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Results for 'Jeffrey D. Bodle'

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  1.  164
    Causes and Consequences of Sports Concussion.Jonathan C. Edwards &Jeffrey D.Bodle -2014 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 42 (2):128-132.
    The Consensus Statement of the Third International Congress on Concussion in Sport in November 2008 defined concussion as a “complex pathophysiologic process affecting the brain, induced by traumatic biochemical forces.” Definitions of concussion vary slightly between various professional organizations of neurosurgeons, neurologists, and orthopedic surgeons, but all share the common characteristics of trauma affecting the head or body resulting in transient neurologic deficits or symptoms. Underlying the symptoms of concussion is a complex pathophysiologic process at the cellular level. While concussion (...) is typically thought of as resulting from a direct impact to the head, a concussion can also be sustained as a result of an impact to the body causing the force of the impact to be transmitted to and absorbed by the brain. (shrink)
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  2. Theological revolution and the entangled emergence of Enlightenment secularization.Jeffrey D. Burson -2022 - In Anna Tomaszewska,Between Secularization and Reform: Religion in the Enlightenment. Boston: BRILL.
     
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  3.  47
    Is inequality bad for our health?Jeffrey D. Milyo &Jennifer M. Mellor -1999 -Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 13 (3-4):359-372.
    Abstract A number of recent studies suggest that income and social inequality (as opposed to poverty itself) have detrimental consequences on people's health. These studies argue that while the poor may suffer the most from inequality, the rich also suffer. On closer inspection, however, it emerges that the basic arguments and evidence that inequality has a causal effect on health are wanting in many respects.
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  4.  40
    Rubisco rules fall; gene transfer triumphs.Jeffrey D. Palmer -1995 -Bioessays 17 (12):1005-1008.
    The most common form of the CO2‐fixing enzyme rubisco is a form I enzyme, heretofore found universally in oxygenic phototrophs (cyanobacteria and plastids) and widely in proteobacteria. Two groups(1–4), however, now report that in dinoflagellate plastids the usual form I rubisco has been replaced by the distantly related form II enzyme, known previously only from anaerobic proteobacteria. This raises the important question of how such an oxygensensitive rubisco could function in an aerobic organism. Moreover, the dinoflagellate rubisco has unusual molecular (...) properties: it is encoded as a polyprotein, by nuclear (rather than plastid) genes, and these genes contain noncanonical spliceosomal introns. The nuclear location and alphaproteobacterial affinity of dinoflagellate rubisco genes hint at a possible mitochondrial origin and highlight the extraordinary richness of lateral gene transfers, both between and within organisms, that have occurred during rubisco evolution. (shrink)
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  5.  32
    Development of the New Zealand nursing workforce: historical themes and current challenges.Jeffrey D. Gage &Andrew R. Hornblow -2007 -Nursing Inquiry 14 (4):330-334.
    Development of the New Zealand nursing workforce has been shaped by social, political, scientific and interprofessional forces. The unregulated, independent and often untrained nurses of the early colonial period were succeeded in the early 1900s by registered nurses, with hospital‐based training, working in a subordinate role to medical practitioners. In the mid/late 1900s, greater specialisation within an expanding workforce, restructuring of nursing education, health sector reform, and changing social and political expectations again reshaped nursing practice. Nursing now has areas of (...) increasing autonomy, expanding opportunities for postgraduate education and leadership roles, and a relationship with medicine, which is more collaborative than in the past. Three current challenges are identified for nursing in New Zealand's rapidly evolving health sector; development of a nursing‐focused knowledge culture, strengthening of research capacity, and dissemination of new nursing knowledge. (shrink)
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  6.  26
    Sharing Democracy.Jeffrey D. Hilmer -2012 -Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 60 (136):81-84.
  7. Nozick's Libertarianism and the Justification of the State.Jeffrey D. Goldsworthy -1987 -Ratio (Misc.) 29 (2):180.
     
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  8.  46
    Questions Left Unanswered: The Machine Question: Critical Perspectives on AI, Robots, and Ethics. David J. Gunkel. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2012, 272 pages, $35.Jeffrey D. Gottlieb -2013 -Ethics and Behavior 23 (2):163-166.
  9.  49
    The Sovereign and the Exile.Jeffrey D. Gower -2015 -Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 19 (2):311-328.
    This essay explores the historical roots of biopolitics by investigating the structural homology between the supremely virtuous king discussed in Aristotle’s Politics and the sovereign living law advanced in On Law and Justice, accepted here as authored by Archytas of Tarentum. Archytas’s sovereign incarnates a divine law in order to ground the written law of the city and to constitute the way of life proper to the citizenry. The identity of life and law in his person exempts this sovereign from (...) the written laws he grounds just as Aristotle’s king cannot be subjected to law because he is a law unto himself. Despite this homology, Archytas’s sovereign exemplifies a highly determinate way of life fully constituted by law while an analysis of Aristotle’s king reveals a double determination of the virtuous exemplar as both sovereign and exile. This double determination both exhibits and complicates the logic of exclusion that, for Agamben, makes Western politics biopolitical from its inception. (shrink)
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  10.  36
    Principles of Database Systems.Jeffrey D. Ullman,David Maier,Ashok K. Chandra &David Harel -1986 -Journal of Symbolic Logic 51 (4):1079-1084.
  11.  49
    Claude G. Buffier and the Maturation of the Jesuit Synthesis in the Age of Enlightenment.Jeffrey D. Burson -2011 -Intellectual History Review 21 (4):449-472.
  12.  27
    The interweaving of sacred and secular: metaphysics, reform and enlightenment in the rivalry between Dom Deschamps and Claude Yvon, 1769–1774.Jeffrey D. Burson -2019 -Intellectual History Review 29 (3):439-466.
    The Benedictine Dom Léger-Marie Deschamps and the philosophical Abbé Claude Yvon may indeed be minor eighteenth-century figures, and they both may be considered to have emerged from the Catholic side of something Helena Rosenblatt has dubbed the Christian Enlightenment, but neither of these figures is neatly “conservative” (as Mark Curran defines it), nor are they fully “radical” (in the sense of having contributed to the Radical Enlightenment). Rather, Deschamps and Yvon are among a number of eighteenth-century figures who do not (...) fit neatly into the expected parameters of Catholic, Christian, Religious or Radical Enlightenment. This article argues that the entanglement of both heterodoxy and orthodoxy, and of sociopolitical progressivism and conservatism, is characteristic of Yvon’s and Deschamps’s particular engagement with what Vincenzo Ferrone describes as the cultural revolution of the eighteenth century. This study of these under-examined Catholic scholars further suggests that conventional and tidy scholarly narratives of the history of Enlightenment should be further problematized. (shrink)
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  13.  15
    Drawing improves memory: The importance of multimodal encoding context.Jeffrey D. Wammes,Tanya R. Jonker &Myra A. Fernandes -2019 -Cognition 191 (C):103955.
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  14.  33
    It Has Been Said.Jeffrey D. Bernhard &Adrian I. Katz -1986 -Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 30 (1):78-80.
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  15.  15
    Everyday Modernities: J. B. Jackson and the Postwar American Landscape.Jeffrey D. Blankenship -2017 -Environment, Space, Place 9 (2):27-51.
    Abstract:In his writing in Landscape magazine, the essayist and critic John Brinckerhoff Jackson (1909–1996) championed a focus on the “everyday” mid-century American landscape. My argument in this paper is that Jackson's writing has enduring relevance for understanding the relationship of modernity to everyday landscapes. Specifically, I develop the concept of “everyday modernities” in order to define and specify the lens through which Jackson sought to reconcile the logics of modernity with the lived realities of mid-century American life. Pulling this concept (...) through two examples of his work—the “other-directedness” of landscape and the bodied landscapes of the hot-rodder—I show how Jackson endeavored to understand how these logics were embedded in some of the most common landscapes. He limned an approach to the modern landscape that took seriously the binary structure of modernist ideology (nature and culture, country and city), but strove to recognize the impacts of this ideology through the networks and connections that produce the material realities of everyday life. While Jackson's particular lens is certainly a very personal one, his interests and approach can help to reveal new connections and inspire new questions about the modern American landscape. (shrink)
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  16.  40
    How best to keep a secret?Jeffrey D. Bloechl -1996 -Man and World 29 (1):1-17.
  17.  16
    The Jesuit Suppression in Global Context: Causes, Events, and Consequences.Jeffrey D. Burson &Jonathan Wright (eds.) -2015 - Cambridge University Press.
    In 1773, Pope Clement XIV suppressed the Society of Jesus, a dramatic, puzzling act that had a profound impact. This volume traces the causes of the attack on the Jesuits, the national expulsions that preceded universal suppression, and the consequences of these extraordinary developments. The Suppression occurred at a unique historical juncture, at the high-water mark of the Enlightenment and on the cusp of global imperial crises and the Age of Revolution. After more than two centuries, answers to how and (...) why it took place remain unclear. A diverse selection of essays - covering France, Spain, Portugal, Italy, the Netherlands, China, Eastern Europe, and the Americas - reflects the complex international elements of the Jesuit Suppression. The contributors shed new light on its significance by drawing on the latest research. Essential reading on a crucial yet previously neglected topic, this collection will interest scholars of eighteenth-century religious, intellectual, cultural, and political history. (shrink)
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  18.  7
    13 The Polyvalence of Heterodox Sources and Eighteenth-Century Religious Change.Jeffrey D. Burson -2020 - In Gianni Paganini, Margaret C. Jacob & John Christian Laursen,Clandestine philosophy: new studies on subversive manuscripts in early modern Europe, 1620-1823. London: University of Toronto Press in association with the UCLA Center for Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Studies and the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library. pp. 328-352.
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  19.  40
    Chloroplast DNA and molecular phylogeny.Jeffrey D. Palmer -1985 -Bioessays 2 (6):263-267.
    The small, relatively constant size and conservative evolution of chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) make it an ideal molecule for tracing the evolutionary history of plant species. At lower taxonomic levels, cpDNA variation is easily and conveniently assayed by comparing restriction patterns and maps, while at higher taxonomic levels, DNA sequencing and inversion analysis are the methods of choice for comparing chloroplast genomes. The study of cpDNA variation has already yielded important new insights into the origin and evolution of many agriculturally important (...) crop plants, and promises to significantly enhance our phylogenetic understanding of the major lines of descent among land plants and algae. (shrink)
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  20.  43
    Investigating neural correlates of consciousness with ambiguous stimuli.Jeffrey D. Schall -2000 -Neuro-Psychoanalysis 2 (1):32-35.
  21. Les enjeux de la compétence éthique dans la formation des enseignants.D.Jeffrey -2005 - In Christiane Gohier & Denis Jeffrey,Enseigner et former à l'éthique. Saint-Foy, Québec: Presses de l'Université Laval. pp. 149--166.
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  22.  57
    A computational analysis of mental image generation: Evidence from functional dissociations in split-brain patients.Stephen M. Kosslyn,Jeffrey D. Holtzman,Martha J. Farah &Michael S. Gazzaniga -1985 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 114 (3):311-341.
  23.  18
    Circular Questioning by Ethics Committees: Who’s Asking the Doctors?Jeffrey D. Tiemstra -1995 -Journal of Clinical Ethics 6 (2):163-165.
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  24.  12
    More Regarding “Circular Questioning”.Jeffrey D. Tiemstra -1995 -Journal of Clinical Ethics 6 (4):378-379.
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  25.  25
    Respecting the Autonomy of the Biologically Driven.Jeffrey D. Tiemstra -2000 -Journal of Clinical Ethics 11 (1):66-68.
  26.  11
    Enlightenment and Catholicism in Europe: A Transnational History.Jeffrey D. Burson &Ulrich L. Lehner (eds.) -2014 - University of Notre Dame Press.
    In recent years, historians have rediscovered the religious dimensions of the Enlightenment. This volume offers a thorough reappraisal of the so-called “Catholic Enlightenment” as a transnational Enlightenment movement. This Catholic Enlightenment was at once ultramontane and conciliarist, sometimes moderate but often surprisingly radical, with participants active throughout Europe in universities, seminaries, salons, and the periodical press._ In _Enlightenment and Catholicism in Europe: A Transnational History_, the contributors, primarily European scholars, provide intellectual biographies of twenty Catholic Enlightenment figures across eighteenth-century Europe, (...) many of them little known in English-language scholarship on the Enlightenment and pre-revolutionary eras. These figures represent not only familiar French intellectuals of the Catholic Enlightenment but also Iberian, Italian, English, Polish, and German thinkers. The essays focus on the intellectual and cultural factors influencing the lives and works of their subjects, revealing the often global networks of intellectual sociability and reading that united them both to the Catholic Enlightenment and to eighteenth-century policies and projects. The volume, whose purpose is to advance the understanding of a transnational "Catholic Enlightenment," will be a reliable reference for historians, theologians, and scholars working in religious studies. "This is a compelling collection on an important subject. Its transnational and biographical approach helps one to see eighteenth-century Catholicism and the Enlightenment itself in fresh and interesting ways." — Darrin M. McMahon, Florida State University_. (shrink)
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  27.  37
    Entangled History and the Scholarly Concept of Enlightenment.Jeffrey D. Burson -2013 -Contributions to the History of Concepts 8 (2):1-24.
    This article considers the methodology of entangled history and its potential for nuancing or circumventing scholarly controversies over the nature and extent of the Enlightenment in eighteenth-century religious thought. After sketching the development of entangled history theory and its potential applicability to studying the Enlightenment, the rest of the article provides a case study of one way in which the insights discussed in the first parts of the article can be applied to current controversies about how historians construct the concept (...) of Enlightenment. As will be shown, the transdiscursive entanglement of Jesuit missionary output with the debates between Voltaire and Bergier illustrates the mutability and rhetorical malleability of historical paradigms concerning the Enlightenment and religion. (shrink)
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  28. I. Belief, enlightenment, and the political culture of the Old Regime. Entangling the "century of lights" to disentangle the Enlightenment.Jeffrey D. Burson -2019 - In Mita Choudhury, Daniel J. Watkins & Dale K. Van Kley,Belief and politics in Enlightenment France: essays in honor of Dale K. Van Kley. [Liverpool, UK]: Liverpool University Press.
     
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  29.  44
    Towards a New Comparative History of European Enlightenments: The Problem of Enlightenment Theology in France and the Study of Eighteenth‐century Europe.Jeffrey D. Burson -2008 -Intellectual History Review 18 (2):173-187.
  30.  2
    Proposal for a UN Peace and Development Fund: A Possible Pathway for Political and Ethical Renewal in the Modern World.Jeffrey D. Sachs &Paul Komesaroff -forthcoming -Journal of Bioethical Inquiry:1-5.
  31.  24
    Helping the needy helps the self.Jeffrey D. Fisher,Arie Nadler,Ed Hart &Sheryle J. Whitcher -1981 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 17 (4):190-192.
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  32.  49
    Some Brief Reflections on Digital Technologies and Economic Development.Jeffrey D. Sachs -2019 -Ethics and International Affairs 33 (2):159-167.
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  33.  42
    Reconstructing racism: Transforming racial hierarchy from “necessary evil” into “positive good”.Jeffrey D. Grynaviski &Michael C. Munger -2017 -Social Philosophy and Policy 34 (1):144-163.
    :Our theoretical claim is that racism was consciously devised, and later evolved, to serve two conflicting purposes. First, racism served a legal-economic purpose, legitimating ownership and savage treatment of slaves by southern whites, preserving the value of property rights in labor. Second, racism allowed slave owners to justify, to themselves and to outsiders, how a morally "good" person could own slaves. Racism portrayed African slaves as being less than human, or else as being other than human. The interest of the (...) historical narrative presented here is the emergence of racial chattel slavery as a coherent and fiercely defended ideal, rather than the "necessary evil" that had been the perspective of the Founders. The reason that this is important is that the ideology of racism persisted far beyond the destruction of the institution of slavery, through Reconstruction, Jim Crow, and in some ways persisting even today. This work is an example of the problems of assuming that there is a "feedback" mechanism by which moral intuitions are updated and perfected; to the contrary, as suggested by Douglass North, even socially inferior ideologies can prove extremely persistent. (shrink)
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  34.  45
    Necessity and sufficiency in the Buddha's causal schema.Jeffrey D. Watts -1982 -Philosophy East and West 32 (4):407-423.
  35.  21
    Exploring essentially three-turn courses of action: An institutional case study with implications for ordinary talk.Jeffrey D. Robinson &Heidi Kevoe-Feldman -2012 -Discourse Studies 14 (2):217-241.
    This article describes an adjacency-pair organized course of action in the institutional context of customers calling an electronics repair facility to request the status of equipment they have previously sent in for repair. Relative to the majority of adjacency-pair sequences described in previous research, this course of action is rare in that it is essentially composed of three turns, including status solicitation, status response, and acceptance/rejection of status response. After defending this finding, we situate and discuss its significance relative to (...) prior research – in both ordinary and institutional contexts – on adjacency-pair sequence organization, including implications for sequence-based relevance rules, such as preference organization. Finally, we outline a possible general explanation for why some initiating actions set in motion essentially three-turn courses of action, and offer a candidate example in ordinary conversation. (shrink)
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  36. Le droit et l'éthique dans la profession enseignante.D.Jeffrey,G. Deschênes,D. Harvengt &M. C. Vachon -2009 - In Christiane Gohier & France Jutras,Repères pour l'éthique professionnelle des enseignants. Québec: Presses de l'Université du Québec.
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  37.  15
    The Ties That Bind: University Nostalgia Fosters Relational and Collective University Engagement.Jeffrey D. Green,Athena H. Cairo,Tim Wildschut &Constantine Sedikides -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Does nostalgia for one’s time at university predict current intentions to engage with the university? In Study 1, United States participants’ nostalgia for their university experience (university nostalgia) at a southern public university predicted stronger intentions to socialize with fellow alumni, attend a future reunion, volunteer for their university, and donate money to their university. Study 2 replicated these findings with alumni from a northeastern private university, and extended them by finding that the links between university nostalgia and university engagement (...) emerged even when controlling for the positivity of university experience. In both studies, feelings of university belonging mediated most of the associations between university nostalgia and university engagement. In Study 2, the positivity of the university experience moderated the relation between university nostalgia and two indices of university engagement. Specifically, university nostalgia was more strongly associated with intentions to attend a reunion and donate money among those who had a relatively negative university experience. Nostalgia for one’s university past predicts future engagement with the university as well as its members. (shrink)
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  38.  66
    Neuronal correlates of subjective visual perception.Nikos K. Logothetis &Jeffrey D. Schall -1989 -Science 245:761-63.
  39.  40
    Recollection, familiarity, and content-sensitivity in lateral parietal cortex: a high-resolution fMRI study.Jeffrey D. Johnson,Maki Suzuki &Michael D. Rugg -2013 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  40.  24
    Hyper-Sovereignty and Community.Jeffrey D. Gower -2024 -Angelaki 29 (1):71-84.
    The article retraces three important steps along the path of Derrida’s Heidegger interpretation in The Beast and the Sovereign, Volume II. Readings of The Fundamental Concepts of Metaphysics, Introduction to Metaphysics, and “The Onto-Theo-Logical Constitution of Metaphysics” complement and further develop Derrida’s deconstruction of Heidegger, which revolves around the term “Walten” and its role in the world-formation that makes community possible. The analysis of what Derrida calls the hyper-sovereignty of Walten reveals an ethico-political ambiguity in Heidegger’s texts. On the one (...) hand, this hyper-sovereignty registers as a super-sovereign violence that founds theological-political world-constructs through the exclusion of those deemed other. On the other hand, like différance it serves as the condition of impossibility of a common world. Following Derrida’s provocation, I develop this second sense to argue that the dissolution of the common world entails an ethical imperative to carry the other with whom one has nothing in common. (shrink)
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  41.  36
    Saccade latency in context: Regulation of gaze behavior by supplementary eye field.Jeffrey D. Schall &Doug P. Hanes -1993 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (3):588-589.
  42. Foundations and Frontiers of Deliberative Governance.Jeffrey D. Hilmer -2012 -Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 59 (130):93-97.
  43.  18
    Preference organization of sequence-initiating actions: The case of explicit account solicitations.Galina B. Bolden &Jeffrey D. Robinson -2010 -Discourse Studies 12 (4):501-533.
    This article extends prior conversation analytic research on the preference organization of sequence-initiating actions. Across two languages, this article examines one such action: explicitly soliciting an account for human conduct. Prior work demonstrates that this action conveys a challenging stance towards the warrantability of the accountable event/conduct. When addressees are somehow responsible for the accountable event/conduct, explicit solicitations of accounts are frequently critical of, and thus embody disaffiliation with, addressees. This article demonstrates that, when explicit solicitations of accounts embody disaffiliation, (...) they are systematically ‘withheld’ and, thus, can be characterized as ‘dispreferred’ actions. This article also examines: a) deviant cases, where account solicitations are not withheld, which is a practice for embodying aggravated disaffiliation; and b) negative cases, where account solicitations actually embody affiliation, and as such are typically treated as preferred actions and not withheld. (shrink)
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  44.  62
    The Ethics of Palliative Care: European Perspectives.D.Jeffrey -2005 -Journal of Medical Ethics 31 (7):e9-e9.
    A welcome addition to the “Facing Death Series” makes an important contribution to palliative care ethics. The contributors, from seven European countries, debate the tension created between viewing ethics as a way of giving answers to end of life issues and the practice and philosophy of palliative care contributing to the development of medical ethics—that is, ethics “in” and “of” palliative care.Philosophical discussion requires an historical perspective; the early part of the book addresses this by describing the work of the (...) “Pallium” project. This European collaboration of ethicists, clinicians, philosophers, and social scientists, explored and analysed conceptual and ethical and ethical issues in palliative care.The study describes the differing way in which palliative care …. (shrink)
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  45.  37
    Retrieval-Based Learning: Positive Effects of Retrieval Practice in Elementary School Children.Jeffrey D. Karpicke,Janell R. Blunt &Megan A. Smith -2016 -Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  46.  50
    The mnemic neglect model: Experimental demonstrations of inhibitory repression in normal adults.Sedikides Constantine &D. GreenJeffrey -2006 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (5):532-533.
    Normal adults recall poorly social feedback that refers to them, is negative, and pertains to core self-aspects. This phenomenon, dubbed the mnemic neglect effect, is equivalent to inhibitory repression. It is instigated under conditions of high self-threat, it implicates not-thinking during encoding, and it involves memories that are recoverable with such techniques as recognition accuracy.
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  47.  72
    The King of the Cosmos.Jeffrey D. Gower -2011 -Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 15 (2):415-434.
    This paper offers a deconstructive reading of the pure actuality of the un­moved mover of Aristotle’s Metaphysics Lambda. Aristotle describes this first, unmoved principle of movement as a divine sovereign—the king of the cosmos—and maintains that the good governance of the cosmos depends on its unmitigated unity and pure actuality. It is striking, then, when Giorgio Agamben claims that Aristotle bequeathed the paradigm of sovereignty to Western philosophy not through his arguments for the pure actuality of the unmoved mover but (...) rather through his description of the essence of potentiality. An interpretation of Aristotle’s account of potentiality in Metaphysics Theta therefore prepares the way for a deconstruction of the unity and pure actuality of the divine sovereign. I argue that the repetition of nous in Aristotle’s description of the divine thinking of thinking betrays traces of division and difference at the heart of divine sovereignty. If this is the case, then actuality and potentiality become indis­cernible at the level of the absolute and the sovereign corresponds to the bifurcated site of this indiscernibility. (shrink)
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  48.  32
    Effects of Cognitive Control Exertion and Motor Coordination on Task Self-Efficacy and Muscular Endurance Performance in Children.Jeffrey D. Graham,Yao-Chuen Li,Steven R. Bray &John Cairney -2018 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 12:347028.
    Emerging research shows a strong connection between brain areas governing cognition and motor behavior. Yet, research investigating the negative aftereffects of cognitive control exertion on task performance has not considered the potential role of areas governing motor behavior. The present study investigated the effects of high cognitive control exertion on task self-efficacy and exercise performance in children. A secondary purpose was to investigate whether motor coordination influences the change in exercise performance differently following low versus high cognitive control exertion. Participants (...) (N = 70) performed two isometric handgrip endurance trials separated by a Stroop task, which was either congruent (low cognitive control) or incongruent (high cognitive control). Motor coordination was assessed prior to the first endurance trial. Task self-efficacy for performing the second endurance trial was assessed following the Stroop task. Participants in the high cognitive control condition reported lower task self-efficacy and showed a reduction in endurance exercise performance. Task self-efficacy mediated the cognitive control – performance relationship. Participants scoring lower on motor coordination showed the greatest declines in exercise performance following high cognitive control, whereas motor coordination did not affect performance following low cognitive control. The results of this study provide evidence that task self-efficacy and exercise performance are also negatively affected in children following high cognitive control, and interestingly, these effects are exacerbated among those scoring lower in motor coordination. We recommend future research investigate motor coordination as a potential mechanism for the reductions in both cognitive and physical task performance following the prolonged exertion of high cognitive control. (shrink)
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  49.  14
    Traité des premières vérités by Claude G. Buffier. [REVIEW]Jeffrey D. Burson -2023 -Journal of the History of Philosophy 61 (1):156-158.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Traité des premières véritésby Claude G. BuffierJeffrey D. BursonClaude G. Buffier. Traité des premières vérités. Édition, présentation et notes par Louis Rouquayrol. Textes cartésiens en langue française. Paris: Librairie Philosophique J. Vrin, 2020. Pp. 379. Paperback, €32.00.Born in Poland to French parents, Claude G. Buffier, SJ (1661–1737) emerged as one of the most influential of the Parisian scriptores librorumin the first decades of the eighteenth century. Buffier is (...) perhaps best known as one of the founding editors of, and contributors to, the influential French Jesuit periodical Mémoires de Trévoux, but his works on general grammar, metaphysics, moral philosophy, and logic earned him widespread renown. His Grammaire françaiseachieved translation into Spanish, German, Italian, and English, and his Cours de sciences sur des principes nouveaux et simples pour former le langage, l'esprit, et le cœur dans l'usage ordinaire de la vie(1715) was widely adopted in France and Spain throughout the eighteenth century. Buffier's eclectic approach to philosophy, science, moral philosophy, and practical theology developed across several significant works: Principes du raisonnement(1714), Traité des premières vérités(1724), Éléments de métaphysique(1725), and Exposition des preuves les plus sensibles de la véritable religion(1732). In these works, Buffier was prescient in selectively adopting perspectives from Descartes, Malebranche, and Locke, evincing thereby his avid interest and participation in early Enlightenment discussions. Many of Buffier's texts proved to be influential on contributors to the Encyclopédie, on Voltaire, and perhaps later, as harbingers of Scottish Common Sense philosophy. Given the growing recognition of Buffier's importance thanks to the work of Kathleen Wilkins, Catherine Northeast,Jeffrey Burson, Katharine Hammerton, and others, Louis Rouquayrol's new critical edition of Buffier's most influential work, Traité des premières vérités( Treatise of First Truths) is most welcome. Rouquayrol's critical edition of the Traitéis replete with helpful [End Page 156]intertextual explanatory notes to the texts and debates that Buffier addressed, and it includes an insightful synthetic introduction, which summarizes the Traitéand addresses aspects of its philosophical and historical significance. The editor also helpfully includes a detailed chronology of Buffier's life and works, a note about the textual bases for the edition, several instructive appendices to later editions and related works by Buffier, and a profoundly helpful bibliography that includes existing editions, copies, and translations of the Traité, in addition to scholarly studies of Buffier's life and work. Rouquayrol's critical edition is, in short, the best one currently available, and it is likely to remain the standard published edition for some time.In the editor's view, Buffier's primary significance is as the inaugural eighteenth-century figure who attempted to redress the weaknesses at the heart of Cartesian "innate ideas" in ways that might have avoided Berkeley's or Malebranche's immaterialism or Hume's skepticism: "pour lutter contre les 'conséquences idéalistes du cartésianisme,'" Buffier "avait eu plutôt recours au sens commun comme à un 'complément nécessaire du sense intime, qui garantit l'existence du monde extérieur'" (13n2, quoting Étienne Gilson). This "solution mitigée" allowed for a certain reconciliation between Descartes and the "empirisme tempéré" of Locke, and more broadly, a way of moderating "les principes des Modernes" with "les poncifs des Anciens" (13). This conciliation of Lockean empiricism and certain strands of Cartesianism found in Buffier was in fact a central point made by my earlier work on Buffier's contribution to eighteenth-century Enlightenment Catholicism (see Rise and Fall of Theological Enlightenment[South Bend, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2010]; also "Claude G. Buffier and the Maturation of the Jesuit Synthesis in the Age of Enlightenment," Intellectual History Review21 [2011]: 449–72). Rouquayrol's effort to revisit the complexities of this conciliation in his introduction is a welcome development. He explicitly reminds us that while Jesuits such as Buffier were prohibited from teaching particular theses associated with Descartes after 1706, they were nevertheless increasingly influenced by aspects of Cartesianism (15–17). In many... (shrink)
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  50.  40
    Looking at me, appreciating you: Self-focused attention distinguishes between gratitude and indebtedness.Maureen A. Mathews &Jeffrey D. Green -2010 -Cognition and Emotion 24 (4):710-718.
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