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  1. Theory as method.Deepa S.Reddy -2015 - In Dominic Boyer, James D. Faubion & George E. Marcus,Theory can be more than it used to be: learning anthropology's method in a time of transition. London: Cornell University Press.
     
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  2.  18
    Theory can be more than it used to be: learning anthropology's method in a time of transition.Dominic Boyer,James D. Faubion &George E. Marcus (eds.) -2015 - London: Cornell University Press.
    Within anthropology, as elsewhere in the human sciences, there is a tendency to divide knowledge making into two separate poles: conceptual (theory) vs. empirical (ethnography). In Theory Can Be More than It Used to Be, Dominic Boyer, James D. Faubion, and George E. Marcus argue that we need to take a step back from the assumption that we know what theory is to investigate how theory—a matter of concepts, of analytic practice, of medium of value, of professional ideology—operates in anthropology (...) and related fields today. They have assembled a distinguished group of scholars to diagnose the state of the theory-ethnography divide in anthropology today and to explore alternative modes of analytical and pedagogical practice. Continuing the methodological insights provided in Fieldwork Is Not What It Used to Be, the contributors to this volume find that now is an optimal time to reflect on the status of theory in relation to ethnographic research in anthropology and kindred disciplines. Together they engage with questions such as, What passes for theory in anthropology and the human sciences today and why? What is theory's relation to ethnography? How are students trained to identify and respect anthropological theorization and how do they practice theoretical work in their later career stages? What theoretical experiments, languages, and institutions are available to the human sciences? Throughout, the editors and authors consider theory in practical terms, rather than as an amorphous set of ideas, an esoteric discourse of power, a norm of intellectual life, or an infinitely contestable canon of texts. A short editorial afterword explores alternative ethics and institutions of pedagogy and training in theory. Contributors: Andrea Ballestero, Rice University; Dominic Boyer, Rice University; Lisa Breglia, George Mason University; Jessica Marie Falcone, Kansas State University; James D. Faubion, Rice University; Kim Fortun, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; Andreas Glaeser, University of Chicago; Cymene Howe, Rice University; Jamer Hunt, Parsons The New School for Design and the Institute of Design in Umea, Sweden; George E. Marcus, University of California, Irvine; Townsend Middleton, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill;Deepa S.Reddy, University of Houston–Clear Lake; Kaushik Sunder Rajan, University of Chicago. (shrink)
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  3.  224
    Recruiting and Educating Participants for Enrollment in HIV-Vaccine Research: Ethical Implications of the Results of an Empirical Investigation.S. Sifunda,P.Reddy,N. Naidoo,S. James &D. Buchanan -2014 -Public Health Ethics 7 (1):78-85.
    The study reports on the results of an empirical investigation of the education and recruitment processes used in HIV vaccine trials conducted in South Africa. Interviews were conducted with 21 key informants involved in HIV vaccine research in South Africa and three focus groups of community advisory board members. Data analysis identified seven major themes on the relationship between education and recruitment: the process of recruitment, the combined dual role of educators and recruiters, conflicts perceived by field staff, pressure to (...) achieve recruitment targets, problems in achieving comprehension, accountability and education as capacity building. The results raise ethical concerns about the adequacy of current informed consent processes in these settings. The study findings bear directly on current debates about issues of exploitation and the scope of moral responsibilities of researchers and funding agencies to assure that HIV clinical prevention research is conducted ethically. (shrink)
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  4.  20
    Use of Particle Swarm Optimization for Optimal Design of Composite Channels.S. Adarsh &M. JangaReddy -2010 -Journal of Intelligent Systems 19 (3):227-248.
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  5.  40
    Mnemonic devices and natural memory.Francis S. Bellezza &B. GoverdhanReddy -1978 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 11 (5):277-280.
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  6. Author (s)/Editor (s) Keywords Publication date Publisher.GayatriReddy,Indian Politics Hijras,Sherry Joseph,M. S. M. India,Undp Who &Anti-Sodomy Law -2003 -Social Research: An International Quarterly 70 (1).
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  7.  75
    Temple publics: Religious institutions and the construction of contemporary hindu communities. [REVIEW]DeepaReddy &John Zavos -2009 -International Journal of Hindu Studies 13 (3):241-260.
  8.  39
    Interference between mnemonic and categorical organization in memory.B. GovardhanReddy &Francis S. Bellezza -1986 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 24 (3):169-171.
  9. 'Siòsòta Narasiòmha 'Såastri's Vivasvatprabhåa a Commentary on Brahmasåutra 'Såaçnkara Bhåaòsya'.âsiòsòta Narasiòmha âsåastråi,V. VenkataramanaReddy &T. S. R. Narayanan -2003 - Sri Venkateswara University, Oriental Research Institute.
     
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  10.  22
    Use of Model Tree and Gene Expression Programming to Predict the Suspended Sediment Load in Rivers.M. JangaReddy &Bhola N. S. Ghimire -2009 -Journal of Intelligent Systems 18 (3):211-228.
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  11. K-Tme: A multiple tree vidde multicast protocol for Ad Hoe wireless networks.B. Animdh,T. B.Reddy &C. S. R. Murthy -2006 - In O. Stock & M. Schaerf,Lecture Notes In Computer Science. Springer Verlag.
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  12.  7
    Assembly, sorting, and exit of oligomeric proteins from the endoplasmic reticulum.Padmalatha S.Reddy &Ronald B. Corley -1998 -Bioessays 20 (7):546-554.
    The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) uses various mechanisms to ensure that only properly folded proteins enter the secretory pathway. For proteins that oligomerize in the ER, the proper tertiary and quaternary structures must be achieved before their release. Although some proteins fold before oligomerization, others initiate oligomerization cotranslationally. Here, we discuss these different strategies and some of the unique problems they present for the ER quality control system. One mechanism used by the ER is thiol retention. Thiol retention operates by monitoring (...) the redox state of specific cysteine residue(s) and was discovered in studies on the assembly of IgM, a complex oligomeric glycoprotein. This system is also involved in retaining other unassembled proteins in the ER. Mutations that result in uneven numbers of cysteine residues can subject yet other proteins to thiol retention, altering their oligomerization status and function. The implications of these results on the effects of thiol retention on protein function and cell fate are discussed. BioEssays 20:546–554, 1998. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons Inc. (shrink)
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  13. Liberalism's Spawn : Imperialist Feminism from the 19th Century to the War on Terror.Deepa Kumar -2017 - In Alejandro Abraham-Hamanoiel,Liberalism in neoliberal times: dimensions, contradictions, limits. London: Goldsmiths Press.
     
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  14. Principle of Equality and its Practice in the Indian Context.P. S. Reddi -1997 - In Dilip Kumar Chakraborty,Perspectives in contemporary philosophy. Delhi: Ajanta Publications. pp. 168.
     
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  15.  24
    (1 other version)Jainism: art, architecture, literature & philosophy.Haripriya Rangarajan,G. Kamalakar,A. K. V. S.Reddy,M. Veerender &K. Venkatachalam (eds.) -2001 - Delhi: Sharada Pub. House.
    Papers presented at National Seminar on Jainism held in 1998 at Hyderabad?
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  16.  57
    Fine-grained Concurrency with Separation Logic.Kalpesh Kapoor,Kamal Lodaya &Uday S.Reddy -2011 -Journal of Philosophical Logic 40 (5):583-632.
    Reasoning about concurrent programs involves representing the information that concurrent processes manipulate disjoint portions of memory. In sophisticated applications, the division of memory between processes is not static. Through operations, processes can exchange the implied ownership of memory cells. In addition, processes can also share ownership of cells in a controlled fashion as long as they perform operations that do not interfere, e.g., they can concurrently read shared cells. Thus the traditional paradigm of distributed computing based on locations is replaced (...) by a paradigm of concurrent computing which is more tightly based on program structure. Concurrent Separation Logic with Permissions, developed by O’Hearn, Bornat et al., is able to represent sophisticated transfer of ownership and permissions between processes. We demonstrate how these ideas can be used to reason about fine-grained concurrent programs which do not employ explicit synchronization operations to control interference but cooperatively manipulate memory cells so that interference is avoided. Reasoning about such programs is challenging and appropriate logical tools are necessary to carry out the reasoning in a reliable fashion. We argue that Concurrent Separation Logic with Permissions provides such tools. We illustrate the logical techniques by presenting the proof of a concurrent garbage collector originally studied by Dijkstra et al., and extended by Lamport to handle multiple user processes. (shrink)
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  17.  11
    Beyond religion, cosmos is one family: address at the Parliament of the World's Religions, Chicago, 2 September, 1993.V. MadhusudanReddy -1995 - Hyderabad, India: Aurodarshan Trust.
    On spiritualism through studies in Aurobindo Ghose, 1872-1950, as a way for peace.
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  18. Introducing mankind on the march: the movement; an evolutionary history of human civilisation and a vision of man's destiny.V. MadhusudanReddy -1972 - Hyderabad, India,: Institute of Human Study.
  19.  22
    Dielectric relaxation and ion transport in silver–boro-tellurite glasses.B. Sujatha,C. NarayanaReddy &R. P. S. Chakradhar -2010 -Philosophical Magazine 90 (19):2635-2650.
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  20.  34
    Early menopause and its determinants.K. Mahadevan,M. S. R. Murthy,P. R.Reddy &Syamala Bhaskaran -1982 -Journal of Biosocial Science 14 (4):473-479.
  21.  27
    Influence of iron ions on dielectric properties of the PbO–Bi2O3–B2O3glass system.P. Venkateswara Rao,M. SrinivasaReddy,K. S. V. Sudhakar &N. Veeraiah -2008 -Philosophical Magazine 88 (11):1601-1614.
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  22. Plotinus' Experience of Time.Deepa Majumdar -2000 - Dissertation, New School for Social Research
    In Ennead III.7.11--13, Plotinus describes the genesis of time, and time's nature as the life of soul, and the moving image of eternity. In this dissertation, Ennead III.7.11--13 was read, using an exegetical method, which comprised, raising questions, and answering them, in strictly Plotinian terms, by contemplating the pieces that best fit into these puzzles. Some answers discovered were as follows. ;Before its appearance, time exists as the seed of time in Intellect. This is a state of rest because of (...) its relative unity, its participation in the genus rest, and its absence of tolma. Time's genesis comprises an eternal manifestation of a change of identity from seed to actualization. Time is generated in four logical steps. Soul becomes diluted upon its generative acts, mainly because of tolma. Soul has a far richer contemplation of Intellect underlying its genesis of the sensibles, than that underlying its genesis of time. ;Soul undergoes ontological loss in its generation of time and the sensible universe. Beginning with tolma, and the desires for autonomy unleashed by tolma, soul's multiplicity is enhanced. Yet this multiplicity is also tempered by soul's unquiet power's glance of aspiration towards Intellect. This glance is the contemplation, which fecundates soul's generation of time. Soul's power is its strength, but the unquietness of this power can indicate ontological loss. Tolma in soul incurs evil, because tolma thwarts soul from contemplating Intellect. ;The genus-species structure of soul is involved in the generation and omnipresence of time, through the actualization of the genus in its species. Time is ideally omnipresent when time is kairos. Soul is immortal and impassible, and it is only soul's activity and progeny, which are temporal. Time is the life of soul, insofar as movement is predicated of this life at three levels: the logical, the perceptible, and the spatial. Time itself is a poorer life than eternity, time itself is not alive, and yet, time is not unreal. Time is a moving image of eternity through the common predicates applied to both, which are their shared characteristics, defining the essence of the image that time constitutes. (shrink)
     
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  23.  10
    Sri Aurobindo: the grand synthesis: (an overview of his major works).V. AnandaReddy -2022 - New Delhi: Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Arts. Edited by Aurobindo Ghose.
    Sri Aurobindo: the future -- Sri Aurobindo's contribution to humanity -- Sri Aurobindo's realisations -- Spirit & significance of Indian culture -- Sri Aurobindo's revelations.
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  24.  2
    Sri Aurobindo's philosophy of evolution.V. MadhusudanReddy -1966 - Hyderabad, India,: Institute of Human Study.
  25.  30
    (2 other versions)Body, Discipline and Devotion: A Karmayogin's Journey.Kishore KumarReddy Areevidu -2016 -Heythrop Journal 61 (1):46-57.
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  26.  23
    Forging new communities: Gendered childhood through the lens of caste.Deepa Sreenivas -2010 -Feminist Theory 11 (3):267-281.
    This article focuses on the narratives of two dalit women which offer new, enabling imaginings of community that open up radical possibilities for rethinking questions of childhood and gender. These texts turn a critical gaze on an upper caste feminist practice and the discourses of childhood, schooling and emancipation that are tied to it. Childhood has been hegemonically represented as a state of innocence and vulnerability and is marked off from the world of adult anxieties and responsibilities. Such representations are (...) generally implicated in abstract, internationalist notions of child rights and remain disengaged from the historical contexts that shape children’s lives. The dominant discourse of the girl child does not problematize the field qualifying as childhood; instead, it proposes that the female child has been excluded from the same. The cause of this exclusion is identified as gender discrimination, reinforcing the primacy of sexual difference and allowing it to subsume all other forms of differences — caste, class, region or community — that exist among children. The article argues that these two narratives disrupt the neat separation between the modernizing nation/ emancipatory self and the regressive community. As each narrative takes us through the life of a dalit girl, it articulates a critique of gender as a category abstracted from material circumstances that constitute women’s lives. Gender in these narratives emerges as complexly intermeshed with caste and community. (shrink)
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  27.  40
    Mysticism and the Political: Stairway to the Good in Plato’s Allegory of the Cave.Deepa Majumdar -2007 -Philotheos 7:144-159.
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  28. A Journal of Demography.V. B. Wigglesworth,P. S. Clarke,H. George Classen,A. R. Goodwin,A. R. Ilersic,John R. Lee,O. S. R. Reddi &F. Rubimarco -1960 -The Eugenics Review 52:107.
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  29.  30
    Speech understanding systems.M. F. Medress,F. S. Cooper,J. W. Forgie,C. C. Green,D. H. Klatt,M. H. O'Malley,E. P. Neuburg,A. Newell,D. R.Reddy,B. Ritea,J. E. Shoup-Hummel,D. E. Walker &W. A. Woods -1977 -Artificial Intelligence 9 (3):307-316.
  30.  87
    The dicey problem of new age science: Einstein, Hawking, and God at the casino.DwaraknathReddy -2002 - Chittoor, [Andhra Pradesh]: Dwaraknath Reddy.
    Order flows from consistent laws. Our understanding of our universe is changing, but Reality behind it is unchanged. Einstein's relativity amended Newtonian determinism, and was in turn amended by quantum mechanics. Einstein saw a harmonious advance in knowledge, and said, 'God does not play dice'; but Stephen Hawking later saw a radical departure, and said, 'God is a gambler.' This author, a keen student of philosophy with a moderate background of science, sees in these conflicting conclusions the inevitable distortion when (...) 'the relative' is projected on to 'the Absolute'. Therefore he says, 'Do not worry about God. He is not a visiting player like you and me, but the absolute owner of the casino. When He plays, His left hand picks up what His right hand loses. His status remains unaltered. We had better be looking out for ourselves.' The serious point made is that the Absolute includes and exceeds the time-space-causation frame of relativity, and these parameters cannot cross the border. The limitations must be clearly understood. 'Time' of physics is enought to study kinetic processes but not to locate the creative potential. That requires 'time' of our conscious awareness. But bio-science mistakes consciousness to be a product of brain-cells. In truth, consciousness is the energy, and brain is the equipment through which it manifests. Thus TIME is the Achilles' heel of physics, and MIND is the Achilles' heel of biology. The name of Reality is Total Consciousness. It is eternal. Death was never born, and life never died. (shrink)
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  31.  26
    The Role of One’s Motive in Meditation Practices and Prosociality.J. Shashi KiranReddy &Sisir Roy -2019 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 13.
  32.  22
    Puppeteer Putin.Deepa Majumdar -2022 -Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 6 (4):32-47.
    In this essay, the author regards the individual as the chief courier of History, and Mr. Putin, the immediate cause of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine – distinguishing his agency from broad precipitating socio-historical causes that deny inwardness, individuality, and free-will. A dark puppeteer, Mr. Putin is more sinister than Plato’s puppeteers (Allegory of the Cave). This invasion raises at least three questions: (1) Why has the west not responded as much to other recent non-western wars and genocides? Why have Europe’s (...) former colonies not protested Russia more vigorously? (2) Why do armed forces obey cultishly, the commands of autocratic heads of state? (3) How do we prevent autocrats from occupying positions of power? Western hedonism and Putin’s puritanism are opposites that cannot resolve one another. Moreover, Ukraine reminds us that non-violence, patriotism, defiance – even war – cannot be moral absolutes. Depending on the context, they are good, evil, or something in between. (shrink)
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  33. Harnessing Advanced Technologies for Global Health Equity.Peter A. Singer,Archana Bhatt,Sarah E. Frew,Heather Greenwood,Jocelyn Mackie,Dilnoor Panjwani,Deepa L. Persad,Fabio Salamanca-Buentello,Béatrice Séguin,Andrew D. Taylor,Halla Thorsteinsdóttir &Abdallah S. Daar -2008 - In Ronald Michael Green, Aine Donovan & Steven A. Jauss,Global bioethics: issues of conscience for the twenty-first century. New York: Oxford University Press.
  34.  204
    On being the object of attention: Implications for self-other consciousness.VasudeviReddy -2003 -Trends in Cognitive Sciences 7 (9):397-402.
    Joint attention to an external object at the end of the first year is typically believed to herald the infant's discovery of other people's attention. I will argue that mutual attention in the first months of life already involves an awareness of the directednesss of attention. The self is experienced as the first object of this directedness followed by gradually more distal 'objects'. this view explains early infant affective self-consciousness within mutual attention as emotionally meaningful, rather than as bearing only (...) a spurious similarity to that in the second and third years of life. Such engagements precede and must inform, rather than derive from, conceptual representations of self and other, and can be better described as self-other conscious affects. (shrink)
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  35.  41
    Distance Makes the Heart Grow Colder: MNEs’ Responses to the State Logic in African Variants of CSR.Ralph Hamann &Colin DavidReddy -2018 -Business and Society 57 (3):562-594.
    The question of how multinational enterprises respond to local corporate social responsibility expectations remains salient, also in the context of many African governments’ attempts to define and regulate business responsibilities. What determines whether MNEs respond to such local, state-driven expectations as congruent with their global commitment to CSR? Adopting an institutional logics perspective, we argue that a higher global CSR commitment will lead to higher local responsiveness when regulatory distance is low, but it will lead to lower local responsiveness when (...) regulatory distance is high. We find support for our hypothesis using data on 93 MNEs’ responses to the South African state’s Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment policy. We thus contribute to the global–local CSR literature and show how MNEs’ local CSR responsiveness will be shaped by not only the local context but also their home country and firm-internal environments. (shrink)
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  36.  23
    Increasing Full Child Immunization Rates by Government Using an Innovative Computerized Immunization Due List in Rural India.Enakshi Ganguly,Rahul Gupta,Alik Widge,R. PurushothamReddy,K. Balasubramanian &P. S.Reddy -2018 -Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 55:004695801775129.
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  37.  53
    Dialogue in the making: emotional engagement with materials.Ingar Brinck &VasudeviReddy -2020 -Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 19 (1):23-45.
    Taking a psychological and philosophical outlook, we approach making as an embodied and embedded skill via the skilled artisan’s experience of having a corporeal, nonlinguistic dialogue with the material while working with it. We investigate the dynamic relation between maker and material through the lens of pottery as illustrated by wheel throwing, claiming that the experience of dialogue signals an emotional involvement with clay. The examination of Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology of habit, the skilled intentionality framework, and material engagement theory shows that (...) while these theories explain complementary aspects of skillful engagement with the material world, they do not consider the dialogic dimension. By way of explanation, we submit that the artisan’s emotional engagement with the material world is based in openness and recognition and involves dialogue with the material. Drawing on the intimate relationship between movement and emotion, it promotes an open-ended manner of working and permits experiencing with the material, acting into its inherent possibilities. In conclusion, we suggest that dialogue, whether verbal or nonverbal, constitutes a primary means for making sense of the world at large, animate and inanimate. (shrink)
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  38.  22
    Joining Intentions in infancy.V.Reddy -2015 -Journal of Consciousness Studies 22 (1-2):24-44.
    In order to understand how infants come to understand others' intentions we need first to study how intentional engagements occur in early development. Engaging with intentions requires that they are, first of all, potentially available to perception and, second, that they are meaningful to the perceiver. I argue that in typical development it is in the infant's responses to others' infant-directed intentional actions that others' intentions first become meaningful. And that it is through the meaningful joining of intentions that understanding (...) continues to develop. I use three common arenas in the first year to illustrate this claim: infants' anticipatory adjustments to being picked up, infants' emerging compliance to others' directives, and infant teasing. Even by the age of two months infants adjust their postures appropriately, gazing at the adult's face as they approach with arms outstretched to pick them up. From the middle of the first year infants come to recognize the meanings of verbal directives and start to comply with them, being drawn further into the cultural worlds of their families. In the last quarter of the first year infants start to playfully tease and foil others' intentions in a variety of ways, actively redirecting the course of intentional engagements. Others' intentions are thus increasingly available to infants, allowing cooperation, challenge, and further elaboration. Joint intentional actions are best understood as the processes through which intention awareness develops rather than just as the products of such awareness. (shrink)
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  39. Participants don't need theories : Knowing minds in engagement.VasudeviReddy &Paul Morris -2004 -Theory and Psychology 14 (5):647-665.
    The theory-theory is not supported by evidence in the everyday actions of infants and toddlers whose lives a Theory of Mind is meant radically to transform. This paper reviews some of these challenges to the theory-theory, particularly from communication and deception. We argue that the theory’s disconnection from action is both inevitable and paradoxical. The mind–behaviour dualism upon which it is premised requires a conceptual route to knowing minds and disallows a real test of the theory through the study of (...) action. Taking engagement seriously avoids these problems and requires that both lay people and psychologists be participants rather than observers in order to know, and indeed to create, minds. (shrink)
     
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  40.  28
    Marketing to Bottom-of-the-Pyramid Consumers in an Emerging Market: The Responses of Mainstream Consumers.Reetika Gupta,Deepa Chandrasekaran,Sankar Sen &Tanvi Gupta -forthcoming -Journal of Business Ethics:1-17.
    Many companies are now targeting the sizeable segment of consumers in Bottom-of-the-pyramid (BoP) markets with new products to specifically address their needs. As mainstream consumers become aware of these initiatives, their views on what products may be construed as appropriate for BoP marketplaces, may influence their attitudes towards the companies engaging in BoP activities. We propose that when the mainstream consumers are culturally distant from the BoP consumers, they have less favourable attitudes towards a company marketing a hedonic product to (...) BoP consumers, compared to a utilitarian one. However, when the mainstream consumers are culturally closer to the BoP consumers, they are less likely to react negatively to a company’s marketing of a hedonic product compared to a utilitarian one. We theorize that these differences in evaluation are based on the mainstream consumers’ expectations regarding the products a company would/should target towards BoP consumers. We also examine two company characteristics (country-of-origin and profit orientation) as contingency factors affecting the attitudes of culturally close mainstream consumers towards companies engaging in BoP practices. Across two studies, we find support for our hypotheses. This research adds to a new stream of scholarship that theorizes about the permissible consumption mindset of mainstream consumers. The research also provides guidance to marketing managers and communication experts to help build favourable company attitudes and minimize any mainstream negativity towards a company’s marketing initiatives in the BoP domain. (shrink)
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  41.  39
    Playful teasing and the emergence of pretence.VasudeviReddy,Emma Williams &Alan Costall -2022 -Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 21 (5):1023-1041.
    The study of the emergence of pretend play in developmental psychology has generally been restricted to analyses of children’s play with toys and everyday objects. The widely accepted criteria for establishing pretence are the child’s manipulation of object identities, attributes or existence. In this paper we argue that there is another arena for pretending—playful pretend teasing—which arises earlier than pretend play with objects and is therefore potentially relevant for understanding the more general emergence of pretence. We present examples of playful (...) pretend teasing in infancy before and around the end of the first year, involving pretend communicative gestures, mis-labelling and almost non-compliance with prohibitions. We argue that the roots of pretence not only lie earlier in human infancy than generally acknowledged, but also are rooted in playful emotional exchanges in which people recognise and respond to violations of communicative gestures and agreements. (shrink)
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  42.  67
    Motivations for entry into sex work and hiv risk among mobile female sex workers in india.Niranjan Saggurti,Ravi K. Verma,Shiva S. Halli,Suvakanta N. Swain,Rajendra Singh,HanimiReddy Modugu,Saumya Ramarao,Bidhubhusan Mahapatra &Anrudh K. Jain -2011 -Journal of Biosocial Science 43 (5):535-554.
  43.  2
    Before the 'Third Element': understanding attention to self.VasudeviReddy -2005 - In Naomi Eilan, Christoph Hoerl, Teresa McCormack & Johannes Roessler,Joint Attention: Communication and Other Minds: Issues in Philosophy and Psychology. Oxford, GB: Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 85--109.
    The entry of an external object or the ‘third element’ into the dyad is generally taken as necessary for evidence of an understanding of others' attention, leading to an equating of the terms joint attention and awareness of attention. This chapter considers meta-theoretical and methodological reasons for psychology's disregard of mutual attention in this context and provides an alternative account of the emergence and development of attention awareness. Through the course of the first year human infants show a range of (...) emotional reactions to mutual attention and an increasingly complex range of attempts to regain it when it is absent or retain it when it is present. Prior to the onset of joint attention involving distal objects, mutual attentional engagements expand from an awareness of the self as an ‘object’ of others' attention to an awareness of the infant's own actions and expressions as ‘objects’. Providing the most direct experience of others' attention, mutual attention not only also reveals an awareness of attention but is the basis upon which further appropriate development of attention awareness can occur. (shrink)
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  44.  31
    Understanding Meditation Based on the Subjective Experience and Traditional Goal: Implications for Current Meditation Research.J. Shashi KiranReddy &Sisir Roy -2019 -Frontiers in Psychology 10:435870.
    Owing to its benefits on various cognitive aspects, one’s emotions and wellbeing, meditation has drawn interest from several researchers and common public alike. We have different meditation practices associated with many cultures and traditions across the globe. Current literature suggests significant changes in the neural activity among the different practices of meditation, as each of these practices contributes to distinct physiological and psychological effects. Although this is the case, we want to find out if there is an underlying commonality among (...) all these different practices. So, we ask the following questions related to different practices of meditation, the traditional goal of meditation and its significance - What is the central purpose of meditation? Do traditions define the final goal of all the practices of meditation? Are the purpose and goal of these practices different or is there a common goal to be attained through all these distinct practices? Embracing the traditional perspective, through this paper, we want to emphasize, although these techniques and practices may appear different on the periphery, eventually, they seem to subject one to the same experience at the end; a natural meditative state (discussed in various spiritual traditions as the goal of meditation). In view of future studies on different meditation practices and also those exploring this subjective state, we offer some interesting ideas based on the traditional insights on meditation. In this context, we would also like to make a few comments on the way contemporary researchers view different practices of meditation. (shrink)
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  45.  70
    Before the `Third Element': Understanding Attention to Self.VasudeviReddy -2005 - In Naomi Eilan, Christoph Hoerl, Teresa McCormack & Johannes Roessler,Joint Attention: Communication and Other Minds: Issues in Philosophy and Psychology. Oxford, GB: Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 85--109.
    The entry of an external object or the ‘third element’ into the dyad is generally taken as necessary for evidence of an understanding of others' attention, leading to an equating of the terms joint attention and awareness of attention. This chapter considers meta-theoretical and methodological reasons for psychology's disregard of mutual attention in this context and provides an alternative account of the emergence and development of attention awareness. Through the course of the first year human infants show a range of (...) emotional reactions to mutual attention and an increasingly complex range of attempts to regain it when it is absent or retain it when it is present. Prior to the onset of joint attention involving distal objects, mutual attentional engagements expand from an awareness of the self as an ‘object’ of others' attention to an awareness of the infant's own actions and expressions as ‘objects’. Providing the most direct experience of others' attention, mutual attention not only also reveals an awareness of attention but is the basis upon which further appropriate development of attention awareness can occur. (shrink)
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  46.  29
    Ideology, discourse and social theory: André Du Toit's contribution to South African studies.ThivenReddy -2000 -South African Journal of Philosophy 19 (4):405-416.
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  47. Judicial Process, Thomson Reuters, 2019 (Book Review). [REVIEW]Deepa Kansra -2020 -Banaras Law Journal 49.
    Judicial process is an integral part of legal systems. The process rests primarily on established principles of constitutional governance and responsibility. In the last ten years, the dynamism within judicial institutions and the judicial process has gained considerable attention. The dynamism is often viewed in light of the diversity of claims being addressed, the openness of courts to foreign material, and the use of non-legal studies and findings in court proceedings. How one views the judicial process in the traditional sense, (...) and in the light of the new experiences is an important question today. Also, what new theories explain this public sphere of activity? -/- In this regard, Dr. Pathak’s book "Judicial Process" is a noteworthy contribution. The book explores the complex nature of the judicial process, along with its wider constitutional, political, and social relevance. The book builds on an understanding that the judicial process, the courts, and the judges are central to constitutional governance. With that backdrop, it engages with four aspects of the judicial process, including (1) the nature of the judicial process, (2) the engagements and interactions within the judiciary, (3) the engagements and interactions between the courts and other institutions, and (4) the protection of rights and redressal of violations function performed by courts. -/- The book includes a detailed discussion on key concepts, practices, tests, and principles. The following chapters and discussions are particularly interesting. Chapter one involves a jurisprudential take on the subject while referring to the works of Blackstone, Holmes, and Cardozo. Particularly relevant in chapter one are Indian cases that have cited Cardozo while determining important judicial matters. Further, the chapter includes foreign case law which has been cited by the Indian courts to discuss the nature of the judicial process. Chapter three on Judicial Review discusses the scope of judicial review in India and its centralizing force in constitutional governance. The author carefully explores the expansion in a judicial capacity for review. The chapter highlights the dynamism attached to the practice of judicial review, moving from the review of constitutional amendments, to that of laws, administrative actions, and policy. Further, the chapter includes a discussion on the basic structure of the Indian Constitution. Chapter four on Law of Precedent includes a discussion on stare decisis, which the author refers to as a principle conferring legitimacy and stability to the judicial system. Recent scholarship on the nature of obiter dicta of higher courts and persuasive quality of foreign case law in domestic cases has been cited. Chapter five covers the Independence of the Judiciary debates in India. It discusses the issue of post-retirement appointments of judges and recusal from judicial matters. Chapter eight Judicial Activism traces the development of the concept from its early days to the present times. The chapter adopts the five core meanings offered by Keenan Kmiec to substantiate the old and the new avatars of judicial activism. The chapter discusses the role of social action litigation in India and its hand in defining the judiciary as a protector of rights and constitutional values. -/- The book provides sufficient guidance to study the nature of the judicial process. It also makes one curious about the changing nature of the judicial process and the new waves of constitutional ethics and governance. The following are some of the themes not attended to in the book. First, the judgments of the courts. The written judgments constitute an integral part of the judicial process. The judgments constitute public law reaching out to beneficiaries including litigants, people at large, as well as foreign institutions and courts. That being said, a discussion on judgements and the written or unwritten standards governing the same needs attention. Also included in this point is the role of dissenting judgments. How should one view or study dissent in judgments of constitutional significance? A normative framework to study the same is much needed. Second, the tools and indicators to measure judicial impact. The judicial impact can include (a) the impact of judicial decisions on the law, policy, and society (b) the impact of law/legislation on the judicial process, and (c) the impact of technological and scientific advancements on the judicial process. Tools like judicial impact assessment have been widely argued to be important to the working of the courts. Further, parameters to study compliance, policy integration, and the impact of judicial decisions on other state institutions have gained attention. (shrink)
     
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  48.  13
    The Brahmo Dharma Debate: Part 1.Deepa Nag Haksar -2018 -Journal of the Indian Council of Philosophical Research 35 (3):513-548.
    From the perspective of philosophy of religion, Part 1 of this essay examines the original vision of the faith ‘Brahmo Dharma’ as ‘Reform Hinduism’, a ‘sect’ within the larger religious tradition as ‘Vedantic monotheism’ founded by Raja Rammohun Roy in 1828—with the nineteenth-century ‘Bengal Renaissance’ in the background. Roy questioned the authority of revelation given in the Brahmanas in the Vedic Scriptures and endeavoured a democratization of the Vedanta, rejecting the caste system as well as idolatry. It charts the transition (...) of the Faith from ‘Reform Hinduism’ to Debendranath Tagore’s Codification given in his book Brahmo Dharma, 1850, interpreting it as an ‘independent religion’, not adhering to the authority of the Vedas including the Vedanta or any other religious scripture. This essay marks the recent legal claim in Supreme Court of the Brahmo Samaj that its Faith ‘Brahmo Dharma’ is non-Hindu, and as an ‘independent religion’, it is deserving of ‘minority’ status. The role of British colonialism pertaining to the legal history of ‘Brahmo Dharma’ is reviewed here to bring forward Brahmo Samaj’s contemporary claim of ‘Brahmo Dharma’ being ‘non-Hindu’. Focusing on ‘religious reform’ as primary to ‘social reform’, in this context, this essay reflects upon the interpretation of the Faith—arguing that ‘reform in religion’ ought to be recognizable in law, not merely customs and rituals, considering ‘the Spirit of the Faith’ which is essentially ‘Upanishad–Vedanta’. (shrink)
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  49.  16
    Getting back to the rough ground: deception and 'social living'.VasudeviReddy -2007 - In Nathan Emery, Nicola Clayton & Chris Frith,Social Intelligence: From Brain to Culture. Oxford University Press.
    At the heart of the social intelligence hypothesis is the central role of ‘social living’. But living is messy and psychologists generally seek to avoid this mess in the interests of getting clean data and cleaner logical explanations. The study of deception as intelligent action is a good example of the dangers of such avoidance. We still do not have a full picture of the development of deceptive actions in human infants and toddlers or an explanation of why it emerges. (...) This paper applies Byrne & Whiten’s functional taxonomy of tactical deception to the social behaviour of human infants and toddlers using data from three previous studies. The data include a variety of acts, such as teasing, pretending, distracting and concealing, which are not typically considered in relation to human deception. This functional analysis shows the onset of non-verbal deceptive acts to be surprisingly early. Infants and toddlers seem to be able to communicate false information (about themselves, about shared meanings and about events) as early as true information. It is argued that the development of deception must be a fundamentally social and communicative process and that if we are to understand why deception emerges at all, the scientist needs to get ‘back to the rough ground’ as Wittgenstein called it and explore the messy social lives in which it develops. (shrink)
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  50.  24
    A hybrid particle swarm optimization with multi-objective clustering for dermatologic diseases diagnosis.R. Nagaraja &RavinderReddy Baireddy -2022 -Journal of Intelligent Systems 31 (1):876-890.
    Effective and personalized treatment relies heavily on skin disease categorization. In the stratification of skin disorders, it is crucial to identify the subtypes of illnesses to provide an efficient therapy. To attain this aim, researchers have focused their attention on cluster algorithms for the stratification of skin disorders in recent decades. But, cluster algorithms have real-world drawbacks, including experimental noises, a large number of dimensions, and a poor ability to comprehend. Cluster algorithms, in particular, determine the quality of clusters using (...) a single internal evaluation operation in the majority of cases. A single internal assessment procedure is difficult to design and robust for all datasets, which is a problem. The multi-objective particle swarm obtained high sensitivity in the existing work, but it is not able to anticipate all kinds of classes. An optimized cluster distance parameter for K-means clustering is determined using a hybrid particle swarm and moth flame optimization. Multi-objective is guided by two cluster value indices, including the K-means clustering misclassification rate and neural network classification rate. Hybrid PSO will solve the multi-objective problem to identify the optimal cluster for clustering. On the dermatological dataset from the UCI repository, MATLAB R2020a will be used to evaluate the proposed method. This will be followed by an evaluation of the proposed method’s performance using the cluster evaluation indices. (shrink)
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