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Results for 'Dawn Mueller Agnew'

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  1.  116
    Public Stem Cell Banks: Considerations of Justice in Stem Cell Research and Therapy.Ruth R. Faden,Liza Dawson,Alison S. Bateman-House,DawnMuellerAgnew,Hilary Bok,Dan W. Brock,Aravinda Chakravarti,Xiao-Jiang Gao,Mark Greene,John A. Hansen,Patricia A. King,Stephen J. O'Brien,David H. Sachs,Kathryn E. Schill,Andrew Siegel,Davor Solter,Sonia M. Suter,Catherine M. Verfaillie,LeRoy B. Walters &John D. Gearhart -2003 -Hastings Center Report 33 (6):13-27.
    If stem cell-based therapies are developed, we will likely confront a difficult problem of justice: for biological reasons alone, the new therapies might benefit only a limited range of patients. In fact, they might benefit primarily white Americans, thereby exacerbating long-standing differences in health and health care.
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  2.  59
    Safety Issues In Cell-Based Intervention Trials.Liza Dawson,Alison S. Bateman-House,DawnMuellerAgnew,Hilary Bok,Dan W. Brock,Aravinda Chakravarti,Mark Greene,Patricia King,Stephen J. O'Brien,David H. Sachs,Kathryn E. Schill,Andrew Siegel &Davor Solter -2003 -Fertility and Sterility 80 (5):1077-1085.
    We report on the deliberations of an interdisciplinary group of experts in science, law, and philosophy who convened to discuss novel ethical and policy challenges in stem cell research. In this report we discuss the ethical and policy implications of safety concerns in the transition from basic laboratory research to clinical applications of cell-based therapies derived from stem cells. Although many features of this transition from lab to clinic are common to other therapies, three aspects of stem cell biology pose (...) unique challenges. First, tension regarding the use of human embryos may complicate the scientific development of safe and effective cell lines. Second, because human stem cells were not developed in the laboratory until 1998, few safety questions relating to human applications have been addressed in animal research. Third, preclinical and clinical testing of biologic agents, particularly those as inherently complex as mammalian cells, present formidable challenges, such as the need to develop suitable standardized assays and the difficulty of selecting appropriate patient populations for early phase trials. We recommend that scientists, policy makers, and the public discuss these issues responsibly, and further, that a national advisory committee to oversee human trials of cell therapies be established. **NB we did not reccommend a NAC, we think it might be appropriate**. (shrink)
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  3. Public Stem Cell Banks.Hilary BokMuellerAgnew,Danw Brock,Aravinda Chakravarti,Xiao-Jiang Gao,Mark Greene,John A. Hansen,Patricia A. King,Stephen J. O'brien,David H. Sachs &Kathryn E. Schill -2003 -Hastings Center Report 33 (6):13-27.
     
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  4.  22
    The World According to Cycles: How Recurring Forces Can Predict the Future and Change Your Life.SamuelAgnew Schreiner -2009 - Skyhorse.
    What everything is about -- Why understanding cycles matters and how to recognize a cycle when you're in one -- A new science in the making -- How cycles study became a science that can explain the universe or predict your future -- Follow the money -- Cycles students got profitable early warnings of the 2008/9 financial crisis, did you? -- Nature on the move -- Will it rain on your parade? Will a rising tide flood your basement? : try (...) asking cycles -- Heeding nature's clock -- Do you doze after lunch? : it isn't food, are you bright atdawn? : it's not sun, it's cycles -- Making the most of moods -- For the curse in woman or just the blues in anyone, cycles can be a saving grace -- Cycles as history -- How did China get so rich? Why the war in Afghanistan? -- It could be star-born cycles -- Looking to the heavens -- Is the universe a giant musical instrument? : scientists and poets can hear it singing -- Thinking out of the box -- Independent thinkers are allied with cycles students in learning from nature's rich text. (shrink)
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  5. Nietzsche on the Art of Living: New Studies from the German-Speaking Nietzsche Research.Günter Gödde,Jörg Zirfas,ReinhardMueller &Werner Stegmaier (eds.) -2023 - Nashville: Orientations Press.
    The philosophy of the art of living asks the age-old question of orienting one’s own life: ‘How can I live well?’ An art of living is always called for when people do not know what to do and how to go on, when the ways of life are no longer self-evident, when traditions, conventions, rules, and norms lose their plausibility and individuals begin to worry about themselves. The art of living and of its philosophy has a practical aim: It is (...) not concerned with ethical principles, but with the concrete practice of people’s everyday life, with their individual and successful lives. Friedrich Nietzsche, as he often did, pushed the problem of the art of living to the extreme, making it palpable both in its dignity and in its force. For him, the modern uncertainty of human orientation caused by nihilism pointed to art and aesthetics, which, he supposed, makes life if not justifiable, at least bearable. The arts open up a multi-perspectival seeing and hearing, they experiment with alternative forms and techniques, and create the finest sensibilities for both – Nietzsche himself, with his rich forms of philosophical writing, is an outstanding example of this. -/- The volume we present here, entails contributions of German-speaking scholars on Nietzsche and the ways of living he proposes, especially, but not alone inDawn. The papers are selected from a book series on the common issue “Critical Art of Living,” edited by Günter Gödde, Jörg Zirfas, and others, and translated on behalf of the Foundation for Philosophical Orientation. (shrink)
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  6.  37
    Foucault's clinic.John C. Long -1992 -Journal of Medical Humanities 13 (3):119-138.
    What does the word clinic mean? The clinic is first a place to diagnose and treat sick persons. The clinic is also a way of thinking and speaking; it is a discursive practice that links health with knowledge. For Michel Foucault the clinic is a mode of perception and enunciation that allows us to see and name disease and to place statements about illness among statements about birth and death. Within the clinic resides understanding of disease visible on the surface, (...) yet hidden within the tissual depths, of an ailing patient. Foucault shows that by thedawn of the nineteenth-century medicine is no longer a two-dimensional reading of symptoms, but a three-dimensional probing from symptomatic surface into disease interior. The anatomical site of disorder hidden within tissual depths is visible to the scrutiny of pathologist, endoscopist or radiologist. The clinic, a discourse that enables us to think about disease when we make statements about health and death, operates not only in its familiar textual domain, the medical journal, but in pictures of the scene at the sickbed, and poetry about disease. The truth of disease and placement of that truth in a general plan of the world in Renaissance woodcuts and John Donne's poetry is different from the regime of truth after the birth of the clinic in Bichat'sTreatise on Membranes, the paintings of Laennec,Agnew and Gross, the modern lithographs and the verse of Walt Whitman and L. E. Sissman. Foucault's clinic is where knowledge and sickness some together in the modern period. (shrink)
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  7.  43
    A Communication From professorMueller.Gustav E.Mueller -1951 -Educational Theory 1 (2):139-142.
  8.  23
    Just‐relations and responsibility for planetary health: The global nurse agenda for climate justice.Robin Evans-Agnew,Jessica LeClair &De-Ann Sheppard -2024 -Nursing Inquiry 31 (1):e12563.
    There is an urgent call for nurses to address climate change, especially in advocating for those most under threat to the impacts. Social justice is important to nurses in their relations with individuals and populations, including actions to address climate justice. The purpose of this article is to present a Global Nurse Agenda for Climate Justice to spark dialog, provide direction, and to promote nursing action for just‐relations and responsibility for planetary health. Grounding ourselves within the Mi'kmaw concept of Etuaptmumk (...) (two‐eyed seeing), we suggest that climate justice is both call and response, moving nurses from silence to Ksaltultinej (love as action). We review the movement for climate justice in nursing, weaving between our own stories, our relations with Mi'kmaw ways of knowing, and the stories of the movement, with considerations for the (w)holistic perspectives foundational to nursing's metaparadigm of person, environment, and health. We provide a background to the work of the Global Nurse Agenda for Climate Justice steering committee including their role at the 26th United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, 2021, and share our own stories of action to frame this agenda. We accept our Responsibility for the challenges of climate justice with humility and invite others to join us. (shrink)
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  9. Pressured Into Crime: An Overview of General Strain Theory.RobertAgnew -2006 - Oxford University Press USA.
    Pressured Into Crime: An Overview of General Strain Theory by RobertAgnew provides an overview of general strain theory, one of the leading explanations of crime and delinquency, developed by author RobertAgnew. Written to be student-friendly, Pressured Into Crime features numerous real-world examples, insightful and colorful quotes from former and active criminals, clear summaries of major points, and challenging review and discussion questions at the end of each chapter.This book provides the following:* It compares and contrasts GST (...) to other leading theories of crime, including biopsychological, control, social learning, routine activities, and social disorganization theories.* It describes the evidence on GST, including the most current research on the types of strains most likely to cause crime, why these strains cause crime, and the factors that influence the effects of strains on crime.* It employs GST to explain patterns of offending over the life course as well as age, gender, class, and race/ethnic differences in offending.* It uses GST to explain community and societal differences in crime rates.* It draws on GST to make recommendations for reducing crime.* It revises and extends GST to take into account the latest research findings.Pressured Into Crime allows students to explore this major theory in depth--reviewing the research on the theory, comparing it to other theories, and applying the theory to key issues in the study of crime. (shrink)
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  10.  141
    Borders on the mind: re-framing border thinking.JohnAgnew -2008 -Ethics and Global Politics 1 (4):175-191.
    From one viewpoint, interstate borders are simple ‘artefacts on the ground’. Borders exist for a variety of practical reasons and can be classified according to the purposes they serve and how they serve them. They enable a whole host of important political, social, and economic activities. From a very different perspective, borders are artefacts of dominant discursive processes that have led to the fencing off of chunks of territory and people from one another. Such processes can change and as they (...) do, borders live on as residual phenomena that may still capture our imagination but no longer serve any essential purpose. Yet, what if, although still necessary for all sorts of reasons, borders are also inherently problematic? We need to change the way in which we think about borders to openly acknowledge their equivocal character. In other words, we need to see a border not as that which is either fixed or that as such must be overcome, but as an evolving construction that has both practical merits and demerits that must be constantly reweighed. Thinking about borders should be opened up to consider territorial spaces as ‘dwelling’ rather than national spaces and to see political responsibility for pursuit of a ‘decent life’ as extending beyond the borders of any particular state. Borders matter, then, both because they have real effects and because they trap thinking about and acting in the world in territorial terms. Keywords: borders, frontiers, decent life, dwelling, territory, heterotopia, globalization (Published online: 7 November 2008) Citation: Ethics & Global Politics. Vol. 1, No. 4, 2008, pp. 175-191. DOI: 10.3402/egp.v1i4.1892. (shrink)
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  11.  291
    Philosophy of mathematics and deductive structure in Euclid's Elements.IanMueller -1981 - Mineola, N.Y.: Dover Publications.
    A survey of Euclid's Elements, this text provides an understanding of the classical Greek conception of mathematics and its similarities to modern views as well as its differences. It focuses on philosophical, foundational, and logical questions — rather than strictly historical and mathematical issues — and features several helpful appendixes.
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  12.  34
    Correlation between preoperative Kimura inching studies and intraoperative findings during endoscopic-assisted decompression of the ulnar nerve at the elbow.Sonya PaisleyAgnew,Michael M. Minieka,Ronak M. Patel &Daniel J. Nagle -2012 - In Zdravko Radman,The Hand. MIT Press. pp. 370-373.
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  13.  37
    Investigating the Neural Basis of Theta Burst Stimulation to Premotor Cortex on Emotional Vocalization Perception: A Combined TMS-fMRI Study.Zarinah K.Agnew,Michael J. Banissy,Carolyn McGettigan,Vincent Walsh &Sophie K. Scott -2018 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12.
  14.  118
    Space, scale and culture in social science.JohnAgnew -1993 - In S. James & David Ley,Place/culture/representation. London ; New York: Routledge. pp. 251.
  15.  16
    The Sacred in Creation and the God-Intoxicated Celt?UnaAgnew -2011 -Tattva - Journal of Philosophy 3 (1):35-50.
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  16. The Causes of Animal Abuse.RobertAgnew -forthcoming -Between the Species.
     
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  17.  36
    Beings of Thought and Action: Epistemic and Practical Rationality.AndyMueller -2021 - Cambridge University Press.
    In this book, AndyMueller examines the ways in which epistemic and practical rationality are intertwined. In the first part, he presents an overview of the contemporary debates about epistemic norms for practical reasoning, and defends the thesis that epistemic rationality can make one practically irrational.Mueller proposes a contextualist account of epistemic norms for practical reasoning and introduces novel epistemic norms pertaining to ends and hope. In the second partMueller considers current approaches to pragmatic encroachment (...) in epistemology, ultimately arguing in favor of a new principle-based argument for pragmatic encroachment. While the book defends tenets of the knowledge-first programme, one of its main conclusions is thoroughly pragmatist: in an important sense, the practical has primacy over the epistemic. (shrink)
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  18. Originality-art of being oneself.U.Agnew -1976 -Humanitas 12 (1):49-58.
     
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  19. Referees for Ethics, Place and Environment, Volume 1, 1998.JohnAgnew,Ash Amin,Jacqui Burgess,Robert Chambers,Graham Chapman,Denis Cosgrove,Gouranga Dasvarma,Klaus Dodds,Sally Eden &Nick Entrikin -1998 -Ethics, Place and Environment 1 (2):269.
     
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  20.  12
    The science game.Neil McKAgnew -1969 - Englewood Cliffs, N.J.,: Prentice-Hall. Edited by Sandra W. Pyke.
  21. Sin as Alienation: On Khawaja's Interpretation of Kierkegaard.Dawn Eschenauer Chow -2018 -Existenz 13 (1):50-55.
    Noreen Khawaja's The Religion of Existence offers an interpretation of Søren Kierkegaard's account of sin and despair as an account of alienation and our struggle to overcome it. I argue that Khawaja's interpretation of Kierkegaard is incompatible with Kierkegaard's insistence that sin must necessarily be the sinner's own fault—a result of the sinner's own free choice. I consider two possible ways of harmonizing Khawaja's account with this claim, one proposing a fictive acceptance of fault for what is not actually one's (...) fault, and one based on the claim that sin presupposes sin-consciousness, but argue that neither constitutes a satisfactory solution. I conclude that while alienation does constitute sin for Kierkegaard, it does so for a different reason than Khawaja proposes. (shrink)
     
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  22.  86
    Interplay of opposites.Gustav E.Mueller -1965 -Philosophia Mathematica (2):86-87.
  23.  36
    Social Justice and the Ethics of Recognition.Dawn Jakubowski -2003 -Southwest Philosophy Review 19 (1):107-114.
  24.  35
    Vom Schönen und seiner Wahrheit.GustavMueller -1957 -Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 18 (1):136-136.
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  25.  143
    Invisible Images and Indeterminacy: Why We Need a Multi-stage Account of Photography.Dawn M. Wilson -2021 -Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 79 (2):161-174.
    Some photographs show determinate features of a scene because the photographed scene had those features. This dependency relation is, rightly, a consensus in philosophy of photography. I seek to refute many long-established theories of photography by arguing that they are incompatible with this commitment. In Section II, I classify accounts of photography as either single-stage or multi-stage. In Section III, I analyze the historical basis for single-stage accounts. In Section IV, I explain why the single-stage view led scientists to postulate (...) “latent” photographic images as a technical phenomenon in early chemical photography. In Section V, I discredit the notion of an invisible latent image in chemical photography and, in Section VI, extend this objection to the legacy of the latent image in digital photography. In Section VII, I appeal to the dependency relation to explain why the notion of a latent image makes the single-stage account untenable. Finally, I use the multi-stage account to advance debate about “new” versus “orthodox” theories of photography. (shrink)
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  26.  32
    A Comparative Perspective on the Role of Acoustic Cues in Detecting Language Structure.Jutta L.Mueller,Carel ten Cate &Juan M. Toro -2018 -Topics in Cognitive Science 12 (3):859-874.
    Mueller et al. discuss the role of acoustic cues in detecting language structure more generally. Across languages, there are clear links between acoustic cues and syntactic structure. They show that AGL experiments implementing analogous links demonstrate that prosodic cues, as well as various auditory biases, facilitate the learning of structural rules. Some of these biases, e.g. for auditory grouping, are also present in other species.
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  27.  48
    Domestication, crop breeding, and genetic modification are fundamentally different processes: implications for seed sovereignty and agrobiodiversity.Natalie G.Mueller &Andrew Flachs -2021 -Agriculture and Human Values 39 (1):455-472.
    Genetic modification of crop plants is frequently described by its proponents as a continuation of the ancient process of domestication. While domestication, crop breeding, and GM all modify the genomes and phenotypes of plants, GM fundamentally differs from domestication in terms of the biological and sociopolitical processes by which change occurs, and the subsequent impacts on agrobiodiversity and seed sovereignty. We review the history of domestication, crop breeding, and GM, and show that crop breeding and GM are continuous with each (...) other in many important ways, but represent a momentous break from domestication because they move plant evolution off of farms and into centralized institutions. The social contexts in which these processes unfold dictate who holds rights to germplasm and agricultural knowledge, shape incentives to effect particular kinds of changes in our crops, and create or constrict biodiversity. Presenting GM as a continuation of domestication puts forward a false equivalency that fundamentally misrepresents how domestication, crop breeding, and GM occur. In doing so, this narrative diminishes public understanding of these important processes and obscures the effects of industrial agriculture on in situ biodiversity and the practice of farming. This misrepresentation is used in public-facing science communication by representatives of the biotechnology industry to silence meaningful debate on GM by convincing the public that it is the continuation of an age-old process that underlies all agricultural societies. (shrink)
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  28.  27
    Enlightenment Orpheus: The Power of Music in Other Worlds.VanessaAgnew -2008 - Oup Usa.
    The Enlightenment saw a critical engagement with the ancient idea that music carries certain powers - it heals and pacifies, civilizes and educates. Yet this interest in musical utility seems to conflict with larger notions of aesthetic autonomy that emerged at the same time. In Enlightenment Orpheus, VanessaAgnew examines this apparent conflict, and provocatively questions the notion of an aesthetic-philosophical break between the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
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  29.  27
    Washington Insider - Proposed Regulations by the Executive Branch.Arina GrossuAgnew -2023 -The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 23 (2):193-208.
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  30.  11
    What is Rhythmanalysis?Dawn Lyon -forthcoming -Rhuthmos.
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  31.  6
    American Space/American Place: Geographies of the Contemporary United States.John A.Agnew &Jonathan M. Smith -2002 - Geographies of the Contemporar.
    This book offers geographical perspectives on the condition of the United States at the outset of the 21st century. It compares the American ideals of liberty, equality, individual opportunity, and social improvement with the contemporary condition of the regions, states and localities - the ideal American space with its reality as a place. It uses the public standard provided by the official ideology of the United States to see how well things are really going.
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  32.  36
    The Bubonic Plague and England. Charles F. Mullett.L.Agnew -1959 -Isis 50 (2):162-163.
  33.  24
    Jean Edouard du monin voleur de feu… d'artifice: Essai biographique.Jean Paul Barbier-Mueller &J. P. Barbier-Müller -2004 -Bibliothèque d'Humanisme Et Renaissance 66 (2):311-330.
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  34.  43
    Rufinus of Aquileia . His Life and Works By Francis X. Murphy, C.SS.R., Ph.D.UrbanMueller -1946 -Franciscan Studies 6 (2):247-248.
  35.  16
    Zur Möglichkeit und Wirklichkeit mentaler Verursachung.TobiasMueller -2013 -Philosophisches Jahrbuch 120 (1):131-143.
  36.  9
    L'Irrationalisme contemporain.Fernand LucienMueller -1970 - Paris: [Payot.
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  37. Righteousness, Eros, and Agape.Gustav E.Mueller -1957 -Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 38 (3):266.
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  38. Thoreau's Selections from Chinese Four Books for the Dial.Roger C.Mueller -1972 -Thoreau Journal Quarterly 4 (15):1-8.
  39.  23
    Civil Rights Law and the Determinants of Health: How Some States Have Utilized Civil Rights Laws to Increase Protections Against Discrimination.Dawn Pepin &Samantha Bent Weber -2019 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 47 (S2):76-79.
    One fundamental barrier to eliminating health disparities, particularly with regard to the determinants of health, is the persistence of discrimination. Civil rights law is the primary legal mechanism used to address discrimination. Federal civil rights laws have been the subject of wider analyses as a determinant of health as well as a tool to address health disparities. The research on state civil rights laws, while more limited, is growing. This article will highlight a few examples of how some states are (...) using civil rights laws to combat discrimination, particularly in more expansive ways and in the interest of new populations, presenting tools that can target determinants and address the goal of reducing health disparities. (shrink)
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  40.  21
    Hard Work and Hopefulness: A Mixed Methods Study of Music Students’ Status and Beliefs in Relation to Health, Wellbeing, and Success as They Enter Specialized Higher Education.Dawn C. Rose,Carlo Sigrist &Elena Alessandri -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Using mixed methods, we explored new music students’ concepts of wellbeing and success and their current state of wellbeing at a university music department in Switzerland. Music performance is a competitive and achievement-oriented career. Research suggests musicians face vocation-specific challenges to physical health and mental wellbeing but has yet to investigate music students’ beliefs about wellbeing and success. With a self-report questionnaire we investigated new music students’ quality of life and self-efficacy. Through qualitative workshops we explored students’ understanding of the (...) term “wellbeing,” and how this relates to “success.” Over half new music students believed the institution has 40–60% responsibility for their wellbeing. A simple linear regression showed that self-efficacy could predict better wellbeing, explaining 12% of the variance. Self-efficacy predicts wellbeing for new music students. The 17 flipcharts generated 121 inputs clustered into themes. Four themes solely described “wellbeing” and four separately depict “success”. Some themes intersected as elements of both constructs. Four further themes illustrated the relationship between the two. Music students believe responsibility for wellbeing is shared between themselves and their institution. As they scored low on both self-efficacy and wellbeing, these findings are an urgent call for action for school management and stakeholders of the music student population. (shrink)
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  41.  59
    A partial implementation of the Bica cognitive decathlon using the psychology experiment building language.Shane T.Mueller -2010 -International Journal of Machine Consciousness 2 (2):273-288.
    The Cognitive Decathlon is a proposed set of tasks that can be tested on both human and artificially intelligent agents, and which constitutes a modern specification for the Turing Test. In this paper, a partial implementation of the Cognitive Decathlon is described using the Psychology Experiment Building Language (PEBL). The tasks focus not simply on generic human abilities, but on critical skills that highlight aspects of human performance that are at odds with common artificial intelligence approaches. The differences between human (...) and algorithmic behavior in such tasks can reveal properties of the human cognitive architecture, and production of similar behavior by artificial systems can help constrain and validate biologically-inspired systems. (shrink)
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  42. Resiliency and collateral learning in science in some students of Cree ancestry.Dawn Sutherland -2005 -Science Education 89 (4):595-613.
     
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  43.  14
    GIS for science: applying mapping and spatial analytics.Dawn J. Wright,Christian Harder &Jared M. Diamond (eds.) -2020 - Redlands, California: Esri Press.
    GIS for Science presents a collection of real-world stories about modern science and a cadre of scientists who use mapping and spatial analytics to expand their understanding of the world. The accounts in this book are written for a broad audience including professional scientists, the swelling ranks of citizen scientists, and people generally interested in science and geography. Scientific data are brought to life with GIS technology to study a range of issues relevant to the functioning of planet Earth in (...) a natural sense as well as the impacts of human activity. In a race against the clock, the scientists profiled in this volume are using remote sensing, web maps within a geospatial cloud, Esri StoryMaps, and spatial analysis to document and solve an array of issues with a geographic dimension, ranging from climate change, natural disasters, and loss of biodiversity, to homelessness, loss of green infrastructure, and resource shortages. These stories present geospatial ideas and inspiration that readers can apply across many disciplines, making this volume relevant to a diverse scientific audience. See how scientists working on the world's most pressing problems apply geographic information systems--GIS. -- "Mike Goodchild". (shrink)
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  44.  118
    The Hermeneutics reader: texts of the German tradition from the Enlightenment to the present.KurtMueller-Vollmer (ed.) -1985 - New York: Continuum.
    Essays discuss reason and understanding, interpretation, language, meaning, the human sciences, social sciences, and general hermeneutic theory.
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  45.  51
    The knowledge norm of apt practical reasoning.AndyMueller -2021 -Synthese 199 (1-2):5395-5414.
    I will argue for a novel variant of the knowledge norm for practical reasoning. In Sect. 2, I will look at current variations of a knowledge norm for practical reasoning and I will provide reasons to doubt these proposals. In Sects. 3 and 4, I develop my own proposal according to which knowledge is the norm of apt practical reasoning. Section 5 considers objections. Finally, Sect. 6 concerns the normativity of my proposed knowledge norm and its significance.
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  46.  236
    Aristotle on Geometrical Objects.IanMueller -1970 -Archiv für Geschichte der Philosophie 52 (2):156-171.
  47. The meaning of ‘populism’.AxelMueller -2019 -Philosophy and Social Criticism 45 (9-10):1025-1057.
    This essay presents a novel approach to specifying the meaning of the concept of populism, on the political position it occupies and on the nature of populism. Employing analytic techniques of concept clarification and recent analytic ideology critique, it develops populism as a political kind in three steps. First, it descriptively specifies the stereotype of populist platforms as identified in extant research and thereby delimits the peculiar political position populism occupies in representative democracies as neither inclusionary nor fascist. Second, it (...) specifies on this basis analytically–normatively the particular stance towards liberal representative democracy (in particular towards popular sovereignty and democratic legitimacy) that unifies populism’s political position and explains how populist politics can be compelling for democratic citizens. The normative core (populist ideology) turns out to require no more than two general principles of legitimizing political authority by elections. Surprisingly, it does not need a separate anti-pluralist or exclusionary commitment: it entails it. Third, this normative model allows a response to a contested question in the theoretical discussion, namely, whether populism (properly specified) can be democracy-enhancing. The article defends the negative answer in virtue of the normative core alone and does so as much vis-à-vis a minimal (purely electoral) as vis-à-vis a normatively ambitious (liberal) conception of democracy. The reconstruction of the normative core of populist ideology enables a novel argument to show that populism is incompatible with the continued democratic legitimation of political authority even in the normatively most austere conception of ‘electoral democracy’, not just with ‘liberal democracy’. Assuming a normatively more ambitious concept of democratic legitimation in terms of political autonomy, the model also produces an extremely direct argument showing that populists cannot fulfil their promise of ‘taking back control’ over political decision-making to the population. (shrink)
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  48.  36
    Absolute judgment of distance as a function of induced muscle tension, exposure time, and feedback.N. M.Agnew,Sandra Pyke &Z. W. Pylyshyn -1966 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 71 (5):649.
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    5 Space: Place.JohnAgnew -2005 - In Paul Cloke & Ron Johnston,Spaces of geographical thought: deconstructing human geography's binaries. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications. pp. 81.
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  50.  27
    When is a nation not a nation? the formation of the modern Czech nation.Hugh LeCaineAgnew -1992 -History of European Ideas 15 (4-6):787-792.
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