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Results for 'Irene Cárcel Ejarque'

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  1.  16
    Los restos documentales del perpetrador: imágenes y textos.IreneCárcelEjarque &Juanjo Monsell Corts -forthcoming -Thémata Revista de Filosofía.
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  2.  22
    The Documentary Remains of the Perpetrator: Images and Texts.IreneCárcelEjarque &Juanjo Monsell Corts -forthcoming -Thémata Revista de Filosofía.
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  3. Briefe durch die Mauer: Briefwechsel 1954-1998 zwischen Ernst & Karola Bloch und Jürgen & Johanna Teller.Jan Robert Bloch,Welf Schröter &Irene Scherer (eds.) -2009 - Mössingen-Talheim: Talheimer.
     
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  4. An fMRI study measuring analgesia enhanced by religion as a belief system.Katja Wiech,Miguel Farias,Guy Kahane,Nicholas Shackel,Wiebke Tiede &Irene Tracey -unknown
    Although religious belief is often claimed to help with physical ailments including pain, it is unclear what psychological and neural mechanisms underlie the influence of religious belief on pain. By analogy to other top-down processes of pain modulation we hypothesized that religious belief helps believers reinterpret the emotional significance of pain, leading to emotional detachment from it. Recent findings on emotion regulation support a role for the right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex, a region also important for driving top-down pain inhibitory circuits. (...) Using functional magnetic resonance imaging in practicing Catholics and avowed atheists and agnostics during painful stimulation, here we show the existence of a context-dependent form of analgesia that was triggered by the presentation of an image with a religious content but not by the presentation of a non-religious image. As confirmed by behavioral data, contemplation of the religious image eneabled the religious group to detach themselves from the experience of pain. Critically, this context-dependent modulation of pain specifically engaged the right VLPFC, whereas group-specific preferential liking of one of the pictures was associated with activation in the ventral midbrain. We suggest that religious belief might provide a framework that allows individuals to engage known pain-regulatory brain processes. (shrink)
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  5.  28
    Concept determination of human dignity.Margareta Edlund,Lillemor Lindwall,Iréne von Post &Unni Å Lindström -2013 -Nursing Ethics 20 (8):851-860.
    This study presents findings from an ontological and contextual determination of the concept of dignity. The study had a caritative and caring science perspective and a hermeneutical design. The aim of this study was to increase caring science knowledge of dignity and to gain a determination of dignity as a concept. Eriksson’s model for conceptual determination is made up of five part-studies. The ontological and contextual determination indicates that dignity can be understood as absolute dignity, the spiritual dimension characterized by (...) responsibility, freedom, duty, and service, and relative dignity, characterized by the bodily, external aesthetic dimension and the psychical, inner ethical dimension. Dignity exists in human beings both as absolute and relative dignity. (shrink)
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  6.  32
    Twelve Tips for Getting Published in Business & Society.Dirk Matten,Bryan W. Husted,Irene Henriques &Andrew Crane -2017 -Business and Society 56 (1):3-10.
  7.  71
    Problematic Social Situations for Peer-Rejected Students in the First Year of Elementary School.Luis J. Martín-Antón,María Inés Monjas,Francisco J. García Bacete &Irene Jiménez-Lagares -2016 -Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  8.  45
    “As long as that is my hand, that willed action is mine”: Timing of agency triggered by body ownership.Dalila Burin,Maria Pyasik,Irene Ronga,Marco Cavallo,Adriana Salatino &Lorenzo Pia -2018 -Consciousness and Cognition 58:186-192.
  9.  242
    Response to professor Huang Siu-Chi's review of "knowledge painfully acquired", by lo ch'in-Shun and translated byIrene Bloom.Irene Bloom -1989 -Philosophy East and West 39 (4):459-463.
  10.  25
    Leadership and Political Institutions in India.Kenneth Ballhatchet,Richard L. Park &Irene Tinker -1961 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 81 (3):317.
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  11.  65
    Conceptual expansion and creative imagery as a function of psychoticism.Anna Abraham,Sabine Windmann,Irene Daum &Onur Güntürkün -2005 -Consciousness and Cognition 14 (3):520-534.
    The ability to be creative is often considered a unique characteristic of conscious beings and many efforts have been directed at demonstrating a relationship between creativity and the personality construct of psychoticism. The present study sought to investigate this link explicitly by focusing on discrete facets of creative cognition, namely the originality/novelty dimension and the practicality/usefulness dimension. Based on Eysenck’s conceptualisation of psychoticism as being characterised by an overinclusive cognitive style, it was expected that higher levels of psychoticism would accompany (...) a greater degree of conceptual expansion and elevated levels of originality in creative imagery, but would be unrelated to the practicality/usefulness of an idea. These hypotheses were confirmed in 80 healthy participants who were contrasted based on their EPQ psychoticism scale scores. Our findings suggest that the link between psychoticism and creativity is based on associative thinking and broader but weak top-down activation patterns rather than on goal-related thinking. (shrink)
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  12. An empirical study on using visual embellishments in visualization.Rita Borgo,Alfie Abdul-Rahman,Farhan Mohamed,Philip W. Grant,Irene Reppa,Luciano Floridi &Men Chin -2012 -IEEE Transactions on Visualization and Computer Graphics 18 (12):2759–2768.
    In written and spoken communications, figures of speech (e.g., metaphors and synecdoche) are often used as an aid to help convey abstract or less tangible concepts. However, the benefits of using rhetorical illustrations or embellishments in visualization have so far been inconclusive. In this work, we report an empirical study to evaluate hypotheses that visual embellishments may aid memorization, visual search and concept comprehension. One major departure from related experiments in the literature is that we make use of a dual-task (...) methodology in our experiment. This design offers an abstraction of typical situations where viewers do not have their full attention focused on visualization (e.g., in meetings and lectures). The secondary task introduces “divided attention”, and makes the effects of visual embellishments more observable. In addition, it also serves as additional masking in memory-based trials. The results of this study show that visual embellishments can help participants better remember the information depicted in visualization. On the other hand, visual embellishments can have a negative impact on the speed of visual search. The results show a complex pattern as to the benefits of visual embellishments in helping participants grasp key concepts from visualization. (shrink)
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  13.  24
    Consumer Motivation in Developed Economies With Secular Stagnation.Fernando Evaristo Callejas-Albiñana,Irene Martín de Vidales Carrasco,Isabel Martínez-Rodríguez &Ana Isabel Callejas-Albiñana -2019 -Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  14.  64
    Is the qualitative research interview an acceptable medium for research with palliative care patients and carers?Marjolein Gysels,Cathy Shipman &Irene J. Higginson -2008 -BMC Medical Ethics 9 (1):7-.
    BackgroundContradictory evidence exists about the emotional burden of participating in qualitative research for palliative care patients and carers and this raises questions about whether this type of research is ethically justified in a vulnerable population. This study aimed to investigate palliative care patients' and carers' perceptions of the benefits and problems associated with open interviews and to understand what causes distress and what is helpful about participation in a research interview.MethodsA descriptive qualitative study. The data were collected in the context (...) of two studies exploring the experiences of care of palliative care patients and carers. The interviews ended with questions about patients' and carers' thoughts on participating in the studies and whether this had been a distressing or helpful event. We used a qualitative descriptive analysis strategy generated from the interviews and the observational and interactional data obtained in the course of the study.ResultsThe interviews were considered helpful: sharing problems was therapeutic and being able to contribute to research was empowering. However, thinking about the future was reported to be the most challenging. Consent forms were sometimes read with apprehension and being physically unable to sign was experienced as upsetting. Interviewing patients and carers separately was sometimes difficult and not always possible.ConclusionThe open interview enables the perspectives of patients and carers to be heard, unfettered from the structure of closed questions. It also enables those patients or carers to take part who would be unable to participate in other study designs. The context is at least as important as the format of the research interview taking into account the relational circumstances with carers and appropriate ways of obtaining informed consent. Retrospective consent could be a solution to enhancing participants control over the interview. (shrink)
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  15.  31
    Space of the cineclub of death to create mental health in the academic community.Janaina Luiza dos Santos,Ana Carolina Ferreira Castanho,Alexandre Diniz Breder,Lilian Cláudia Ulian Junqueira,Benita Caetano Lima de Souza,Yasmin de Miranda Sant’ Ana Valle,Ana Claudia Moreira Monteiro &Irene Bulcão -2024 -Prometeica - Revista De Filosofía Y Ciencias 30:300-312.
    La película es una expresión artística que permite a los estudiantes entrar en contacto con temas sensibles, como la muerte, el duelo y los cuidados paliativos. Este Proyecto de Extensión tiene como objetivo describir la experiencia de la comunidad académica de una Universidad Federal de Río de Janeiro con el Cineclube da Morte. Su propuesta metodológica es producir procesos de aprendizaje con el propósito de difundir y dilucidar temas relacionados con la finitud humana y cualquier tema que permea la muerte (...) para los académicos, ayudándolos en la construcción de ese conocimiento, acogiéndolos a la salud mental y apoyándolos en el dolor derivado de la muerte. Temas difíciles sobre la muerte y la pérdida, que impregnan la vida cotidiana. El Proyecto realiza encuentros mensuales promoviendo la proyección de películas y su reflexión, así como espacios de experiencias personales, donde el público se divide en pequeños grupos de discusión, se comparten historias personales, se introducen conceptos y docentes de enfermería y psicología apoyan y Para casos más complejos, todo este proceso dura una media de 3h30. Al final de las reuniones, se pone a disposición vía correo electrónico un formulario de Google con las preguntas: ¿Qué punto de la discusión te llamó la atención? ¿Qué aprendiste de esta reunión? A través de estas respuestas se está construyendo una base de datos para que pueda haber mejoras. En cada encuentro se viven nuevas experiencias, se comparten nuevas historias y se comienzan a discutir y desmitificar temas tabú como la “muerte”, posibilitando nuevas formas de gestión y atención humanizada de los pacientes en cuidados paliativos y de los distintos duelos vividos. (shrink)
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  16.  23
    NACHWEIS AUS RICHARD ANTHONY PROCTOR, UNSER STANDPUNKT IM WELTALL (1877): mitgeteilt vonIrene Treccani.Irene Treccani -2019 -Nietzsche Studien 48 (1):327-329.
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  17.  30
    Indonesisch-Deutsches Wörterbuch. Kamus Bahasa Indonesia-DjermanIndonesisch-Deutsches Worterbuch. Kamus Bahasa Indonesia-Djerman.John M. Echols,Otto Karow &Irene Hilgers-Hesse -1981 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 101 (4):495.
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  18. Cross-sector collaboration for public value co-creation : a critical analysis.Alessandro Sancino,James Rees &Irene Schindele -2019 - In Margaret Stout,From austerity to abundance?: creative approaches to coordinating the common good. Bingley, UK: Emerald Publishing.
     
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  19.  31
    Jewish identification and critical theory: The political significance of conceptual categories.Shana Sippy,Sarah Imhoff,Aaron Gross,Jay Geller,Irene Silverblatt,Jonathan Boyarin &Annalise E. Glauz-Todrank -2014 -Critical Research on Religion 2 (2):165-194.
    This symposium examines how various discursive frameworks inform Jewish and non-Jewish interpretations of Jewishness. Although the specific characteristics of these frameworks are context-dependent, the underlying themes remain the same: Jewish identification entails identifying “difference,” and this process of drawing distinctions between Jews and non-Jews gets developed in discursive frameworks of temporality, “race thinking,” nationalism, and genetics, among others. In the broader contexts within which Jewish identification is formulated, these frameworks serve to: delineate categories of people on the basis of socially (...) salient qualities associated with human and other bodies; evaluate these categorical “types” in regard to their determined “desirable” and “undesirable” qualities; implement institutionally sanctioned measures that facilitate the privileging of the people who apparently embody desired qualities; and enforce structural constraints within which people may choose to contest, re-inscribe, re-appropriate, and/or attempt to transform components of the other three networks mentioned above. It also emphasizes the significance of who mobilizes these discourses, with what objectives in mind, and how both factors instantiate discursive and discursively informed concretized outcomes. (shrink)
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  20.  17
    Doing Bodies in YouTube Videos about Contested Illnesses.Jenny Slatman,Sanneke de Haan &Irene Groenevelt -2022 -Body and Society 28 (4):28-52.
    This article is based on an online ethnographic study of Dutch women who use YouTube as a medium to document their contested illness experiences. During 13 months of observations between 2017 and 2019, we followed a sample of 16 YouTubers, and conducted an in-depth analysis of 30 YouTube videos and of 7 interviews. By adopting a ‘praxiographic’ approach to social media, and by utilising insights from phenomenological theory, this study teases out how bodies are ‘done’ in (the making of) these (...) YouTube videos. We describe three types of bodies: (1) inert bodies, (2) experienced bodies, and (3) authentic bodies. Ultimately, this study shows how vlogging about contested illness is a practice in which bodies are continually (re)configured, and through which the ‘invisibility’ of a sufferer’s condition can obtain social visibility. (shrink)
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  21.  482
    Semantics in generative grammar.Irene Heim &Angelika Kratzer -1998 - Malden, MA: Blackwell. Edited by Angelika Kratzer.
    Written by two of the leading figures in the field, this is a lucid and systematic introduction to semantics as applied to transformational grammars of the ...
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  22.  14
    Innovación o moda: las pedagogías activas en el actual modelo educativo. Una reflexión sobre las metodologías emergidas.Andrés Torres Carceller -2019 -Voces de la Educación 4 (8):3-16.
    As society advances, the educational system remains linked to the traditional model focused on the transmission of information and must adapt to new times and new profile of students, with the students and learning centered education. Active pedagogies developed during the 20th century become a fundamental reference point for the implementation of education competencies.
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  23.  16
    NO-DO como afianzador de identidades culturales locales.José Javier Aliaga Cárceles -2022 -Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 11 (2):1-21.
    La entidad NO-DO cumplió un papel de primer orden en la interpretación del territorio español (paisajes, costumbres, tradiciones, monumentos, etc.), a través de sus producciones cinematográficas durante el franquismo y la Transición. Este artículo analiza la imagen y la identidad que se forjó del legado artístico y monumental de Murcia, desde la metodología de los estudios visuales. Las conclusiones demuestran que si bien la catedral y la vista urbana de Murcia configuraron la imagen-marca de la ciudad, como ya había sucedido (...) en el siglo XIX, los escultores Salzillo y Planes fueron los principales representantes del arte murciano en el cine oficial franquista. (shrink)
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  24.  14
    Teología feminista como instancia crítica de las religiones en el espacio público. La propuesta de Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza.Montserrat EscribanoCárcel -2013 -Contrastes: Revista Internacional de Filosofía 18 (2).
    RESUMENEste artículo se acerca al papel público que las religiones desempeñan en las democracias. Para ello es necesario que cultiven un doble afán. El primero, que mira hacia el exterior y sitúa a la religión católica entre el resto de esferas que definen nuestras sociedades plurales. El artículo cuestiona la tarea ética que puede ejercer esta tradición religiosa y que ha de reforzar el marco democrático en el que todas estas esferas se incluyen. El segundo, que mira hacia el interior (...) de esta religión y ocupa la mayor parte de este artículo, gira en torno a la teología feminista desarrollada por Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza. Su sentido crítico está transformando la identidad de los y las creyentes, los horizontes comprensivos religiosos y puede ayudar así a reforzar el papel de las democracias.PALABRAS CLAVERELIGIÓN, ESPACIO PÚBLICO, DELIBERACIÓN, HERMENÉUTICA CRÍTICA Y TEOLOGÍA FEMINISTA CRÍTICA.ABSTRACTThis article approaches the public part religions play in democracies. On the one hand, the Catholic religion has to be set amidst the rest of the spheres, which define our plural societies. In this first part, we will try to evaluate how the Catholic religion helps reinforcing the democratic frame in which it evolves. On the other hand, the largest part of this article will be devoted to the Catholic feminist theology developed by Elisabeth Schüssler Fiorenza not only as a means of changing the identity of believers and their understanding religious horizons, but also as a way of strengthening the role of democracies.KEYWORDSRELIGION, PUBLIC SPHERE, DELIBERATION, CRITICAL HERMENEUTICS AND CRITICAL FEMINIST THEOLOGY. (shrink)
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  25.  15
    Deconstrucción fílmica.Andrés Torres-Carceller -2023 -Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 12 (5):1-15.
    La Investigación basada en las Artes es un enfoque metodológico que cuestiona el cientifismo racional y objetivo como única vía valida de indagación, desarrollando un corpus de procedimientos vinculados con las artes cuyo objetivo principal no es tanto la evidencia, sino ofrecer nuevas perspectivas al incorporar las disciplinas artísticas como medio de investigación. Se analizan a partir de la deconstrucción los rasgos compositivos de cinco creaciones audiovisuales a partir del estudio de su configuración visual en encuadres y ritmo fílmico, mediante (...) dos instrumentos de análisis visual cuantitativo y medias visuales. (shrink)
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  26.  18
    Las edades de la creatividad. Algunas consideraciones sociológicas sobre la originalidad creativa en la modernidad.Juan A. RocheCárcel -2020 -Arbor 196 (797):569.
    Tras reseñar diferentes sociólogos que han destacado la importancia de la originalidad para la creatividad, este artículo tiene como objetivo analizar el conflicto entre generaciones y la alternancia continuidad-cambio social que genera y que constituye el motor de la creatividad. Para ello, se indaga en la etimología del concepto de ‘originalidad’, con el fin de encontrar los términos básicos con los que se asocia. Como se verá, concretamente lo hace con las palabras origen y originario u originante, que se fusionan (...) en el proceso creador, de manera que este establece una narrativa temporal en la que el pasado, el presente y el futuro quedan interrelacionados. Esta narrativa temporal se concreta en la sociedad y en la cultura modernas -especialmente, en el arte, la ciencia, la democracia y el capitalismo, cuatro de las creaciones más destacadas de la etapa-, diferenciándose la primera modernidad por su evolución desde la creatividad infantil o juvenil hacia la senil, y la segunda por la decadencia. Finalmente, el artículo concluye que la creatividad se define por la originalidad, porque construye una narración histórica y porque puede ayudar a eliminar la confusión del presente; que la infancia y la juventud de los creadores se vincula con el conflicto generacional; y que la primera modernidad constituye una etapa infantil o juvenil, mientras que la segunda se define por el declive generalizado físico, cultural y social. (shrink)
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  27.  356
    E-type pronouns and donkey anaphora.Irene Heim -1990 -Linguistics and Philosophy 13 (2):137--77.
  28.  27
    Where Now for Post-Normal Science?: A Critical Review of its Development, Definitions, and Uses.Irene Lorenzoni,Mavis Jones &John Turnpenny -2011 -Science, Technology, and Human Values 36 (3):287-306.
    ‘‘Post-normal science’’ has received much attention in recent years, but like many iconic concepts, it has attracted differing conceptualizations, applications, and implications, ranging from being a ‘‘cure-all’’ for democratic deficit to the key to achieving more sustainable futures. This editorial article introduces a Special Issue that takes stock of research on PNS and critically explores how such research may develop. Through reviewing the history and evolution of PNS, the authors seek to clarify the extant definitions, conceptualizations, and uses of PNS. (...) The authors identify five broad areas of research on, or using, PNS which have developed over four decades. Their analysis suggests that the 1990s represent a symbolic watershed in the use of PNS terminology, when the concept was further developed and applied to highly complicated issues such as climate change. The authors particularly distinguish between uses of PNS as a normative prescription and as a practical method. Through this classification, they set out gaps and research questions arising. They then briefly summarize the Special Issue articles and consider their relationship to each other and the research questions raised by their analysis. They conclude by considering what the articles in this issue suggest for future theory building in PNS and related scholarship. (shrink)
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  29.  90
    Function Is Not Enough.Irene Olivero -2019 -Grazer Philosophische Studien 96 (1):105-129.
    The “nature” of an artifact is often equated with its function. Clearly, an artifactual function must be an extrinsic property. This feature of functions has important implications on the semantics of artifactual kind terms: it enables us to vindicate that artifactual kind terms have an externalist semantics. Any alleged externalist theory, indeed, must show that the referents of the considered terms share a common nature (i.e., an extrinsic property), whether we know or could possibly ever know what that nature is. (...) However, the state of the art shows that function is not enough to represent such “nature”: function does not exhaustively account for important phenomena that characterize artifacts and artifactual kinds, nor does it thoroughly define what they are. Thus, extending the scope of externalism to artifactual kind terms seems doomed to fail. Pace opposite views, it could even be argued that artifacts are a sub-class of social kinds. If so, not only social but also artifactual kind terms cannot refer externalistically, since their referents constitutively depend on human intentions and norms. Either way, externalism fails to apply to those kinds of terms. (shrink)
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  30.  22
    Determinants and Performance Effects of Social Performance Measurement Systems.Irene Eleonora Lisi -2018 -Journal of Business Ethics 152 (1):225-251.
    This study investigates the performance measurement systems adopted by companies to manage their social responsibility activities, a theme that remains under-researched despite the important role that these mechanisms may play in helping firms control and improve their social performance. An integrative model is developed to examine how the three fundamental drivers of corporate social strategies, i.e., business motivations, perceived stakeholder pressures, and top management’s social commitment, influence the use of social performance indicators for internal decision-making and control and how such (...) use impacts companies’ social and economic performance. The results from a survey of 97 Italian companies suggest that economic motivations and top management’s commitment are associated with a more intensive use of social performance indicators for decision-making and control, whereas perceived pressures from stakeholders do not represent a significant determinant of such use. The use of social performance indicators, in turn, is found to directly influence a firm’s social performance and, indirectly, its bottom line. (shrink)
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  31.  40
    Clinical ethics committees – also for mental health care? The Norwegian experience.Irene Syse,Reidun Førde &Reidar Pedersen -2016 -Clinical Ethics 11 (2-3):81-86.
    Background The aim was to explore how the clinical ethics committees in Norway have worked and functioned within mental health care and addiction treatment services. Methods Analysis of 256 annual reports from clinical ethics committees from 2003 to 2012 and a survey to clinicians who had used a clinical ethics committee. Results Dilemmas related to coercion, confidentiality, information, and patient autonomy dominated. The committees established only for psychiatric hospitals, had received more cases from mental health and addiction services than the (...) committees also serving somatic services. Many of the case discussions involved both somatic and mental health care, complicated legal issues as well as ethical dilemmas. Mental health care professionals that have used the clinical ethics committees evaluated the clinical ethics committees deliberation as useful. Conclusion Given the many difficult ethical dilemmas in mental health care ethics work need to be strengthened. The complexity of the cases requires varied and interdisciplinary competence and training among the clinical ethics committee members. (shrink)
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  32.  31
    From Harmony to Conflict: MacIntyrean Virtue Ethics in a Confucian Tradition.Irene Chu &Geoff Moore -2020 -Journal of Business Ethics 165 (2):221-239.
    This paper explores whether MacIntyrean virtue ethics concepts are applicable in non-Western business contexts, specifically in SMEs in Taiwan, a country strongly influenced by the Confucian tradition. It also explores what differences exist between different polities in this respect, and specifically interprets observed differences between the Taiwanese study and previous studies conducted in Europe and Asia. Based on case study research, the findings support the generalizability of the MacIntyrean framework. Drawing on the institutional logics perspective and synthesizing this with MacIntyrean (...) concepts, the paper explains the differences between the studies largely by reference to the Confucian tradition operating at both the micro-level within firms and at the macro-level as a means of harmonizing the potentially competing institutional logics to which firms are subject. The recent weakening of this tradition, however, suggests that increased conflict may characterize the future. (shrink)
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  33.  68
    Balancing confidentiality and the information provided to families of patients in primary care.M. D. Perez-Carceles -2005 -Journal of Medical Ethics 31 (9):531-535.
    Background: Medical confidentiality underpins the doctor–patient relationship and ensures privacy so that intimate information can be exchanged to improve, preserve, and protect the health of the patient. The right to information applies to the patient alone, and, only if expressly desired, can it be extended to family members. However, it must be remembered that one of the primary tenets of family medicine is precisely that patient care occurs ideally within the context of the family. There may be, then, certain occasions (...) when difficulties will arise as to the extent of the information provided to family members.Objectives: This study aimed to describe family doctors’ attitudes to confidentiality and providing patient information to relatives as well as their justifications for sharing information.Method: A descriptive postal questionnaire was self-administered by family doctors.Results: Of 227 doctors, 95.1% provided information to a patient’s family and over a third disclosed information to others without prior patient consent.Conclusions: The findings reveal that family doctors should pay more attention to their patients’ rights to information, privacy, and confidentiality, and reflect very carefully on the fine balance between this and the occasional need for the support and collaboration of family members in delivery of care. Emphasis should be placed on ethics and legal problems during undergraduate education and in-service training of doctors. (shrink)
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  34.  37
    Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder: A Longitudinal Study of Malnutrition and Psychopathological Risk Factors From 2 to 11 Years of Age. [REVIEW]Loredana Lucarelli,Cristina Sechi,Silvia Cimino &Irene Chatoor -2018 -Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  35.  48
    Wh-questions used as challenges.Irene Koshik -2003 -Discourse Studies 5 (1):51-77.
    This article uses a conversation analytic framework to describe a type of wh-question used to challenge a prior utterance, specifically to challenge the basis for or right to do an action done by the prior utterance. These wh-questions are able to do challenging because, rather than asking for new information, they are used to convey a strong epistemic stance of the questioner, a negative assertion. The utterances are designed as requests for an account for a prior claim or action, but (...) by conveying a negative assertion, they suggest that there is no adequate account available and, thus, that there are no grounds for the prior claim or action. The use of these questions in institutional settings can display participants' orientation to institutional goals, norms and roles, showing that institutional roles can thus be enacted, and goals accomplished, by means of practices of talk which are not, themselves, institutionally specific. (shrink)
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  36.  14
    Contemporary Music: Theoretical and Philosophical Perspectives.Irène Deliège &Max Paddison -2010 - Routledge.
    This collection of essays and interviews addresses important theoretical, philosophical and creative issues in Western art music at the end of the twentieth- and the beginning of the twenty-first centuries. The book offers a wide range of international perspectives from prominent musicologists, philosophers and composers.Part I is mainly theoretical in emphasis. Issues addressed include the historical rationalization of music and technology, new approaches to the theorization of atonal harmony in the wake of Spectralism, debates on the 'new complexity', the heterogeneity, (...) pluralism and stylistic omnivorousness that characterizes music in our time, and the characterization of twentieth-century and contemporary music as a 'search for lost harmony'. The orientation of Part II is mainly philosophical, examining concepts of totality and inclusivity in new music. Part III offers creative perspectives, with new essays and interviews from important contemporary composers. A concluding essay by Alastair Williams provides a postlude to the book, while the whole collection is prefaced by an extended introductory chapter by Max Paddison which provides a context of ideas, and traces many of the issues discussed back to Adorno's seminal notion of une musique informelle. (shrink)
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  37.  15
    What is religious ethics?: an introduction.Irene Oh -2023 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    What is Religious Ethics? An Introduction is an accessible and informative overview to major themes and methods in religious ethics. This short and lively book demonstrates the relevance and importance of ethics based in religious traditions and describes how scholars of religious ethics think through moral problems. Combining an issues-based approach with a model of studying ethics religion-by-religion, this volume examines pressing topics through a variety of belief systems - Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, and Sikhism - while also (...) importantly spotlighting indigenous communities. Engaging case studies invite readers to consider the role of religions with regard to issues such as: CRISPR Vegetarianism Nuclear weapons Women's leadership Reparations for slavery What is Religious Ethics? is a reliable and easily digestible introduction to the field. With chronologically structured chapters, discussion questions, suggestions for further reading, and interviews with scholars of religious ethics, this is an ideal guide to those approaching the study of religious ethics for the first time. (shrink)
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  38.  17
    Pruning and repopulating a lexical taxonomy: experiments in Spanish, English and French.Irene Renau,Rafael Marín,Gabriela Ferraro,Antonio Balvet &Rogelio Nazar -2020 -Journal of Intelligent Systems 30 (1):376-394.
    In this paper we present the problem of a noisy lexical taxonomy and suggest two tasks as potential remedies. The first task is to identify and eliminate incorrect hypernymy links, and the second is to repopulate the taxonomy with new relations. The first task consists of revising the entire taxonomy and returning a Boolean for each assertion of hypernymy between two nouns (e.g. brie is a kind of cheese). The second task consists of recursively producing a chain of hypernyms for (...) a given noun, until the most general node in the taxonomy is reached (e.g. brie → cheese → food → etc.). In order to achieve these goals, we implemented a hybrid hypernym-detection algorithm that incorporates various intuitions, such as syntagmatic, paradigmatic and morphological association measures as well as lexical patterns. We evaluate these algorithms individually and collectively and report findings in Spanish, English and French. (shrink)
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  39. Book notices-festschriften der versammlungen Deutscher naturforscher und arzte, 1822 bis 1920.Irene Scheifele -1998 -History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 20 (1):123-123.
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  40.  15
    La arquitectura teatral griega como cuerpo-red de relaciones entre el universo teatral, la polis y el mundo.Juan RocheCárcel -2024 -Argos 49:e0053.
    En este artículo, la arquitectura teatral de la Grecia Antigua va a ser considerada como un cuerpo-signo que significa, construido social, cultural y políticamente, como un reflejo y creador del orden social, como un cuerpo que es civilización y, por consiguiente, como un microcosmos de la con­cepción del mundo de los griegos antiguos. Y es que la arquitectura teatral es vista por los helenos como un cuerpo articulador, delimitado, diferenciado y separado y con entradas o salidas que comunican sus funciones (...) interiores con las exteriores, por lo que, a pesar de su autonomía, no está aislado en sí mismo, sino que constituye una auténtica red de relaciones entre el universo teatral, la pólis y el mundo. (shrink)
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  41.  14
    (1 other version)In the Northern Territory Intervention, What is Saved or Rescued and at What Cost?Irene Watson -2009 -Cultural Studeis Review 15 (2):45-60.
    The foundation of the Australian colonial project lies within an ‘originary violence’, in which the state retains a vested interest in maintaining the founding order of things. Inequalities and iniquities are maintained for the purpose of sustaining the life and continuity of the state. The Australian state, founder of a violent order is called upon by the international community to conform and uphold ‘human rights’, but what does this call to conformity require, particularly when the call comes from states which (...) are also founded upon colonial violence? This article argumes that very little is required beyond the masquerade that ‘equality’ for Aboriginal peoples is an on-going project of the state. So for what purpose does the masquerade continue? (shrink)
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  42.  78
    Born to be Wild.Irene Klaver,Jozef Keulartz &Henk van den Belt -2002 -Environmental Ethics 24 (1):3-21.
    With the turning of wilderness areas into wildlife parks and the returning of developed areas of land to the forces of nature, intermediate hybrid realms surface in which wild and managed nature become increasingly entangled. A partitioning of environmental philosophy into ecoethics and animal welfare ethics leaves these mixed territories relatively uncharted—the first dealing with wild (animals), the second with the welfare of captive or domestic animals. In this article, we explore an environmental philosophy that considers explicitly these mixed situations. (...) We examine a recent Dutch policy of introducing domesticated and semi-wild large herbivores in newly developed nature areas. Larger issues are at stake, such as the intertwinement of nature and culture, the dynamic character of de-domestication processes, and the relation between concepts of authenticity and the wild. We sketch a pluralistic, dynamic, and pragmatic environmental philosophy that is capable of dealing with the complicated ethicalproblems concerning creatures and land caught between domestication and the wild. (shrink)
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  43.  80
    Elderly patients also have rights.M. D. Perez-Carceles,M. D. Lorenzo,A. Luna &E. Osuna -2007 -Journal of Medical Ethics 33 (12):712-716.
    Background: Sharing information with relatives of elderly patients in primary care and in hospital has to fit into the complex set of obligations, justifications and pressures concerning the provision of information, and the results of some studies point to the need for further empirical studies exploring issues of patient autonomy, privacy and informed consent in the day-to-day care of older people.Objectives: To know the frequency with which “capable” patients over 65 years of age receive information when admitted to hospital, the (...) information offered to the families concerned, the person who gives consent for medical intervention, and the degree of satisfaction with the information received and the healthcare provided.Method: A descriptive questionnaire given to 200 patients and 200 relatives during the patients’ stay in hospital.Results: Only 5% of patients confirmed that they had been asked whether information could be given to their relatives. A significantly higher proportion of relatives received information on the successive stages of the care offered than did patients themselves. As the age of the patients increased, so the number who were given information, understood the information and were asked for their consent for complementary tests decreased. The degree of satisfaction with the information offered was high for both patients and relatives , despite the irregularities observed.Conclusions: The capacity of elderly patients to participate in the decision-making process is frequently doubted simply because they have reached a certain age and it is thought that relatives should act as their representatives. In Spain, the opinion of the family and doctors appears to play a larger role in making decisions than does the concept of patient autonomy. (shrink)
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  44.  158
    Pragmatic truth and approximation to truth.Irene Mikenberg,Newton C. A. da Costa &Rolando Chuaqui -1986 -Journal of Symbolic Logic 51 (1):201-221.
  45.  31
    Advance Care Planning in Nursing Homes – Improving the Communication Among Patient, Family, and Staff: Results From a Cluster Randomized Controlled Trial.Irene Aasmul,Bettina S. Husebo,Elizabeth L. Sampson &Elisabeth Flo -2018 -Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  46. Defining 'aesthetics' for non-western studies: the case of Ancient Mesopotamia.Irene Winter -2002 - In Michael Ann Holly & Keith P. F. Moxey,Art history, aesthetics, visual studies. Williamstown, Mass.: Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute. pp. 3--19.
     
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  47.  34
    The Role of Prosocial Motives and Social Exchange in Mediating the Relationship Between Organizational Virtuousness’ Perceptions and Employee Outcomes.Irene Tsachouridi &Irene Nikandrou -2020 -Journal of Business Ethics 166 (3):535-551.
    Theoretical arguments suggest that organizational virtuousness makes individuals surpass their exchange concerns sparking their prosocial motives. This paper focuses on the examination of this issue incorporating two field studies. The first field study examines prosocial motives and social exchange as parallel mediators of the relationship between organizational virtuousness’ perceptions and three employee outcomes. The second field study examines prosocial motives, personal sacrifice and impression management motives as parallel mediators of the examined relationships. Both field studies indicated that only prosocial motives (...) can mediate the relationship between organizational virtuousness’ perceptions and employee outcomes. (shrink)
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  48.  69
    Informed consent of the minor. Implications of present day Spanish law.M. D. Perez-Carceles -2002 -Journal of Medical Ethics 28 (5):326-326.
    In Spain, any person under the age of 18 is a minor. Generally, minors lack the legal capacity to take legally binding actions because they are deemed incapable of legally binding consent. Spanish civil law recognises, however, that the child, in accordance with the law and being sufficiently mature, may act for himself. It stands, then, that consent, as expressed by the “sufficiently mature” minor, should be legally valid.
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  49.  159
    Pragmatic truth and approximation to truth.Irene Mikenberg,Newton C. A. Costa &Rolando Chuaqui -1986 -Journal of Symbolic Logic 51 (1):201-221.
  50.  323
    Integrating AI ethics in wildlife conservation AI systems in South Africa: a review, challenges, and future research agenda.Irene Nandutu,Marcellin Atemkeng &Patrice Okouma -2023 -AI and Society 38 (1):245-257.
    With the increased use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in wildlife conservation, issues around whether AI-based monitoring tools in wildlife conservation comply with standards regarding AI Ethics are on the rise. This review aims to summarise current debates and identify gaps as well as suggest future research by investigating (1) current AI Ethics and AI Ethics issues in wildlife conservation, (2) Initiatives Stakeholders in AI for wildlife conservation should consider integrating AI Ethics in wildlife conservation. We find that the existing literature (...) weakly focuses on AI Ethics and AI Ethics in wildlife conservation while at the same time ignores AI Ethics integration in AI systems for wildlife conservation. This paper formulates an ethically aligned AI system framework and discusses pre-eminent on-demand AI systems in wildlife conservation. The proposed framework uses agile software life cycle methodology to implement guidelines towards the ethical upgrade of any existing AI system or the development of any new ethically aligned AI system. The guidelines enforce, among others, the minimisation of intentional harm and bias, diversity in data collection, design compliance, auditing of all activities in the framework and ease of code inspection. This framework will inform AI developers, users, conservationists, and policymakers on what to consider when integrating AI Ethics into AI-based systems for wildlife conservation. (shrink)
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