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Results for 'Jyoti Mittal'

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  1.  49
    Ethical, Legal, and Clinical Considerations when Disclosing a High‐Risk Syndrome for Psychosis.Vijay A.Mittal,Derek J. Dean,JyotiMittal &Elyn R. Saks -2015 -Bioethics 29 (8):543-556.
    There are complex considerations when planning to disclose an attenuated psychosis syndrome diagnosis. In this review, we evaluate ethical, legal, and clinical perspectives as well as caveats related to full, non- and partial disclosure strategies, discuss societal implications, and provide clinical suggestions. Each of the disclosure strategies is associated with benefits as well as costs/considerations. Full disclosure promotes autonomy, allows for the clearest psychoeducation about additional risk factors, helps to clarify and/or correct previous diagnoses/treatments, facilitates early intervention and bolsters communication (...) between providers but there are important considerations involving heritability, comorbidity, culture, and stigma. Non-disclosure advances nonmaleficence by limiting stigma and stress, and confusion in a sensitive developmental period but is complicated by varying patient preferences and the possibility that, as new treatments without adverse effects become available, the risk with false positives no longer justifies the accompanying loss of autonomy. Partial disclosure balances ethical considerations by focusing on symptoms instead of labels, but evidence that laypersons may interpret this information as a pseudo-diagnosis and that symptoms alone also contribute to stigma limits the efficacy of this approach. In addition, there are notable societal considerations relating to disclosure involving conservatorship, the reach of insurance companies, and discrimination. We advocate a hybrid approach to disclosure and recommend future research aimed at understanding the effects of stigma on clinical course and a renewed focus on those help-seeking cases that do not transition but remain clinically relevant. (shrink)
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  2.  62
    Investigating the research approaches for examining technology adoption issues.Jyoti Choudrie &Yogesh Kumar Dwivedi -2005 -Journal of Research Practice 1 (1):Article - D1.
    Adoption of technology, a research topic within the Information Systems area, is usually studied at two levels: organizational level and user level. This paper examines the range of methods used for studying technology adoption issues at both these levels. The approaches were selected after conducting a review of 48 articles on technology adoption and usage, published in peer reviewed journals between 1985 and 2003. The journals reviewed include the MIS Quarterly, Information Systems Research, European Journal of Information Systems, Information Systems (...) Journal, and other relevant journals in the IS area. The findings suggest that the survey method was used predominantly when investigating the topics of user adoption and the usage of technology. In contrast, the case study method is the most widely used when examining adoption issues at the organizational level. (shrink)
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  3.  54
    Gender-based differences in perception of a just society.Jyoti N. Prasad,Nancy Marlow &Richard E. Hattwick -1998 -Journal of Business Ethics 17 (3):219-228.
    In this study, 191 subjects, 93 male and 98 female undergraduate business students, were asked to respond to a 51 item questionnaire to examine their perception of what constituted a "just society". The subjects agreed on 16 characteristics which a just society would have. Out of 51 there were only 10 statements whereon average responses showed significant differences based on gender.
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  4. Introduction : Why public philosophy? Why now?Jyoti Bawane &Muzaffar Ali -2021 - In Murzban Jal & Jyoti Bawane,The Imbecile's Guide to Public Philosophy. New York, NY: Routledge India.
     
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  5. Schooling : the invisible paradigm.Jyoti Bawane -2021 - In Murzban Jal & Jyoti Bawane,The Imbecile's Guide to Public Philosophy. New York, NY: Routledge India.
     
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  6.  7
    Exploring mind pollution.Jyoti Bhansali &Sushamā Siṅghavī (eds.) -2010 - New Delhi: Gunjan Foundation.
  7.  25
    High CEC generation and surface modification in mica and vermiculite minerals.VikasMittal -2013 -Philosophical Magazine 93 (7):777-793.
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  8.  10
    Perspectives of the philosophy of Devatma.Kewal KrishanMittal (ed.) -1983 - Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass.
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  9. States' sexualities : theorizing sexuality, gender and governance.Jyoti Puri -2014 - In Mary Evans, Clare Hemmings, Marsha Henry, Hazel Johnstone, Sumi Madhok, Ania Plomien & Sadie Wearing,The SAGE handbook of feminist theory. Thousand Oaks, California: SAGE reference.
  10.  18
    Waiting times for transurethral resection of prostate.Jyoti Shah -2008 -Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 14 (3):473-476.
  11.  15
    Wittgenstein's Religious Belief.Jyoti Kumari Sinha -2008 - In Kali Charan Pandey,Perspectives on Wittgenstein's unsayable. New Delhi: Readworthy Publications.
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  12.  210
    Do Bigha Zamin: A Realistic Wonder of Indian Cinema.Jyoti Tyagi &Pankaj Jain -2020 -Journal of Visual Anthropology 33 (5).
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  13. A Unique" Kalpasutra" Manuscript, of c. 1440 from Mandu, in Jagdish and KamlaMittal Museum of Indian Art, Hyderabad.Padmasri JagdishMittal -2001 - In Haripriya Rangarajan, G. Kamalakar, A. K. V. S. Reddy, M. Veerender & K. Venkatachalam,Jainism: art, architecture, literature & philosophy. Delhi: Sharada Pub. House.
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  14.  6
    The Intensification of the Caste Divide: Increasing Violence on the Dalits in Neoliberal India.Jyoti Bhosale -2025 -Araucaria 27 (58).
    This paper is a study of the increasing instances of violence on the Dalits in contemporary India. It contextualises such violence in the new economic reforms of the 1990s which inaugurated the neo-liberal policies of privatisation and signified a withdrawal from a certain kind of state welfare. Apart from the extended role for the market, such a transition is also worked out by manoeuvring with the constitutional mandated form of social justice. By examining the physical, structural, and the symbolic infliction (...) of violence on the Dalits, this paper argues that the caste divide has intensified. (shrink)
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  15. Democracy in Indian classrooms : equalizing educational opportunities.Jyoti Bawane -2020 - In Murzban Jal & Jyoti Bawane,Theory and Praxis: Reflections on the Colonization of Knowledge. New York: Routledge India.
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  16. Biotechnology and ethics in India.Jyoti Dineshrao Bhosale -2024 - In Purusottama Bilimoria & Amy Rayner,The Routledge companion to Indian ethics: women, justice, bioethics and ecology. London ; New York: Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group.
     
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  17.  26
    A Cross-Comparison of Reengineering Teams Undertaking Business Process Change.Jyoti Choudrie &Vlatka Hlupic -2000 -Journal of Intelligent Systems 10 (5-6):473-508.
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  18. Dhātusāmya meṃ manobhāvoṃ kā sthāna.PracetāJyoti -2001 - Nāgapura: Viśvabhāratī Prakāśana.
    Study of psychology with references to Ayurveda.
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  19.  29
    Exploring talent management practices: antecedents and consequences.JeevanJyoti &Roomi Rani -2014 -International Journal of Management Concepts and Philosophy 8 (4):220.
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  20.  21
    Reading romance novels in postcolonial india.Jyoti Puri -1997 -Gender and Society 11 (4):434-452.
    This article examines the role of Harlequin and Mills and Boon romance novels in the lives of young, single, middle-class women readers in urban India. The article focuses on the readers' interpretations of the novels given the differences in the sites of production of the romance novels and the sociocultural context of reception. Three themes are explored in this study: the influence of romance novels on the readers' expectations of marital sexuality and gender role patterns, the limitations of novels in (...) dealing with the social uncertainties that face the readers as young women in Indian culture, and the generation of readers' social anxieties due to the difference between the content of the novels and the sociocultural context in which they are read. The article concludes with a discussion of its implications for understanding global forms of culture, contested meanings of culturally transposed texts, and the shaping of popular cultural practices in a transnational arena around vectors of gender and socioeconomic class. (shrink)
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  21.  29
    Recontextualizing Knowledge: An Epistemological Ambiguity.Jyoti Prakash Bagchi -2002 -Journal of Human Values 8 (2):157-163.
    The encounter of the cognitive apparatus with the phenomenal world had led to the emergence of independent thought processes either based on scientific method of enguiry or on meditative experiences. In the course of time these have developed into a systematized body of knowledge. They purport to provide peace and happiness, but when seduced by power a distorted value structure has been legitimized. The plethora of evidences suggest the 'self' has been incapacitated for long. The scientific experiences have been given (...) supreme status. The paper stresses the need to attain a beginner's mind so that looking within and looking without no longer remain intangible goals of education. The naodalities have been discussed to escape the bonds of conceptual limitations. Finally, it is suggested that this constructive role of optimizing the oppor tunities for formation of intellect, which moves beyond conventional intellectualism, will evolve into a com passionate world-serving intellect, and pave the way for peace and harmony in this turbulent world. (shrink)
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  22.  14
    Omissions and Chronological Complexities.Jyoti Mohan -2023 -Philosophy East and West 73 (1):220-230.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Omissions and Chronological ComplexitiesJyoti Mohan (bio)The stated purpose of Chinese and Indian Ways of Thinking in Early Modern European Philosophy: The Reception and the Exclusion by Selusi Ambrogio is "to examine the European understanding of China and India within the histories of philosophy from 1600 to 1744."1 Specifically, Ambrogio sets out to investigate the antecedents of the "othering" of non-Western philosophies. How far back did the notion go, that (...) non-Western philosophies were inferior? While Ambrogio often extends his argument to non-Western philosophies in general, in this monograph he examines only what he defines as "orientalist" philosophies—the philosophies of India and China. Since Ambrogio is investigating the histories of philosophy written in Europe, this choice makes sense: India and China were the two philosophical giants that most European philosophers needed to include in their works in order to claim to be universalist. No philosopher who wrote about world philosophies—and by extension no historian of philosophy—could ignore India and China, whether it was to dismiss the philosophies emanating from these geographic regions as inferior, or to extol them as proof that Europe was not the birthplace of "original thought."Ambrogio has chosen a time span from 1600 to 1744 c.e. to represent "the year 1600 … [,] the publication of Barbaricae philosophae antiquitatum by Otto van Heurn[,] and 1744[,] the year of the publication of the last book of the Historia critica by Jakob Brucker."2 Within the limits of this time [End Page 220] span, Ambrogio examines the work of several scholars who included Indian and Chinese philosophies in their "world histories of philosophies" and delineates three major historiographical trends. His rationale for ending his study with Brucker's work is that after this eighteenth-century opus, "Asians were usually excluded from the histories of philosophy."3 This time span seems puzzling to me. I know that most, if not all, of the authors Ambrogio cites had successors in their individual traditions well into the nineteenth century, if not the twentieth. While many histories of philosophy focused solely on the Western and classical traditions (as they did during the period under review by Ambrogio as well), the work of historians and scholars on Orientalist philosophies continued to multiply. To the extent that Ambrogio diligently studies his sources and constructs his argument, his work is commendable, but as a historian my questions for Ambrogio have to do with the underlying rationale for the time span he has chosen, and, by that extension, by the choices of his sources. Below I collect evidence that Asians continue to be included in the histories of philosophy past 1744, and in so doing suggest that this fact has an impact on his historiographical model.For instance, I would like to understand why, in his choice of sources, he has omitted all colonial works, especially since he engages with the argument that descriptions and understandings of Indian and Chinese philosophies were meditated through lenses of proselytization and of conquest. Granted, he is beginning with historians of philosophy, but as the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries progressed, historians also diversified their writings—as Ambrogio acknowledges—into histories of religion for instance. The connections between, and descriptions of, non-Western religions and philosophies were so muddled that it is impossible to separate them, save by attending to the titles of individual authors' works as being about religion or philosophy, respectively.The contents of such works are so closely related, at least in the Indian context, that contemporary historians, especially of the colonial period and of Indology, do not quibble over whether these works are about religion or philosophy. For instance, Paul Masson-Oursel wrote in 1923 that the development of Indian philosophy was integral to and proceeded alongside the development of religion.4 Systems of philosophical thought in India operated within larger systems of religious practice. Based on this model, Masson-Oursel describes the development of Indian philosophy as proceeding from the needs of religion. So, for example, he theorized that the mix of an Indo-Iranian religion and a pastoral, fire-worshipping people with an older indigenous Dravidian culture of agriculture, Goddess worship, and belief in amulets, spells, talismans, and other... (shrink)
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  23.  11
    Stakes and States: Sexual Discourses from New Delhi.Jyoti Puri -2006 -Feminist Review 83 (1):139-148.
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  24. Contribution of Sarahapada, Nagarjuna and Aryadeva to Buddhist Thought-The Tibetan Eye View.Kewal KrishanMittal -2005 - In G. Kamalakar & M. Veerender,Buddhism: art, architecture, literature & philosophy. Delhi: Sharada Pub. House. pp. 113.
     
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  25.  23
    Surface modification of layered silicates. II. Factors affecting thermal stability.VikasMittal -2012 -Philosophical Magazine 92 (36):4518-4535.
  26.  16
    Surface modification of layered silicates. I. Factors affecting thermal stability.VikasMittal -2012 -Philosophical Magazine 92 (36):4498-4517.
  27.  4
    Śūnyavāda, the Mādhyamika Thought.Kewal KrishanMittal -1993
    Contributed papers presented at all India seminar.
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  28.  151
    Board Composition and Financial Performance: Uncovering the Effects of Diversity in an Emerging Economy. [REVIEW]Jyoti D. Mahadeo,Teerooven Soobaroyen &Vanisha Oogarah Hanuman -2012 -Journal of Business Ethics 105 (3):375-388.
    We examine the key elements of board diversity (or heterogeneity) amongst listed companies operating in an emerging economy (Mauritius) and the extent to which these influence financial performance. Specifically, we ask whether there is evidence of tangible benefits in pursuing a strategy of board diversity in terms of gender-, age-, educational background and independence in a corporate context which has long been dominated by family-led and ‘closed’ boardrooms. In light of recent corporate governance developments which appear to foster greater diversity, (...) we examine data from the 2007 annual reports of all 42 companies listed on the Stock Exchange of Mauritius. We find that (i) women remain poorly represented on boards (ii) there is a relatively satisfactory level of heterogeneity in terms of educational background, age and independence in relation to developed countries. We also find significant regression coefficients for all four variables in terms of their impact on short-term performance. However, these relationships are characterised by both negative and positive impacts thereby leading to discussions on the validity of a strict heterogeneous or homogeneous board composition in the context of a developing economy. (shrink)
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  29.  40
    Editorial.SushilMittal -1997 -International Journal of Hindu Studies 1 (1):1-2.
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  30.  24
    Socioeconomic status, unpredictability, and different perceptions of the same risk.ChiraagMittal &Vladas Griskevicius -2017 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 40.
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  31.  36
    Materialism in Indian thought.Kewal KrishanMittal -1974 - [New Delhi]: Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers.
    Description: This is a unique research work of distinctive quality based on original Sanskrit, Pali and Prakrit sources. The book not only highlights the neglected features of Indian thought of the early pre-systematic period but also presents a careful, critical and constructive survey of well-developed concepts and doctrines of the full-fledged Indian philosophy. The book also exposes some of the established misconceptions about Indian philosophy that, It is essentially spiritualistic and the like, made current by some 'great' orientalists with ulterior (...) motives and accepted uncritically by the historians of Indian philosophy. Thus, the book maintains, that like life and culture, the Indian thought is equally rich and variegated decrying the tendency to consider all other schools of thought as so many steps towards Vedanta. The book upholds that even for Materialism we need not seek inspiration elsewhere, as we not only have a system of materialism of our own in the Carvaka (Lokayata) system but it also plays a role of considerable importance in the other thought-system. (shrink)
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  32.  58
    Conceptualizations of user autonomy within the normative evaluation of dark patterns.Jyoti Kumar &Sanju Ahuja -2022 -Ethics and Information Technology 24 (4):1-18.
    Dark patterns have received significant attention in literature as interface design practices which undermine users’ autonomy by coercing, misleading or manipulating their decision making and behavior. Individual autonomy has been argued to be one of the normative lenses for the evaluation of dark patterns. However, theoretical perspectives on autonomy have not been sufficiently adapted in literature to identify the ethical concerns raised by dark patterns. The aim of this paper is to conceptualize user autonomy within the context of dark patterns. (...) In this paper, we systematically review 151 dark patterns from 16 taxonomies to understand how dark patterns threaten users’ autonomy. We demonstrate through this analysis that implications for autonomy arise along four dimensions, because autonomy itself can be understood as subsuming several distinguishable concepts. These are agency, freedom of choice, control and independence. We argue that an assessment of whether a design pattern qualifies as ‘dark’ should account for the sense in which autonomy is threatened, as individuals’ rights and expectations of autonomy vary in various contexts and depend upon the interpretation of autonomy. This paper aims to contribute to the development of the normative lens of individual autonomy for the evaluation of dark patterns, as well as for persuasive design more broadly. (shrink)
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  33.  37
    The Influence of Business Incentives and Attitudes on Ethics Discourse in the Information Technology Industry.Sanju Ahuja &Jyoti Kumar -2021 -Philosophy and Technology 34 (4):941-966.
    As information technologies have become synonymous with progress in modern society, several ethical concerns have surfaced about their societal implications. In the past few decades, information technologies have had a value-laden impact on social evolution. However, there is limited agreement on the responsibility of businesses and innovators concerning the ethical aspects of information technologies. There is a need to understand the role of business incentives and attitudes in driving technological progress and to understand how they steer the ethics discourse on (...) technology. In the information technology industry, there is an observed trivialization of ethics supported by a business driven and technology-centric approach to ethics. This trivialization rests on hardened beliefs, ideologies, and arguments which hint at reduced accountability for business and tend to individualize social responsibility. The phenomenon of ethics trivialization needs to be duly addressed to resolve the tensions between business needs and ethical concerns. This paper has identified from literature and conceptually analyzed the beliefs and ideologies underlying ethics trivialization which undermine ethics in business contexts. The paper has attempted to address the business concerns indicated by this phenomenon as well as highlight the weaknesses of its assumptions, rhetoric, and justifications. The aim of this paper is to systematically present the justifications in favor of and against the practice of ethics trivialization in the information technology domain, thereby highlighting the need to develop frameworks for assessment of ethical responsibility, accountability, and democratization of the value trade-offs involved in the design of technologies. (shrink)
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  34.  12
    Prākr̥ta sāhitya ke vyāvahārika paksha.Jyoti Bābū Jaina -2019 - Udayapura: Bhāratiya Prākr̥ta Skôlarsa Sosāyaṭī.
    Research papers on Prakrit Jaina canonical literature.
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  35.  17
    Renungan hidup dalam sloka Hindu.Ida Rsi Bhujangga Waisnawa Putra Sara Shri SatyaJyoti &I. Gede Pariadnya (eds.) -2017 - Denpasar: Pustaka Bali Post.
    Self-discipline, ethics, character, and philosophy in Hindu poetry; criticism to Bhagavad Gita, Nītīśāstra, Sāra-samuccaya, etc.
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  36.  17
    A Southern Critique of the Globalist Assumptions about Technology Transfer in Climate Change Treaty Negotiations.Jyoti S. Kulkarni -2003 -Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 23 (4):256-264.
    This article critically evaluates the process of technology transfer from developed to developing countries. It considers market-based policies contained in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, which are proposed as tools to promote the transfer of technologies that can abate greenhouse gas emissions contributing to climate change. It uses the case of India to exemplify the conditions that exist and issues that arise in a rapidly developing country that is a recipient of such investments. It contests the claim (...) that such market-based strategies embodied in the present climate policy framework can facilitate the transfer of technologies that offer ecologically sustainable and socially equitable solutions for developing countries. (shrink)
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  37.  11
    Agricultural innovations for sustainability? Diverse pathways and plural perspectives on rice seeds in Odisha, India.Saurabh Arora,Bhuvana Narayanarao,NimishaMittal &Rasheed Sulaiman Vadekkal -forthcoming -Agriculture and Human Values:1-18.
    We focus on alternative innovation pathways for addressing agricultural sustainability challenges in Odisha, India. The first pathway that we term as industrial, is focused on breeding new seed varieties in modern laboratories and test fields, ostensibly for climate resilience. It is driven by public scientific institutions and private corporations. The second pathway that we call agroecological, is grounded in saving and sharing of diverse local varieties, largely by Indigenous (Adivasi) smallholders and their allies in civil society. Using the pathways’ descriptions (...) as bases, we present perspectives of different professional groups who appraise how effectively each pathway addresses a range of sustainability issues. While all participants appraise the agroecological pathway to be clearly better performing for addressing agricultural biodiversity and cultural uses of rice, appraisals for issues of the economy, seed accessibility, stress tolerance, and nutrition diverged from each other. An overall picture in support of one pathway did not emerge. Embracing such ambiguities and uncertainties associated with appraisals, we argue for balancing political support between diverse pathways. Greater support for structurally marginalised agroecological pathways may be crucial to meet sustainability goals. This support can include the restitution of lands and other socio-ecological resources for marginalised pathways as well as guaranteeing autonomy of Adivasi (Indigenous) communities among whom the pathways thrive. (shrink)
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  38.  29
    Clay exfoliation in polymer nanocomposites: Specific chemical reactions and exchange of specialty modifications on clay surface.VikasMittal -2010 -Philosophical Magazine 90 (17-18):2489-2506.
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  39.  28
    Organic functionalization of thermally reduced graphene oxide nanoplatelets by adsorption: structural and morphological characterization.VikasMittal,Ali U. Chaudhry &Nadejda B. Matsko -2016 -Philosophical Magazine 96 (20):2143-2160.
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  40.  30
    Who Am I and Who Are You?: Gadamer on Celan’s Dialogical Poetry.ArupJyoti Sarma -2023 -Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 10 (1):33-48.
    ABSTRACT In this essay, I shall discuss Gadamer’s interpretation of Celan’s dialogical poetry in his essay “Wer bin Ich und wer bist Du?” (“Who am I and Who are You?”). One may argue that this is Gadamer’s articulation of the problem of the self-other relationship. To understand the question of self and other, it is first of all necessary to return to the poetic word from which the question arises. Speaking is, for Gadamer, the most profoundly self-forgetful action, because when (...) one speaks, one is so deeply “within the word” that one is not turned toward the word but, rather, to what one wants to say with the word. For hermeneutics, interpreting means putting oneself on the task of the poetic text. The proximity between poetizing and interpreting emerges, also in its specificity concerning the proximity between poetizing and thinking. Such a proximity, in turn, divides itself into two extremes: the word that sublates itself, and the word that stands for itself. It is hence the uncertain fullness of language, where, unsurprisingly, both poetizing and interpreting come into themselves, which constitutes the link between the one and the other. Therefore, the interpreted word, intertwined with the poetic word does not replace what it indicates, but merely points beyond itself, to what is other than itself. Both pursue a meaning that points toward an open realm. (shrink)
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  41.  10
    Quest for truth: a felicitation volume in honour of Prof. S.P. Kanal =[Satyānveshaṇa].Satewan Parsram Kanal &Kewal KrishanMittal (eds.) -1976 - Delhi: Prof. S. P. Kanal Abhinandan Samiti.
    Contributed articles, chiefly on Indic philosophy; festschrift honoring the Indian philosopher and educator Satewan Parsram Kanal.
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  42.  25
    Varsity Medical Ethics Debate 2019: is authoritarian government the route to good health outcomes?Azmaeen Zarif,RheaMittal,Ben Popham,Imogen C. Vorley,Jessy Jindal &Emily C. Morris -2023 -Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (11):791-796.
    Authoritarian governments are characterised by political systems with concentrated and centralised power. Healthcare is a critical component of any state. Given the powers of an authoritarian regime, we consider the opportunities they possess to derive good health outcomes. The 2019 Varsity Medical Ethics Debate convened on the motion: ‘This house believes authoritarian government is the route to good health outcomes’ with Oxford as the Proposition and Cambridge as the Opposition. This article summarises and extends key arguments made during the 11th (...) annual debate between medical students from the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge. By contrasting the principles underlying authoritarianism and democracy, it enables a discussion into how they translate into healthcare provision and the outcomes derived. Based on the foundation of said principles, an exploration of select cases represents examples of applications and the results. We analyse the past, present and future implications on the basis of fundamental patient-centred care. (shrink)
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  43.  11
    Buddhist perspective on the religions and philosophy of life in India: compendium of papers presented at an Academic Conference held at Won Kwang University, Iri City, Korea, April 1991.Kewal KrishanMittal -1992 - Delhi: Published by Abha Prakashan in association with World Buddhist Cultural Foundation (India).
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  44.  13
    Character of National University- A Conceptual Framework.L. N.Mittal -2018 -Tattva - Journal of Philosophy 10 (2):31-36.
    The paper situates India’s global position with respect to its R&D and patent development and then highlights the current status of university system in India as a causative factor since majority of universities are busy in teaching merely how to qualify a paper-pencil test without much impetus on Research and Development. The paper also presents the perceived scenario of a national university and its characteristics. It also suggests ways in which universities can prioritize to produce researchers and innovators.
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  45.  31
    Can ‘The Individual’ Be Defined?Kewal KrishanMittal -1966 -International Philosophical Quarterly 6 (3):492-495.
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  46.  30
    Knowledge of oral cancer and screening practice of B.Sc. nursing students in Davangere City, India.SimpyMittal,Usha Mohandas,ChanduGowrapura Natraj,Subramaniam Ramanarayanan,Mahesh Hiregoudar,Amit Mahuli &PrashantGoudar Manjunath -2013 -Journal of Education and Ethics in Dentistry 3 (1):40.
  47.  19
    Melting and crystallization transitions in organically modified layered silicates studied with differential scanning calorimetry.VikasMittal -2012 -Philosophical Magazine 92 (32):3968-3982.
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  48.  9
    New Insights Into Sedentary Behavior Highlight the Need to Revisit the Way We See Motor Symptoms in Psychosis.Vijay A.Mittal,Jessica A. Bernard,Gregory P. Strauss &Sebastian Walther -2021 -Schizophrenia Bulletin 47 (4):877-879.
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  49.  180
    Thomas Kelly, "Bias: A Philosophical Study". [REVIEW]Jyoti Kishore -2024 -Philosophy in Review 44 (3):19-21.
    Thomas Kelly's book 'Bias: A philosophical study', is a philosophical exploration of the phenomena of bias and our practice of attributing it. He delves into the multifaceted nature of bias and offers a norm theoretic account for conceptualizing the phenomenon as typically involving "systematic departures from the norms". As a topic of inquiry, bias has attracted comparatively less attention in philosophy than in other disciplines like psychology and statistics. Hence, this book is an interesting and relevant read. Scholars working in (...) the areas of ethics, epistemology and social epistemology can greatly benefit from it. Practitioners of AI can also gain valuable insights from the study of bias. -/- In my review of the book, I provide a critical summary of Kelly's main arguments while acknowledging its fruitfulness in understanding bias. (shrink)
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    A crisis that changed the banking scenario in India: exploring the role of ethics in business.Sushma Nayak &Jyoti Chandiramani -2022 -Asian Journal of Business Ethics 11 (1):7-32.
    Digital business has marked an era of transformation, but also an unprecedented growth of cyber threats. While digital explosion witnessed by the banking sector since the COVID-19 pandemic has been significant, the level and frequency of cybercrimes have gone up as well. Cybercrime officials attribute it to remote working—people using home computers or laptops with vulnerable online security than office systems; malicious actors relentlessly developing their tactics to find new ways to break into enterprise networks and grasping defence evasion; persons (...) unemployed during the pandemic getting into hacking; cloud and data corruption; digital fatigue causing negligence; etc. This study adopts a case-based approach to explore the importance of business ethics, information sharing and transparency to build an information-driven society by scouting the case of Punjab and Maharashtra Co-operative (PMC) Bank, India. PMC defaulted on payments to its depositors and was placed under Reserve Bank of India’s directions due to financial irregularities and a massive fraud perpetrated by bank officials by orchestrating the bank’s IT systems. The crisis worsened when panic-stricken investors advanced their narrative through fake news peddled via social media channels, resulting in alarm that caused deaths of numerous depositors. It exposed several loopholes in information management in India’s deposit insurance system and steered the policy makers to restructure the same, thus driving the country consistent with its emerging market peers. The study further identifies best practices for aligning employees towards ethical behaviour in a virtual workplace and the pedagogical approaches for information management in the new normal. (shrink)
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