padronizados (pops) de higienização e desinfecção dos equipamentos e utensílios em Uma unidade de alimentação e nutrição hospitalar.Caroline das Neves MendesNunes,Flavia Queiroga Aranha &Daniela Salate Biagioni Vulcano -2014 -Simbio-Logias Revista Eletrônica de Educação Filosofia e Nutrição 7 (10):34-48.
    In a hospital UFNs, an outbreak of food poisoning can have disastrous consequences and aggregate risk of death for patients. Thus, the training of food handlers is critical to ensuring the quality of the food that is produced. The aim of this study was to implement the SOPs related to sanitation and disinfection of equipment and utensils, by means of a training, containing illustrative figures and everyday issues on the subject; and evaluate the daily practice of sanitation and disinfection activities (...) before and after the intervention with employees of UFN. We developed and implemented a guidefor inspection of best practices in sanitation of equipment and utensils at two different times, before and after the intervention with the food handlers. The results showed a significant improvement in the situation of this unit in terms of practice, frequency and fulfillment of stages related to sanitation and disinfection of equipment and utensils. We concluded that the implementation of SOPs for sanitation and disinfection was carried out successfully, and that empowering employees with dynamic and interactive training allows them a greater understanding of the importance of hygiene practices in the daily routine of UFN. (shrink)
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  11.  17
    “The Worst Part Was Coming Back Home and Feeling Like Crying”: Experiences of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans Students in Portuguese Schools.Jorge Gato,Daniela Leal,Carla Moleiro,Telmo Fernandes,DiogoNunes,Inês Marinho,Oren Pizmony-Levy &Cody Freeman -2020 -Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  12.  13
    Knowledge and action within the knowledge based society.Daniela Dunca &Cornelia Gășpărel (eds.) -2012 - Iași: Institutul European.
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  13.  11
    Significance and interpretation within the knowledge based society.Cornelia Gășpărel &Daniela Dunca (eds.) -2013 - Iași: Institutul European,.
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  14.  56
    Mudança de terapeuta e abandono da psicoterapia em uma clínica-escola; Change of therapist and therapy drop out in a training clinic.Alfredo Cardoso Lhullier,Maria Lucia TielletNunes,Ana Furlong Antochevis,Ana Maria Porto &Daniela Figueiredo -2000 -Aletheia: An International Journal of Philosophy 11:7-11.
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  15.  46
    Editorial: Behavioral and physiological bases of attentional biases: paradigms, participants, and stimuli.Daniela M. Pfabigan &Ulrich S. Tran -2015 -Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  16.  30
    Do we care about the powerless third? An ERP study of the three-person ultimatum game.Johanna Alexopoulos,Daniela M. Pfabigan,Claus Lamm,Herbert Bauer &Florian Ph S. Fischmeister -2012 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 6.
  17.  121
    Deleuze's Rethinking of the Notion of Sense.Daniela Voss -2013 -Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 7 (1):1-25.
    Drawing on Deleuze's early works of the 1960s, this article investigates the ways in which Deleuze challenges our traditional linguistic notion of sense and notion of truth. Using Frege's account of sense and truth, this article presents our common understanding of sense and truth as two separate dimensions of the proposition where sense subsists only in a formal relation to the other. It then goes on to examine the Kantian account, which makes sense the superior transcendental condition of possibility of (...) truth. Although both accounts define sense as merely the form of possibility of truth, a huge divide cuts across a simple formal logic of sense and a transcendental logic: transcendental logic discovered a certain genetic productivity of sense, such that a proposition always has the kind of truth that it merits according to its sense. In pursuit of this genetic productivity of sense, Deleuze applies different models of explanation: a Nietzschean genealogical model of the genetic power of sense, and in The Logic of Sense a structural model combined with elements of Stoic philosophy. This article follows Deleuze in setting up a new and very complex notion of sense, which he radically distinguishes from what he terms ‘signification’, that is, an extrinsic, linguistic or logical, condition of possibility. Rather, sense has to be conceived as both the effect and the intrinsic genetic element of an extra-propositional sense-producing machine. (shrink)
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  18.  70
    Sex differences in event-related potentials and attentional biases to emotional facial stimuli.Daniela M. Pfabigan,Elisabeth Lamplmayr-Kragl,Nina M. Pintzinger,Uta Sailer &Ulrich S. Tran -2014 -Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  19.  33
    The Power of Good: A Leader's Personal Power as a Mediator of the Ethical Leadership-Follower Outcomes Link.Daniela K. Haller,Peter Fischer &Dieter Frey -2018 -Frontiers in Psychology 9:355964.
    The study's goal was to examine the socially responsible power use in the context of ethical leadership as an explanatory mechanism of the ethical leadership-follower outcomes link. Drawing on the attachment theory (Bowlby, 1969/1982 ), we explored a power-based process model, which assumes that a leader's personal power is an intervening variable in the relationship between ethical leadership and follower outcomes, while incorporating the moderating role of followers' moral identity in this transformation process. The results of a two-wave field study (...) ( N = 235) that surveyed employees and a scenario experiment ( N = 169) fully supported the proposed (moderated) mediation models, as personal power mediated the positive relationship between ethical leadership and a broad range of tested follower outcomes (i.e., leader effectiveness, follower extra effort, organizational commitment, job satisfaction, and work engagement), as well as the interactive effects of ethical leadership and follower moral identity on these follower outcomes. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed. (shrink)
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  20.  113
    Not All Forms of Independence Are Created Equal: Only Being Independent the “Right Way” Is Associated With Self-Esteem and Life Satisfaction.Daniela Moza,Smaranda Ioana Lawrie,Laurențiu P. Maricuțoiu,Alin Gavreliuc &Heejung S. Kim -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Past research has found a strong and positive association between the independent self-construal and life satisfaction, mediated through self-esteem, in both individualistic and collectivistic cultures. In Study 1, we collected data from four countries and replicated these findings in cultures which have received little attention in past research. In Study 2, we treated independence as a multifaceted construct and further examined its relationship with self-esteem and life satisfaction using samples from the United States and Romania. Different ways of being independent (...) are associated with self-esteem and life satisfaction in the two cultures, suggesting that it is not independence as a global concept that predicts self-esteem and life satisfaction, but rather, feeling independent in culturally appropriate ways is a signal that one’s way of being fits in and is valued in one’s context. (shrink)
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  21.  46
    Illness Perceptions of COVID-19 in Europe: Predictors, Impacts and Temporal Evolution.David Dias Neto,AnaNunes da Silva,Magda Sofia Roberto,Jelena Lubenko,Marios Constantinou,Christiana Nicolaou,Demetris Lamnisos,Savvas Papacostas,Stefan Höfer,Giovambattista Presti,Valeria Squatrito,Vasilis S. Vasiliou,Louise McHugh,Jean-Louis Monestès,Adriana Baban,Javier Alvarez-Galvez,Marisa Paez-Blarrina,Francisco Montesinos,Sonsoles Valdivia-Salas,Dorottya Ori,Raimo Lappalainen,Bartosz Kleszcz,Andrew Gloster,Maria Karekla &Angelos P. Kassianos -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Objective: Illness perceptions are important predictors of emotional and behavioral responses in many diseases. The current study aims to investigate the COVID-19-related IP throughout Europe. The specific goals are to understand the temporal development, identify predictors and examine the impacts of IP on perceived stress and preventive behaviors.Methods: This was a time-series-cross-section study of 7,032 participants from 16 European countries using multilevel modeling from April to June 2020. IP were measured with the Brief Illness Perception Questionnaire. Temporal patterns were observed (...) considering the date of participation and the date recoded to account the epidemiological evolution of each country. The outcomes considered were perceived stress and COVID-19 preventive behaviors.Results: There were significant trends, over time, for several IP, suggesting a small decrease in negativity in the perception of COVID-19 in the community. Age, gender, and education level related to some, but not all, IP. Considering the self-regulation model, perceptions consistently predicted general stress and were less consistently related to preventive behaviors. Country showed no effect in the predictive model, suggesting that national differences may have little relevance for IP, in this context.Conclusion: The present study provides a comprehensive picture of COVID-19 IP in Europe in an early stage of the pandemic. The results shed light on the process of IP formation with implications for health-related outcomes and their evolution. (shrink)
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  22.  50
    Two lessons from fractals and chaos.Larry S. Liebovitch &Daniela Scheurle -2000 -Complexity 5 (4):34-43.
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  23.  28
    The relationship between environmentally induced emotion and memory for a naturalistic virtual experience.Aria S. Petrucci,Cade McCall,Guy Schofield,Victoria Wardell,Omran K. Safi &Daniela J. Palombo -2025 -Cognition and Emotion 39 (1):180-195.
    Emotional stimuli (e.g. words, images) are often remembered better than neutral stimuli. However, little is known about how memory is affected by an environmentally induced emotional state (without any overtly emotional occurrences) – the focus of this study. Participants were randomly assigned to discovery (n = 305) and replication (n = 306) subsamples and viewed a desktop virtual environment before rating their emotions and completing objective (i.e. item, temporal-order, duration) and subjective (e.g. vividness, sensory detail, coherence) memory measures. In both (...) samples, a Partial Least Squares Correlation analysis showed that an emotional state characterised by high negative emotion (i.e. threat, fear, anxiety) and arousal was reliably associated with better memory in both objective (i.e. item) and subjective (i.e. vividness and sensory detail) domains. No reliable associations were observed for any temporal memory measures (objective or subjective). Thus, an environmentally induced state of negative emotion corresponds with enhanced memory for indices of episodic memory pertaining to “what” happened, but not necessarily “when” it happened. (shrink)
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  24.  16
    Reflexiones contemporáneas sobre la obra centenaria de Max Weber.Zaikoski Biscay,Daniela María José,Nicolás Emanuel Olivares &Max Weber (eds.) -2021 - Rosario: Prohistoria Ediciones.
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  25.  103
    Deleuze's Third Synthesis of Time.Daniela Voss -2013 -Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 7 (2):194-216.
    Deleuze's theory of time set out in Difference and Repetition is a complex structure of three different syntheses of time – the passive synthesis of the living present, the passive synthesis of the pure past and the static synthesis of the future. This article focuses on Deleuze's third synthesis of time, which seems to be the most obscure part of his tripartite theory, as Deleuze mixes different theoretical concepts drawn from philosophy, Greek drama theory and mathematics. Of central importance is (...) the notion of the cut, which is constitutive of the third synthesis of time defined as an a priori ordered temporal series separated unequally into a before and an after. This article argues that Deleuze develops his ordinal definition of time with recourse to Kant's definition of time as pure and empty form, Hölderlin's notion of ‘caesura’ drawn from his ‘Remarks on Oedipus’ (1803) and Dedekind's method of cuts as developed in his pioneering essay ‘Continuity and Irrational Numbers’ (1872). Deleuze then ties together the conceptions of the Kantian empty form of time and the Nietzschean eternal return, both of which are essentially related to a fractured I or dissolved self. This article aims to assemble the different heterogeneous elements that Deleuze picks up on and to show how the third synthesis of time emerges from this differential multiplicity. (shrink)
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  26.  21
    (Austria) Janusz Korczak: Childhood and Children's Rights.Daniela G. Camhy -2009 - In Eva Marsal, Takara Dobashi & Barbara Weber,Children Philosophize Worldwide: Theoretical and Practical Concepts. Frankfurt, Germany: Peter Lang GmbH. pp. 9--247.
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  27.  45
    Academia After Virtue? An Inquiry into the Moral Character(s) of Academics.Daniela Pianezzi,Hanne Nørreklit &Lino Cinquini -2020 -Journal of Business Ethics 167 (3):571-588.
    An extensive literature has focused on the impact of new public management oriented structural changes on academics’ practice and identity. These critical studies have been resolute in concluding that NPM inevitably leads to a degeneration of academics’ ethos and values. Drawing from the moral philosophy of Alasdair MacIntyre, we argue that these previous analyses have overlooked the moral agency of the academics and their role in ‘moralizing’ and consequently shaping the ethical nature of their practices. The paper provides a new (...) theoretical understanding of NPM-oriented reforms in light of the virtue ethics approach, thereby directing the attention to the moral character and moral agency of academics. Our analysis of interviews collected in the business department of a Danish university provides an example of how individuals have divergent ethical understandings of these structural changes and enact/resist pre-defined social roles in different ways. While in some cases the NPM agenda of the institutions has triggered internal moral conflict and a crisis of moral character, in other cases the new logic resonates with academics’ values and evaluative standards. Partially departing from the theoretical ground of MacIntyre, we conclude that academics can play a crucial role in shaping the morality of NPM-oriented institutions and in transforming these settings into suitable contexts for the cultivation of virtues. (shrink)
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  28. Incertidumbre, probabilidad y prueba de la causalidad en el derecho de daños: análisis de la doctrina del incremento del riesgo a más del doble.Daniela Accatino -2018 - In Carmen Vázquez Rojas,Hechos y razonamiento probatorio. [Pachuca de Soto, Hidalgo]: Editorial CEJI.
     
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  29.  44
    Aristotle's Denial of Deliberation About Ends.Daniela Cammack -2013 -Polis 30 (2):228-250.
    Although Aristotle stated that we do not deliberate about ends, it is widely agreed that he did not mean it. Eager to save him from implying that ends are irrational, scholars have argued that he did recognize deliberation about the specification of ends. This claim misunderstands Aristotle’s conceptions of both deliberation and ends. Deliberation is not the whole of reasoning: it is a subcategory concerning only practical matters within our power. Not deliberating about something thus does not preclude other forms (...) of reflection on it, such as that involved in specification. Yet on Aristotle’s view, our ends are not in our power. They are generated not by individual choice but by nature, which in the case of human beings includes roles for both language and politics. Ends are thus beyond individual deliberation, though not beyond reason. This is no minor point. The claim that human beings can act rationally depends upon it. (shrink)
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  30. Teilhard de Chardin, o Santo Tomás do século XX: paralelismo filosófico-teológico, convergências e divergências.J. PauloNunes -1977 - São Paulo: Edições Loyola.
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  31.  49
    Agency matters! Social preferences in the three-person ultimatum game.Johanna Alexopoulos,Daniela M. Pfabigan,Florian Göschl,Herbert Bauer &Florian Ph S. Fischmeister -2013 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  32.  30
    Conditions of Thought: Deleuze and Transcendental Ideas.Daniela Voss -2013 - Edinburgh University Press.
    Analyses Deleuze's notion of transcendental and genetic Ideas as conditions of creative thought. From his early work in 'Nietzsche and Philosophy' to 'Difference and Repetition', Deleuze develops a unique notion of transcendental philosophy. It comprises a radical critique of the illusions of representation and a genetic model of thought.Engaging with questions of representation, Ideas and the transcendental,Daniela Voss offers a sophisticated treatment of the Kantian aspects of Deleuze's thought, taking account of Leibniz, Maimon, Lautman and Nietzsche along the (...) way. (shrink)
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  33.  49
    Padrões de Ajustamento na Aposentadoria.Mauro de Oliveira Magalhães,Daniela Valle Krieger,Aline Groff Vivian,Márcia Carvalho S. Straliotto &Maslowa Pereira Poeta -2004 -Aletheia: An International Journal of Philosophy 19:57-68.
    O estudo investigou a experiência de transição para a aposentadoria na perspectiva subjetiva dos sujeitos que a vivenciaram. Foram entrevistados 20 trabalhadores aposentados no período de até 18 meses após o desligamento de suas atividades laborais. As entrevistas seguiram roteiro semi-estruturado e..
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  34. The development of the living seed of intentionality. From E. Husserl and E. Fink to A.-T. Tymieniecka's ontopoiesis of life.Daniela Verducci -2010 -Analecta Husserliana 105:19-37.
  35. Love's Curiosity.Daniela Dover -forthcoming - In Connie Rosati,Practical Reflections: Essays in Honor of J. David Velleman.
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  36. An Introduction to the History and Sources of Jewish Law.N. S. Hecht,B. S. Jackson,S. M. Passamaneck,Daniela Piattelli &Alfredo Rabello (eds.) -1996 - Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press UK.
    Jewish law has a history stretching from the early period to the modern State of Israel, encompassing the Talmud, Geonic and later codifications, the Spanish Golden Age, medieval and modern responsa, the Holocaust and modern reforms. Fifteen distinct periods are separately studied in this volume, each one by a leading specialist, and the emphasis throughout is on the development of the institutions and sources of the law.
     
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  37.  35
    It’s a Human Rights Issue!Daniela Truffer -2015 -Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 5 (2):111-114.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:It’s a Human Rights Issue!Daniela TrufferI was born in 1965 in Switzerland with a severe heart defect and ambiguous genitalia. The doctors couldn‘t tell if I was a girl or a boy. First they diagnosed me with CAH and an enlarged clitoris, and cut me between my legs looking for a vagina.Because of my heart condition, the doctors assumed I would die soon. After an emergency baptism, I (...) stayed in the hospital for three months. My mother would travel to the city as often as possible, though she was only allowed to see me through a glass window.When I was two months old, and still in the hospital, doctors opened my abdomen and found healthy testes, which they threw in the garbage bin. According to my medical records, my parents had not provided consent. Further tests showed I am chromosomally male.Later the “castration” was declared a “mistake”: one doctor said I was a boy with hypospadias. As they had already removed the testes, however, they would have “to continue this way and the small patient must be made a girl.”After three months, my parents were finally allowed to take me home.During my childhood, I spent a lot of time in doctor’s offices and hospitals, suffering countless examinations of my genitals and urethral opening. When I was two, our family doctor stuck his finger into my urethral opening; I was screaming very loud, my father says. My mother had to put me into warm water because every time I had to pee I screamed in pain. Later I was hurried to the hospital with a bad infection. Still today my urethra often hurts after going to the toilet.I knew early in my life that I was different.I learned fragments of the truth only after decades of ignorance and denial. I was lucky to obtain my medical records. The hospital initially told me they no longer existed. When I insisted, they eventually sent me some recent files pertaining only to care I received after I was an adult. I kept calling. Once I was put through directly to the archive, where I was told that indeed there were “lots of files on microfilm.” However, it was only when I threatened to return with a lawyer that the hospital sent me a large pile of printouts.Finally I had it in black and white: The doctors had systematically lied to my parents, instructing them to “raise me as a girl” and never talk to me or to anyone else about “the gender issue.” Asked if I could have children, the doctors told them it was “doubtful.” At seven, the doctors still claimed it had been necessary to “remove the ovaries,” and at fourteen told me that I didn‘t menstruate because my “uterus was very small.”Because of the castration, my bone growth was reduced. To this day, I have to deal with health problems like a ruined metabolism, recurring fatigue and vertigo, and osteopenia.I would eventually grow older than doctors had originally predicted. At seven, they decided to operate on my heart septum and valve. I went to the hospital for preparatory cardiac catheterization. However, because of an infection, doctors put off the procedure. Since I had already been admitted, they decided to “use the opportunity to conduct the genital correction already planned in 1965,” and shortened my micropenis to the size of a “very small clitoris,” allegedly with my consent.Fortunately they didn‘t amputate the glans, and I still have sexual feelings left. But I remember the pain and unease, and how I often ran home from [End Page 111] school crying. Today I have a lot of scar tissue, which often hurts and itches.After a few days I was brought back to the cardiologist for the catheterization, and a few months later heart surgery. The doctors saved my life and destroyed it in the same year.I spent my childhood in fear, isolation, and shame. When I had to see a doctor, I was always scared stiff, but I never cried, and endured everything without any protest. I felt sick days in advance, and in... (shrink)
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  38.  57
    Intensity and the Missing Virtual: Deleuze's Reading of Spinoza.Daniela Voss -2017 -Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 11 (2):156-173.
    Deleuze's interpretation of Spinozan philosophy is intrinsically related to the concept of intensity. Attributes are defined as intensive qualities, modal essences as intensive quantities or degrees of power; the life of affects corresponds to continuous variations in intensity. This essay will show why Deleuze needs the concept of intensity for his reading of Spinozan philosophy as a philosophy of expressive immanence. It will also discuss the problems that spring from this reading: in what way, if any, are modal essences modified (...) by the intensive variations of affects? How can the Spinozan conception of eternal modal essences be reconciled with the idea of affections of essence? What is the ethical import of the life of existing modes, when modal essences are considered as eternal? While these questions, in particular the last two, confront each commentator on Spinoza and demand a solution in one way or another, the essay will conclude with a question which is posed from an exclusively Deleuzian perspective: why is the concept of the virtual, which takes centre stage in Deleuze's own philosophy of immanence, missing in his account of Spinoza? (shrink)
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  39.  6
    Open Hermeneutics: André Scrima’s «éclatement de la parole “en moi”» (I).Daniela Dumbravă -2022 -Diakrisis Yearbook of Theology and Philosophy 5:31-46.
    Towards the end of the 1960s, in the well-known Enrico Castelli (1900-1977) colloquia, while intensively discussing the topic of demythologization, scholars concluded that theological language is fundamental in exploring it. Thus, the topic of the analysis of theological language: the Name of God, became prevalent for them and they began to think that a distinction between the terms religious and theological would be desirable, avoiding scandalous formulas for the field of theology. According to Karl Jasper, God is just a chest (...) of something indicible. André Scrima presents himself in the debate with an original proposal, namely to think of theological language, in the broadest sense of this concept, as enclosing religious discourse. In the beginning, speaking theologically should happen in the Name of God, Scrima asserts; at Jasper’s antipodes, he places the Name of God as the origin and mystery that generates speaking theologically. This article aims first of all to bring the question of theological language back into the academic space that is more interested in the phenomenological issues promoted in Enrico Castelli’s thought laboratory in Rome. (shrink)
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  40. Alfredo Michielin, ed., Gli Acta comunitatis Tarvisii del sec. XIII. Introduction by Gian Maria Varanini.(Fonti per la Storia della Terraferma Veneta, 12.) Rome: Viella, 1998. Pp. xciii, 1176 plus 16 black-and-white plates; tables. Bongiovanni di Bonandrea, Il “Quaternus rogacionum” del notaio Bongiovanni di Bonandrea (1308–1320), ed.Daniela Rando and Monica Motter.(Storia del Trentino, 2nd ser., 1.) Bologna: Il Mulino, 1997. Paper. Pp. 406; black-and-white plates, black-and-white figures, and tables .. [REVIEW]James S. Grubb -2001 -Speculum 76 (1):205-206.
     
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  41.  94
    Love’s Curiosity.Daniela Dover -2024 -Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 124 (3):323-348.
    Love naturally gives rise to cravings for epistemic security. At the same time, since human beings are responsive to our interpretations of them, our desire that they be knowable risks becoming oppressively self-fulfilling. I argue that ‘erotic curiosity’—understood not as a desire for stable knowledge but rather as a desire to engage in an indefinitely prolonged inquisitive activity—is central to a certain kind of love.
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  42.  96
    Age-Dependent Positivity-Bias in Children’s Processing of Emotion Terms.Daniela Bahn,Michael Vesker,José C. García Alanis,Gudrun Schwarzer &Christina Kauschke -2017 -Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  43.  25
    The Statistical Style of Reasoning and the Invention of Bose‐Einstein Statistics.Daniela Monaldi -2019 -Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 42 (4):307-337.
    This paper is a preliminary exploration of the connections between the statistical style of reasoning and the research practices of statistical mechanics in the early period of the long quantum revolution. It suggests that before 1925 the instantiations of the statistical style in physics went through two phases. The first phase consisted of the formulation of the Maxwell‐Boltzmann statistics on the basis of the population‐gas analogy. The second phase was characterized by the generalization of the Maxwell‐Boltzmann statistics through analogies between (...) ideal gas molecules and other microphysical entities, analogies that shaped and were shaped by the rise of quantum theory. Einstein's invention of the Bose‐Einstein statistics started a third phase and created the conditions of possibility for a new classification of microphysical entities according to their different statistics. (shrink)
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  44.  24
    Testing a Modified Version of Schwartz’s Portrait Values Questionnaire to Measure Organizational Values in a University Context.Daniela Wetzelhütter,Chigozie Nnebedum,Jacques De Wet &Johann Bacher -2020 -Journal of Human Values 26 (3):209-227.
    Schwartz developed his Theory of Basic Human Values and corresponding instruments, the portrait values questionnaire (PVQ) and the Schwartz values survey (SVS), in order to measure personal values. He uses these instruments (in a slightly modified form) in conjunction with his Theory of Cultural Value Orientations to measure cultural or societal values. His theoretical work is also used in studying organizational values; however, none of these instruments seem suitable to compare personal and perceived organizational values. If the PVQ is widely (...) used to measure personal values, and we need commensurate measures of the person and organization for comparative analysis, then can we not minimally adjust the PVQ to measure organizational values? In this article we discuss the testing of one such adjusted PVQ used for gauging universities’ organizational values. We developed the PVQ-uni to measure university values as perceived by students. We collected data from sociology departments at two universities, one in Austria ( n = 133) and one Nigeria ( n = 156). We then tested the reliability and the validity of the new instrument. Based on the data collected, we found that the PVQ-uni is a reliable and valid instrument; however, further refinements are needed for the instrument to be used successfully in Africa. (shrink)
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  45.  36
    From Inframorality to Moral Creativity.Daniela Jeder -2008 -Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 37:115-122.
    Placing the analyses in an interdisciplinary manner, the present paper fallows to catch and value, form a moral-formative perspective, the interpretations of the ethical theories regarding the evolutions in a moral plan, in order to build a structural model of the morality development levels, with all the complex and dynamiccomponents that this one transmits. We have proposed that this should have as final purpose the transfer and focalization of this data over the significant space of forming the human being as (...) a moral, autonomous and responsible personality, by offering, we hope, in the terms in of efficiency, a rich space, a more complete and operational form about the levels of morality and moral education. The education in mostly very responsible for the step that defines the educated morality, of the community, of the society and a re-thinking, a restructuring and direction of the moral education on different levels is, we think, a way of responding to the challenges of today and tomorrow’s world. (shrink)
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  46.  45
    Preserving children’s fertility: two tales about children’s right to an open future and the margins of parental obligations.Daniela Cutas &Kristien Hens -2015 -Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 18 (2):253-260.
    The sources, extent and margins of parental obligations in taking decisions regarding their children’s medical care are subjects of ongoing debates. Balancing children’s immediate welfare with keeping their future open is a delicate task. In this paper, we briefly present two examples of situations in which parents may be confronted with the choice of whether to authorise or demand non-therapeutic interventions on their children for the purpose of fertility preservation. The first example is that of children facing cancer treatment, and (...) the second of children with Klinefelter syndrome. We argue that, whereas decisions of whether to preserve fertility may be prima facie within the limits of parental discretion, the right to an open future does not straightforwardly put parents under an obligation to take actions that would detect or relieve future infertility in their children—and indeed in some cases taking such actions is problematic. (shrink)
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  47.  19
    Virtù e felicità in Kant.Daniela Tafani -2006 - Firenze: L.S. Olschki.
    Sono prese in esame – attraverso le opere pubblicate, ma anche attraverso le lezioni e le riflessioni – tre questioni centrali nell’etica di Kant: lo spessore teorico, e le modificazioni, dei concetti di virtù e di felicità, nonché le maniere con cui Kant tentò di armonizzarli, nell’idea di sommo bene. La filosofia morale di Kant è presentata non come un sistema compiuto una volta per tutte, bensì come un ragionare in lotta con il proprio oggetto. L’autrice mostra – presentando una (...) ricostruzione sorprendente delle vicende dell’etica di Kant nel decennio successivo alla Critica della ragion pratica– come Kant si trovò costretto, per difficoltà teoriche, a mutare la propria dottrina su tutti e tre i temi, collocandoli, di volta in volta, entro una nuova struttura globale. L’evoluzione del concetto di felicità è riconosciuta dalla Kantforschung; l’analisi dei mutamenti del concetto di dovere etico e dell’idea di sommo bene costituisce un contributo originale dell’autrice. L’excursus sulla nascita del concetto di eudemonismo mostra come il termine – contrariamente a quanto si sostiene correntemente – non sia stato coniato da Kant.L’interpretazione del libro di Kant su La religione contrasta con le tendenze di gran lunga dominanti negli studi kantiani. -/- The concepts of virtue and happiness, and the ways Kant tried to combine them in the idea of the highest good, are examined with regard not only to Kant’s published works, but also to his lectures and reflections. The story of the changes in Kant’s ethic – particularly about the reality of the highest good and God’s existence – and the excursus on the birth of the concept of eudemonism give an original contribution to Kantforschung. (shrink)
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  48.  76
    The phenomenological-existential comprehension of chronic pain: going beyond the standing healthcare models.Daniela D. Lima,Vera Lucia P. Alves &Egberto R. Turato -2014 -Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 9:2.
    A distinguishing characteristic of the biomedical model is its compartmentalized view of man. This way of seeing human beings has its origin in Greek thought; it was stated by Descartes and to this day it still considers humans as beings composed of distinct entities combined into a certain form. Because of this observation, one began to believe that the focus of a health treatment could be exclusively on the affected area of the body, without the need to pay attention to (...) patient’s subjectivity. By seeing pain as a merely sensory response, this model was not capable of encompassing chronic pain, since the latter is a complex process that can occur independently of tissue damage. As of the second half of the twentieth century, when it became impossible to deny the relationship between psyche and soma, the current understanding of chronic pain emerges: that of chronic pain as an individual experience, the result of a sum of physical, psychological, and social factors that, for this reason, cannot be approached separately from the individual who expresses pain. This understanding has allowed a significant improvement in perspective, emphasizing the characteristic of pain as an individual experience. However, the understanding of chronic pain as a sum of factors corresponds to the current way of seeing the process of falling ill, for its conception holds a Cartesian duality and the positivist premise of a single reality. For phenomenology, on the other hand, the individual in his/her unity is more than a simple sum of parts. Phenomenology sees a human being as an intending entity, in which body, mind, and the world are intertwined and constitute each other mutually, thus establishing the human being’s integral functioning. Therefore, a real understanding of the chronic pain process would only be possible from a phenomenological point of view at the experience lived by the individual who expresses and communicates pain. (shrink)
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  49.  30
    Intercultural and Inter-confessional Relations in a Romanian Countryside.Daniela Serban,Constantin Mitrut,Silvia-Elena Cristache,Dana Epure &Simona Vasilache -2008 -Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 7 (20):80-106.
    This paper addresses the question of ethnic entrepreneurship in relation to religious identity and multiculturalism in civil society and proposes a spotlight on Turkish entrepreneurs in Romania, as a relevant example of the benefits of increasing cultural diversity and opportunities to learn from different cultures and traditions. It aims at empirically investigating whether the distinct ethnic features of Turkish entrepreneurs, especially their religion, influence their business performance in Romania and their integration in the host country’s civil society. The information for (...) this case study has been collected through in-depth interviews with top representatives of Turkish-Tartar minority associations in Romania and of Turkish Businessman Association (TIAD), and combined with statistical data from various sources. Several characteristics have been considered in our research, with a focus on business performance, religion and civil society. So far ethnic entrepreneurship issue has been approached in Romanian scientific research only indirectly or partially. Our paper singles out this issue and opens the door for further interdisciplinary research and dialogue. (shrink)
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  50.  80
    The Known and the Lived. Studies in Techno-Scientific 'Experience'.Daniela Helbig -unknown
    There are few doubts about the significance of science and technology for modern human culture and society. But as historians, we are still struggling to find appropriate descriptive terms to capture the broad processes of transformation brought about by “techno-science,” the merging of technical production and modern institutionalized science. This dissertation argues that the term “experience” may serve as such an analytic lens in the specific historical setting of German aviation research from the 1920s through 1945. I reconstruct, on the (...) one hand, the theorization of experience as a concept by the technical physicist Paul von Handel, influenced by the British astronomer Sir Arthur Eddington’s distinction between "scientific" and "everyday" experience. On the other hand, I use the term as a historian’s analytic concept to investigate practices in the context of flight experiments that I take to be constitutive of my historical actors’ experiences. These are recordings of experimental pilots’ cognitive judgements and bodily actions, some of them—such as in-flight note taking—continuous with older cultural technologies. On both of these levels of analysis, I explore the different resonances of “experience” as a term with a legacy as a central epistemological concept in the modern sciences, and as capturing the changing everyday reality in an increasingly technicized environment. My analysis of the textual theorization and simultaneous practical constitution of "techno-scientific experience" serves to read in a new light the story of the pilot and physicist Melitta Schiller-Stauffenberg. Of Jewish descent, Schiller chose to work for the Luftwaffe, the German air force, until her death in 1945 on a flight searching for her husband, Count Alexander Stauffenberg, who was imprisoned after his brother’s failed attempt to assassinate Hitler. The concept and practical reality of “experience” are key to understanding the two striking choices Schiller made as intrinsically connected: the professional choice of working simultaneously as a pilot and a physicist, and the political choice of supporting the Reich’s war effort. Schiller’s story may be understood as exemplifying the fragile identity of the experiencing and the knowing self in 20th-century techno-scientific modernity. (shrink)
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