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Results for 'Daojun Cheng'

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  1.  31
    Endocrine Regulation of Energy Balance by Drosophila TGF‐β/Activins.Wei Song,Arpan C. Ghosh,DaojunCheng &Norbert Perrimon -2018 -Bioessays 40 (11):1800044.
    The Transforming growth factor beta (TGF‐β) family of secreted proteins regulates a variety of key events in normal development and physiology. In mammals, this family, represented by 33 ligands, including TGF‐β, activins, nodal, bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), and growth and differentiation factors (GDFs), regulate biological processes as diverse as cell proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis, metabolism, homeostasis, immune response, wound repair, and endocrine functions. In Drosophila, only 7 members of this family are present, with 4 TGF‐β/BMP and 3 TGF‐β/activin ligands. Studies in (...) the fly have illustrated the role of TGF‐β/BMP ligands during embryogenesis and organ patterning, while the TGF‐β/activin ligands have been implicated in the control of wing growth and neuronal functions. In this review, we focus on the emerging roles of Drosophila TGF‐β/activins in inter‐organ communication via long‐distance regulation, especially in systemic lipid and carbohydrate homeostasis, and discuss findings relevant to metabolic diseases in humans. -/- . (shrink)
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  2.  41
    Strategies for Social and Environmental Disclosure: The Case of Multinational Gambling Companies.TiffanyCheng-Han Leung &Robin Stanley Snell -2019 -Journal of Business Ethics 168 (3):447-467.
    This study investigates how firms in the gambling industry manage their corporate social disclosures about controversial issues. We performed thematic content analysis of CSDs about responsible gambling, money laundering prevention and environmental protection in the annual reports and stand-alone CSR reports of four USA-based multinational gambling firms and their four Macao counterparts. This study draws on impression management theory, camouflage theory and corporate integrity theory to examine the gambling firms’ CSDs. We infer that the CSD strategies of gambling firms in (...) Macao and the USA did not serve as vehicles for reflexivity about social responsibility or social responsiveness. Instead, the firms camouflaged legitimacy gaps about sensitive topics by adopting assertive or defensive façades, disclaiming ethical responsibility, curtailing disclosure, or offering zero disclosure. Differences between CSD strategies according to topic, location, time, and reporting channel appear to reflect four factors: pressure to report, availability of good news, whether a firm was assuming ethical responsibility for addressing the topic, and the prospective readership. This study extends our understanding of the contextual and topic-specific factors affecting the quantity and character of CSDs by firms in a contested industry. (shrink)
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  3.  56
    Tai Chên's Inquiry into goodness.Chung-YingCheng -1971 - Honolulu,: East-West Center Press. Edited by Zhen Dai.
    Humanities Open Book Program, a joint initiative of the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
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  4.  47
    Attraction or Distraction? Corporate Social Responsibility in Macao’s Gambling Industry.TiffanyCheng Han Leung &Robin Stanley Snell -2017 -Journal of Business Ethics 145 (3):637-658.
    This paper attempts to investigate how and why organisations in Macao’s gambling industry engage in corporate social responsibility. It is based on an in-depth investigation of Macao’s gambling industry with 49 semi-structured interviews, conducted in 2011. We found that firms within the industry were emphasising pragmatic legitimacy based on both economic and non-economic contributions, in order to project positive images of the industry, while glossing over two domains of adverse externalities: problem gambling among visitors, and the pollution and despoliation of (...) the environment. By engaging symbolically rather than substantively in CSR, the gambling firms were diverting attention away from issues of moral legitimacy, in order to be allowed to continue to pursue “business as usual” as a means of obtaining substantial financial returns in a social, cultural and socio-political context that was exerting relatively little public pressure to improve corporate social and environmental performance. We conjecture that the gambling firms were feeding on borrowed time. (shrink)
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  5.  35
    Truth Diagrams Versus Extant Notations for Propositional Logic.Peter C.-H.Cheng -2020 -Journal of Logic, Language and Information 29 (2):121-161.
    Truth diagrams are introduced as a novel graphical representation for propositional logic. To demonstrate their epistemic efficacy a set of 28 concepts are proposed that any comprehensive representation for PL should encompass. TDs address all the criteria whereas seven other existing representations for PL only provide partial coverage. These existing representations are: the linear formula notation, truth tables, a PL specific interpretation of Venn Diagrams, Frege’s conceptual notation, diagrams from Wittgenstein’s Tractatus, Pierce’s alpha graphs and Gardner’s shuttle diagrams. The comparison (...) of the representations succeeds in distinguishing ideas that are fundamental to PL from features of common PL representations that are somewhat arbitrary. (shrink)
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  6.  82
    Confucian Onto-Hermeneutics: Morality and Ontology.Chung-YingCheng -2000 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 27 (1):33-68.
  7.  62
    Examination of mechanisms underlying enhanced memory performance in action video game players: a pilot study.Xianchun Li,XiaojunCheng,Jiaying Li,Yafeng Pan,Yi Hu &Yixuan Ku -2015 -Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  8.  30
    Electrophysiological Correlates of the Effect of Task Difficulty on Inhibition of Return.Ai-Su Li,Cheng-Guo Miao,Yu Han,Xun He &Yang Zhang -2018 -Frontiers in Psychology 9.
  9.  48
    Inquiring into the Primary Model: Yi Jing and the Onto-Hermeneutical Tradition.Chung-YingCheng -2003 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 30 (3-4):289-312.
  10.  24
    The instant impact of a single hemodialysis session on brain morphological measurements in patients with end-stage renal disease.Cong Peng,Qian Ran,Cheng Xuan Liu,Ling Zhang &Hua Yang -2022 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 16.
    ObjectiveTo investigate the instant impact of hemodialysis on the cerebral morphological measurements of patients with end-stage renal disease.Materials and methodsTwenty-five patients undergoing maintenance HD and twenty-eight age-, sex-, and education-matched healthy control were included. The HD group and HC group had 3D high-resolution structural magnetic resonance imaging scans twice and once, respectively. Both groups underwent neuropsychologic tests. The morphological measurements of structural MRI were measured using CAT12 and these measures were compared among three groups. The relationship between morphological measures and (...) clinical parameters and neuropsychological tests were investigated through multiple regression analysis.ResultsCompared to the HC group, the cortical thickness before HD significantly decreased in the bilateral temporal lobe and significantly decreased in the left superior temporal gyrus after HD. The cortical thickness significantly increased in the bilateral temporal lobe, frontal lobe and occipital lobe after HD compared to before HD. The sulcus depth in the bilateral insula, frontal lobe, and parietal lobe after HD significantly increased compared to before HD. No significant differences in sulcus depth between HD and HC were detected. After HD, the cortical thickness of the right parsopercularis was positively correlated with the number connection test-A. Cortical thickness in multiple regions were positively correlated with blood flow velocity and cortical thickness in the left parahippocampal gyrus was negatively correlated with ultrafiltration volume. Patients showed better performance in the digit symbol test and line tracing test after HD compared to before HD, but there were no significant differences in the comparison of neuropsychologic tests between patients and HC.ConclusionThe instant morphological changes were captured during a single hemodialysis in HD patients. There was an association between these instant changes in the brain and clinical parameters and neuropsychologic tests. This work implied the instant impact of a single hemodialysis impact on the brain in HD patients. (shrink)
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  11.  69
    Conscience, mind and individual in chinese philosophy.Chung-YingCheng -1974 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 2 (1):3-40.
  12.  42
    (1 other version)Receptivity and Creativity in Hermeneutics: From Gadamer to Onto‐Hermeneutics.Chung-YingCheng -2015 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 42 (1-2):10-41.
    There are two aspects of the hermeneutic: the receptive and the creative. In this article, first of all, I shall identify the strengths of these two aspects of the hermeneutic in the main development of hermeneutics in Western world. Heidegger and Gadamer take ontological receptivity as the source of the meaning of existence as well as the meaningfulness of texts. In my view such a form of receptivity has shaped the predominant paradigm of hermeneutic thinking in contemporary Europe or West. (...) Therefore, I move to the creative formation and positive projection of a transformative cosmological philosophy, namely the Yijing《易經》philosophy in Chinese tradition. In these two contrasts we shall not only notice the strong divergence between the two paradigms but come to see how receptivity and creativity of the hermeneutic could be divergently identified and located in concrete understanding of nature of reality and nature of the human being. (shrink)
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  13.  50
    Methodological suggestions for climato-economic theory.Kwok Leung &Grand H.-L.Cheng -2013 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 36 (5):494-495.
    To evaluate and extend climato-economic theory, the use of more micro units of analysis, such as cities and families, may open up new data sources. The consideration of environmental demands other than thermal climate may also broaden the range of useful data. Longitudinal designs can provide causal evidence, and so can experiments if the theory can be applied to individuals.
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  14.  25
    A Developmental Profile of Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder in China Using the Griffiths Mental Development Scales.Hong-Hua Li,Cheng-Xin Wang,Jun-Yan Feng,Bing Wang,Chun-Li Li &Fei-Yong Jia -2020 -Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  15.  5
    Direct and inverse translation of Chinese adverbs of degree: a comparative study of corpus-based translation orientation.Jing Li &YiyangCheng -2024 -Alpha (Osorno) 58:192-214.
    Resumen: Este trabajo presenta un estudio empírico sobre la direccionalidad en la traducción de los adverbios de grado chinos. Se ha adoptado una metodología cuantitativa basada en corpus y se ha realizado un estudio cualitativo para analizar las diferencias entre las traducciones directas e inversas de los adverbios de grado en un corpus paralelo construido para este estudio. El resultado muestra que los traductores hispanos prefieren utilizar el método de equivalencia, mientras que los chinos tienden a usar el método de (...) omisión; asimismo, las traducciones inversas presentan un debilitamiento de grado mucho más relevante que las directas. De acuerdo con los hallazgos, se ha establecido que la subjetividad del traductor y las características de los adverbios de grado chinos, como el límite difuso entre las categorías y la degeneración semántica, son los principales factores de divergencias entre las traducciones directas e inversas. Este trabajo completa los estudios sobre la direccionalidad traductológica y la traducción de los adverbios de grado. Abstract: This paper presents an empirical study of the directionality of the translation of Chinese adverbs of degree. We adopt the corpus-based quantitative methodology and the qualitative method to analyze the differences between direct and inverse translations of adverbs of degree in a self-built parallel corpus. The result shows that the Spanish translators prefer to use the equivalence method, while the Chinese tend to use the omission method. Moreover, the inverse translations present a much more prominent weakening of the degree than the direct ones. We find that the subjectivity of the translator and the characteristics of Chinese adverbs of degree, such as the blurred border between different degrees and semantic degeneracy, are the main factors of the discrepancy between direct and inverse translations. This work complements the studies on translation directionality and the translation of adverbs of degree. (shrink)
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  16.  19
    Fear of Uncertainty Makes You More Anxious? Effect of Intolerance of Uncertainty on College Students’ Social Anxiety: A Moderated Mediation Model.Jie Li,Ying Xia,XinyingCheng &Shijia Li -2020 -Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  17.  33
    Incremental Bilateral Preference Stable Planning over Event Based Social Networks.Boyang Li,YurongCheng,Guoren Wang &Yongjiao Sun -2019 -Complexity 2019:1-12.
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  18.  25
    Effectiveness of a Malaysian Media Intervention Workshop: Safe Reporting on Suicide.Jane Tze Yn Lim,QijinCheng,Yin Ping Ng,Kai Shuen Pheh,Ravivarma Rao Panirselvam,Kok Wai Tay,Joanne Bee Yin Lim,Wen Li Chan,Amer Siddiq Amer Nordin,Hazli Zakaria,Sara Bartlett,Jaelea Skehan,Ying-Yeh Chen,Paul Siu Fai Yip,Shamsul Azhar Shah &Lai Fong Chan -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 12:666027.
    Background:Suicide remains an important cause of premature deaths and draws much media attention. However, unsafe reporting and portrayal of suicides by the media have been associated with increased risk of suicidal behavior. Current evidence suggests that media capacity-building could potentially prevent suicide. However, there are still knowledge gaps in terms of a lack of data on effective strategies for improving awareness and safe reporting of suicide-related media content. This study aims to investigate the effectiveness of a workshop conducted with members (...) of the media community on the safe reporting of suicide-related content.Methods:An interventional single-arm pre and post pilot study was conducted on a sample of the Malaysian media community recruited through purposive and snowball sampling. The media safe reporting workshop was conducted by a suicide prevention expert with a media industry background. Thirty participants completed a self-reported evaluation questionnaire on their awareness and knowledge of reporting on suicide-related media content; before and after the interventional workshop.Results:There was a significant difference between the total scores before and after the intervention, with a large effect size. Post-intervention scores were significantly improved in 8 items, namely those related to the reporting of: (i) the content of any suicide note; (ii) headlines with methods of suicide; (iii) headlines with the location of suicide; (iv) cases of suspected suicide despite the unconfirmed cause of death; (v) suicide news to cater to readers’ interests; (vi) cause of suicide; (vii) details of the location of suicide; and (viii) the negative impact to media community when reporting suicide stories. In particular, there was an improvement in the majority of items for people from the media community with no lived experience of suicidal behavior.Conclusion:The media safe reporting workshop is a potentially effective intervention for improving awareness and knowledge measures relating to safe reporting on suicide among the media community, with a more pronounced effect in those without lived experience of suicidal behavior. Limitations in the sample size, generalizability, short-term evaluation, and lack of a control group warrant future larger, longer-term controlled, and more representative studies. (shrink)
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  19.  77
    Hybridity as Heterochrony.AlvinCheng-Hin Lim -2014 -World Futures 70 (8):486-495.
    In his essay “Of Other Spaces” Michel Foucault explained that heterotopias, or spaces of otherness, “function at full capacity when men arrive at a sort of absolute break with their traditional time.” This temporal otherness he described as “heterochrony.” In this article I will draw on the Sartrean ontology of the human being as temporal ecstasis to explain the transcultural phenomenon of hybridity as heterochrony, and in particular, how hybrid temporality is out of sync with local temporality. Heeding Virinder Kalra, (...) Raminder Kaur, and John Hutnyk's admonishment that “hybridity is better conceived of as a process rather than a description,” I will attempt to explicate the multiple processes of hybrid becomings I witnessed as an academic migrant in Cambodia, Hawaii, and Nigeria, and as a member of a hybrid subculture in Singapore. (shrink)
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  20.  76
    Integrating the onto-ethics of virtues (east) and the meta-ethics of rights (west).Chung-YingCheng -2002 -Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy 1 (2):157-184.
  21.  91
    Logic and language in chinese philosophy.Chung-YingCheng -1987 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 14 (3):285-307.
  22.  11
    Corporate Social Responsibility in Asia: Practice and Experience.Sik Liong Ang,Samuel O. Idowu &KimCheng Patrick Low (eds.) -2013 - Cham: Imprint: Springer.
    This book presents a rich collection of research studies on the theory and practice of CSR in Asia. It includes valuable contributions of practice-oriented researchers from various Asian countries such as Brunei, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, and Singapore, and from several non-Asian countries, such as Australia, Canada and the USA. The book presents a comprehensive overview of the practice of CSR in Asia. Normally CSR is seen in the Western angles, but here, in this book, Asian philosophies and (...) thoughts are also examined. Touted as the first of its kind, the book also compares Western and Asian perspectives on CSR and presents them in the light of Asian philosophies and thoughts, such as Confucian, Islamic (Koranic), Indian (Vedantic) and other Asian ways of looking at CSR in their own rights and perspectives. (shrink)
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  23.  40
    Social Comparison Orientation and Social Adaptation Among Young Chinese Adolescents: The Mediating Role of Academic Self-Concept.Hualing Miao,Zhenxing Li,Yingkai Yang &Cheng Guo -2018 -Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  24.  133
    Recommendations for Implementing Gamification for Mental Health and Wellbeing.Vanessa Wan SzeCheng -2020 -Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Gamification is increasingly being proposed as a strategy to increase engagement for mental health and wellbeing technologies. However, its implementation has been criticized as atheoretical, particularly in relation to behavior change theory and game studies theories. Definitions of the term “gamification” vary, sometimes widely, between and within academic fields and the effectiveness of gamification is yet to be empirically established. Despite this, enthusiasm for developing gamified mental health technologies, such as interventions, continues to grow. There is a need to examine (...) how best to implement gamification in mental health and wellbeing technologies in a way that takes quick production cycles into account while still emphasizing empirical investigation and building a rigorous evidence base. With reference to game studies and the medical literature, this article interrogates gamification for mental health and wellbeing by examining core properties of the game form. It then explores how gamification can best be conceptualized and implemented for mental health and wellbeing goals from conceptualization through to iterative co-development and evaluation that accommodates software development schedules. Finally, it summarizes its conceptual analysis into recommendations for researchers and designers looking to do so. These recommendations are: assess suitability, implement to support, assess acceptability, evaluate impact, and document comprehensively. These recommendations aim to encourage clear language, unified terminology, the application and evaluation of theory, comprehensive and constant documentation, and transparent evaluation of outcomes. (shrink)
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  25.  6
    Philosophical Reflections on Language Identity and Change: A Comparative Study of English Cultural and Scientific Neologisms Through Social Semantics.JiajiaCheng -2024 -European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 16 (4):332-348.
    Language evolves continuously through the creation of neologisms, reflecting shifts in cultural, scientific, and social paradigms. This study provides a philosophical analysis of English cultural and scientific neologisms through the lens of social semantics, exploring how language identity and conceptual meaning change over time. Drawing on theories of linguistic identity, meaning construction, and cultural semiotics, the study compares the formation, dissemination, and contextual integration of neologisms from cultural and scientific domains. Findings reveal that cultural neologisms often emerge from socio-political discourses (...) and popular media, emphasizing collective identity and social norms, while scientific neologisms are rooted in technological advancements and epistemological precision. The interplay between these linguistic forms underscores a dynamic process where language both shapes and is shaped by human experience. This inquiry highlights the philosophical significance of neologisms as carriers of evolving meaning, cultural heritage, and intellectual identity, offering insights into the relationship between language, belief systems, and societal change. (shrink)
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  26.  53
    Li and Ch’i in the I Ching: A Reconsideration of being and Non-Being in Chinese Philosophy.Chung-YingCheng -1987 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 14 (1):1-38.
  27.  27
    A bibliography of the I Ching in western languages.Chung-YingCheng &Elton Johnson -1987 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 14 (1):73-90.
  28.  67
    A taoist interpretation of "differance" in Derrida.Chung-YingCheng -1990 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 17 (1):19-30.
  29.  18
    Parallelizing SMT solving: Lazy decomposition and conciliation.XiCheng,Min Zhou,Xiaoyu Song,Ming Gu &Jiaguang Sun -2018 -Artificial Intelligence 257:127-157.
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  30.  70
    Preface: Science, Technology, and Chinese Philosophy.Chung-YingCheng -2002 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 29 (4):469-470.
  31.  23
    Preface: Three Significant Aspects of Relating Kierkegaard to Chinese Philosophy.Chung-YingCheng -2013 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 40 (1):1-4.
  32.  19
    Preface: Universalism and globalization.Chung-YingCheng -2010 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 37 (4):519-521.
  33.  62
    Preface: World-Humanity and Chinese Philosophy.Chung-YingCheng -2012 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 39 (4):469-471.
  34.  12
    Preface: Women and Men Philosophers as Equal Partners.Chung-YingCheng -2022 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 49 (1):3-4.
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  35.  34
    Preface: What is Rationality in the West and China.Chung-YingCheng -2017 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 44 (1-2):3-4.
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  36.  13
    Questioning Global Vaginahood: Reflections from Adapting The Vagina Monologues in Hong Kong.SealingCheng -2009 -Feminist Review 92 (1):19-35.
    Drawing on the author's experience in devising a localized version of The Vagina Monologues in Hong Kong, this paper critically appraises the ‘global vaginahood’ in the globalization of The Vagina Monologues and the V-Day movement that reproduces a core-periphery relationship in the transnational women's movement. As a theatrical performance and a worldwide movement, these productions are remarkable for the manner in which they raise awareness about women's sexuality and violence against women in different parts of the world. Critical questions, however, (...) remain on the rhetoric of universalism and the ethnocentric methods of the global campaign, with US women's experiences and agenda defining those of women in other parts of the world. As a worldwide campaign, the V-Day movement reproduces a hierarchical model between the global North and South, with an emphasis on Western leadership rather than coalition between partners with different experiences, priorities, and strategies. The paper argues that feminists may develop more effective coalitions with local women by recognizing and identifying locally derived creative efforts to respond to issues that are pertinent to their lives. As such, the paper is a push for dialogues in the V-Day campaign and transnational women's movement in general. (shrink)
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  37.  55
    Quality of Maternal Parenting of 9-Month-Old Infants Predicts Executive Function Performance at 2 and 3 Years of Age.NanhuaCheng,Shan Lu,Marc Archer &Zhengyan Wang -2018 -Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  38.  19
    Retroactive effect and degree of similarity.N. Y.Cheng -1929 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 12 (5):444.
  39.  29
    (1 other version)Religious Foundation of Morality and Religiousness of Moral Practice: Kant and Confucianism.Chung-YingCheng -2014 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 41 (S1):567-586.
    Kant has attempted to develop a foundation of his metaphysics of morals and this foundation ultimately turns out to be a religious one. Consequently, the question for Kant is whether morality also provides a practical foundation for independent religious faith. In contrast, we see Confucianism as providing a system of morality which has its own religiousness or sense of ultimateness in terms of a robust form of moral life and its practice of li 禮 and reflective thinking on humanity. In (...) this article, I wish to present these two forms of moral thinking which can be respectively titled moral theology and onto-ethics. A relative evaluation shows how a world morality could be consistent or justified within one's own religious tradition and yet can be and should be open to a common people humanity we experience as couched in an open cosmos we observe. (shrink)
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  40.  29
    Reasons for Reason-giving in a Public-Opinion Survey.Martha S.Cheng &Barbara Johnstone -2002 -Argumentation 16 (4):401-420.
    This paper explores why respondents to a telephone public-opinion survey often give reasons for answering as they do, even though reason-giving is neither required nor encouraged and it is difficult to see the reasons as attempts to deal with disagreement. We find that respondents give reasons for the policy claims they make in their answers three times as frequently as they give reasons for value or factual claims, that their reasons tend to involve appeals to personal experience, and that they (...) often talk about their thought processes, especially when the evidentiary stakes are high. We then explore several ways of explaining these findings. We suggest that one useful approach is to see the reason-giving in the survey interviews as deliberative, reflexive argumentation of the sort described as `critical thinking. We further suggest that the reason such argumentation is often conducted out loud in the interviews, rather than internally, is that it functions in the service of rhetorical ethos, in particular the need to display the fact that one is human, with human autonomy and agency. Doing this may be particularly important in contexts such as anonymous survey interviews in which people are at risk of being treated like machines. (shrink)
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  41.  51
    Requirements for the validity of induction: An examination of Charles Peirce's theory.Chung-YingCheng -1968 -Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 28 (3):392-402.
  42.  36
    Regional Gray Matter Volume Mediates the Relationship Between Conscientiousness and Expressive Suppression.Cheng Chen,Yu Mao,Jie Luo,Li He &Qiu Jiang -2018 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
  43.  18
    Series Preface: Chinese Philosophy in Unearthed Texts.Chung–YingCheng -2014 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 41 (1-2):187-190.
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  44.  51
    Truth and Logic in San-lun Mādhyamika Buddhism.Hsueh-liCheng -1981 -International Philosophical Quarterly 21 (3):260-275.
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  45.  17
    Toward a Theory of Subject Structure in Language with Application to Late Archaic Chinese.Chung-YingCheng -1971 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 91 (1):1-13.
  46.  28
    Taking Back the Laugh: Comedic Alibis, Funny Fails.WilliamCheng -2017 -Critical Inquiry 43 (2):528-549.
  47.  45
    The Contrast Effect in Temporal and Probabilistic Discounting.Cheng Chen &Guibing He -2016 -Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  48.  32
    The Confucian Four Books for Women: A New Translation of the Nü Sishu and the Commentary of Wang Xiang, written byAnn Pang-White.Yu-YinCheng -2021 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 48 (1):108-110.
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  49.  20
    Type D Personality Is an Independent Predictor of Lower Urinary Tract Symptoms in Young Men.Wei-MingCheng,Ying-Jay Liou &Yu-Hua Fan -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    This cross-sectional study, which included men aged 20–40 years, aimed to determine the relationships among type D personality, depressive symptoms and lower urinary tract symptoms in young men. An internet-based questionnaire was administered, and General demographics, International Prostate Symptom Scores, Type D Scale-14 scores, and Depression and Somatic Symptom Scale scores were analyzed. A total of 3,127 men were included; of these, 762 reported moderate/severe lower urinary tract symptoms, and 1,565 met the criteria for type D personality. Men with type (...) D personality had significantly higher body mass index and total and sub-scores for the International Prostate Symptom Score and Depression and Somatic Symptom Scale. Furthermore, the type D personality group had a higher prevalence of lower urinary tract symptoms, particularly voiding symptoms. Univariate analysis revealed that all parameters, except for body mass index, were significant predictors of moderate/severe lower urinary tract symptoms. Multivariate analysis showed that age >30 years, type D personality, and depressive and somatic Depression and Somatic Symptom Scale sub-scores were independent predictors of moderate/severe lower urinary tract symptoms. Regarding Type D Scale-14 subscales, social inhibition, rather than negative affectivity, impacted moderate/severe lower urinary tract symptoms. Mediation analysis revealed that depressive symptoms mediated the relationship between type D personality and lower urinary tract symptoms. This study established correlations between type D personality, depressive symptoms, and lower urinary tract symptoms. As previous studies suggested that patients with type D personality are less likely to consult and adhere to treatment, and are at higher risk for depression, urologists should therefore actively recognize patients with TDP. (shrink)
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  50.  38
    Conscience, moral truth, and moral errors: Some responses to Edmund Leites.Chung-YingCheng -1974 -Journal of Chinese Philosophy 2 (1):79-86.
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