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Results for 'Karen Jubanyik'

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  1.  39
    Developing a Triage Protocol for the COVID-19 Pandemic: Allocating Scarce Medical Resources in a Public Health Emergency.Mark R. Mercurio,Mark D. Siegel,John Hughes,Ernest D. Moritz,Jennifer Kapo,Jennifer L. Herbst,Sarah C. Hull,KarenJubanyik,Katherine Kraschel,Lauren E. Ferrante,Lori Bruce,Stephen R. Latham &Benjamin Tolchin -2020 -Journal of Clinical Ethics 31 (4):303-317.
    The coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) has caused shortages of life-sustaining medical resources, and future waves of the virus may cause further scarcity. The Yale New Haven Health System developed a triage protocol to allocate scarce medical resources during the COVID-19 pandemic, with the primary goal of saving the most lives possible, and a secondary goal of making triage assessments and decisions consistent, transparent, and fair. We outline the process of developing the protocol, summarize the protocol, and discuss the major ethical challenges (...) encountered, along with our answers to the challenges. These challenges include (1) the role of age and chronic comorbidities; (2) evaluating children and pregnant patients; (3) racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic disparities in health; (4) prioritization of healthcare workers; and (5) balancing clinical judgment versus protocolized assessments.We conclude with a review of the limitations of our protocol and the lessons learned. We hope that a robust public discussion of such protocols and the ethical challenges they raise will result in the fairest possible processes, less need for triage, and more lives saved during future waves of the pandemic and similar public health emergencies. (shrink)
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  2.  28
    Reflections on New Evidence on Crisis Standards of Care in the COVID-19 Pandemic.Mark R. Mercurio,Mark D. Siegel,John Hughes,Ernest D. Moritz,Jennifer Kapo,Jennifer L. Herbst,Sarah C. Hull,KarenJubanyik,Katherine Kraschel,Lauren E. Ferrante,Lori Bruce,Stephen R. Latham &Benjamin Tolchin -2021 -Journal of Clinical Ethics 32 (4):358-360.
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  3.  172
    Dyadic Coping Across the Lifespan: A Comparison Between Younger and Middle-Aged Couples With Breast Cancer.Chiara Acquati &Karen Kayser -2019 -Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  4.  21
    Does Neutral Affect Exist? How Challenging Three Beliefs About Neutral Affect Can Advance Affective Research.Karen Gasper,Lauren A. Spencer &Danfei Hu -2019 -Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  5.  209
    Climate change denial and beliefs about science.Karen Kovaka -2019 -Synthese 198 (3):2355-2374.
    Social scientists have offered a number of explanations for why Americans commonly deny that human-caused climate change is real. In this paper, I argue that these explanations neglect an important group of climate change deniers: those who say they are on the side of science while also rejecting what they know most climate scientists accept. I then develop a “nature of science” hypothesis that does account for this group of deniers. According to this hypothesis, people have serious misconceptions about what (...) scientific inquiry ought to look like. Their misconceptions interact with partisan biases to produce denial of human-caused climate change. After I develop this hypothesis, I propose ways of confirming that it is true. Then I consider its implications for efforts to combat climate change denial and for other cases of public rejection of science. (shrink)
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  6.  78
    A co-citation analysis of cross-disciplinarity in the empirically-informed philosophy of mind.Karen Yan &Chuan-Ya Liao -2023 -Synthese 201 (5):1-35.
    Empirically-informed philosophy of mind (EIPM) has become a dominant research style in the twenty-first century. EIPM relies on empirical results in various ways. However, the extant literature lacks an empirical description of how EIPM philosophers rely on empirical results. Moreover, though EIPM is essentially a form of cross-disciplinary research, it has not been analyzed as cross-disciplinary research so far. We aim to fill the above two gaps in the literature by producing quantitative and qualitative descriptions of EIPM as a kind (...) of cross-disciplinary research. Our descriptions aim to enable metaphilosophers to evaluate EIPM methodologically and epistemically. Our analyses use co-citation and categorization analyses informed by the literature on interdisciplinarity. We present five sets of descriptions and identify the three most common types of cross-disciplinary interactions in EIPM. The resulting descriptions enable us to locate two metaphilosophical challenges for EIPM philosophers. One concerns how they should incorporate empirical results in different disciplinary contexts, and the other concerns which theoretical virtue(s) they should aim for when tinkering with scientific theories. (shrink)
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  7.  88
    Minding the Gap: Moral Ideals and Moral Improvement.Karen Stohr -2019 - New York, NY, USA: Oup Usa.
    The book is an exploration of how we narrow the gap between our moral ideals and our actual selves. It develops an account of moral improvement as a practical project requiring whatKaren Stohr calls a "moral neighborhood." Moral neighborhoods are constructed through social practices that instantiate shared moral ideals in a flawed world.
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  8.  68
    Cultivating Intimacy: The Use of the Second Person in Lyric Poetry.Karen Simecek -2019 -Philosophy and Literature 43 (2):501-518.
    Lyric poetry is often associated with expression of the personal. For instance, the work of the so-called “confessional” poets, such as Sylvia Plath and Anne Sexton, is often thought to reveal inmost thoughts and feelings of the poetic voice through first personal expression. The lyric poem, with its use of personal pronouns and singularity of voice, appears to invite the reader to experience the unfolding of the words as the intimate expression of another.Intimacy itself is associated with attention to another (...) and is thought to play a role in feeling sympathy and empathy. As John Gibson comments, “Empathy makes possible an especially intimate and powerful form of identification. It underwrites our capacity...... (shrink)
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  9.  25
    Synonymy and semantic classification.Karen Sparck Jones -1964 - Cambridge, Eng.,: Cambridge Language Research Unit.
  10. A Collaborative Effort: Academia and the Black Pentecostal Church.Bonnie Hatchett &Karen Holmes -1999 -The Griot 18 (2):46-53.
     
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  11. Introduction: Wittgenstein, modernism, and the contradictions of writing philosophy as poetry.Michael LeMahieu &Karen Zumhagen-Yekplé -2017 - In Zumhagen-Yekplé Karen & LeMahieu Michael,Wittgenstein and Modernism. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
     
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  12. There Should Be No Room for Cruelty to Livestock.Peter Singer &Karen Dawn -unknown
    What would you do if your neighbors kept their dog permanently caged, never letting her out to exercise or relieve herself, in a crate so narrow that she could not turn around or lie down with her legs outstretched? You'd probably call the police and have them charged with animal cruelty. In California, that is how the vast majority of breeding sows and veal calves are treated -- and it's legal.
     
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  13.  195
    Cross‐Situational Learning of Phonologically Overlapping Words Across Degrees of Ambiguity.Karen E. Mulak,Haley A. Vlach &Paola Escudero -2019 -Cognitive Science 43 (5):e12731.
    Cross‐situational word learning (XSWL) tasks present multiple words and candidate referents within a learning trial such that word–referent pairings can be inferred only across trials. Adults encode fine phonological detail when two words and candidate referents are presented in each learning trial (2 × 2 scenario; Escudero, Mulak, & Vlach, ). To test the relationship between XSWL task difficulty and phonological encoding, we examined XSWL of words differing by one vowel or consonant across degrees of within‐learning trial ambiguity (1 × (...) 1 to 4 × 4). Word identification was assessed alongside three distractors. Adults finely encoded words via XSWL: Learning occurred in all conditions, though accuracy decreased across the 1 × 1 to 3 × 3 conditions. Accuracy was highest for the 1 × 1 condition, suggesting fast‐mapping is a stronger learning strategy here. Accuracy was higher for consonant than vowel set targets, and having more distractors from the same set mitigated identification of vowel set targets only, suggesting possible stronger encoding of consonants than vowels. (shrink)
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  14.  691
    Levels of Fundamentality in the Metaphysics of Physics.Karen Crowther -2024 - In Katie Robertson & Alastair Wilson,Levels of Explanation. Oxford University Press.
    Within physics there are two ways of establishing the relative fundamentality of one theory compared to another, via two senses of reduction: "inter-level" and "intra-level" (Crowther, 2018). The former is standardly recognised as roughly correlating with the chain of ontological dependence (i.e., the phenomena described by theories of macro-physics are typically supposed to be ontologically dependent on the entities/behaviour described by theories of micro-physics), and thus has been of interest to naturalised metaphysics. The latter, though, has not been considered interesting (...) for metaphysics, because it is not thought to correlate either with ontological dependence, nor causal or dynamical dependence. I argue, however, that this is a mistake, and that actually, the intra-level relation does reflect ontological dependence (in the same sense as the inter-level relation) and thus should not be neglected by metaphysics of physics. This argument further supports the assertion that the same notion of fundamentality underlies both the inter- and intra-level claims of fundamentality in physics, and that this notion of relative fundamentality in physics correlates with that of metaphysics. (shrink)
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  15.  24
    Some evidence on the ethical disposition of accounting students: context and gender implications.Charles J. Coate &Karen J. Frey -2000 -Teaching Business Ethics 4 (4):379-404.
  16.  42
    Beyond Choice: Reading Sigmund Freud at the End of Roe.Karen McFadyen -2023 -Philosophies 8 (6):100.
    After Roe v. Wade was overturned by the Supreme Court, pregnant people lost their Constitutional protection of abortion. The new, visible politics of susceptibility have invited a revisitation to the psychoanalytic work of Sigmund Freud. This article examines the trauma narrative of Freud’s Beyond the Pleasure Principle and the theory of the death drive in elaborating the enduring cultural investment in protecting fetal life while examining its implications for pregnant subjects.
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  17.  31
    Where mathematics becomes Political. representing Humans.Karen François &Laurent de Sutter -2004 -Philosophica 74 (2).
  18.  16
    1.1 Public, Relational and Organizational Trust in Economic Affairs1.Karen S. Cook &Oliver Schilke -forthcoming -Common Knowledge: The Challenge of Transdisciplinarity.
  19.  11
    Culturally Relevant Pedagogy: Clashes and Confrontations.Lisa Scherff &Karen Spector (eds.) -2010 - R&L Education.
    The authors in this edited volume reflect on their experiences with culturally relevant pedagogy-as students, as teachers, as researchers-and how these experiences were often at odds with their backgrounds and/or expectations.
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  20.  27
    Naturalistic Theories of Reference.Karen Neander -2006 - In Michael Devitt & Richard Hanley,The Blackwell Guide to the Philosophy of Language. Malden, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 374–391.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Original and Derived Meaning The Causal‐Historical Theory The Crude Causal Theory The Asymmetric Dependency Theory Teleosemantics Informational semantics.
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  21. Durf te denken. Denken over moraal en actuele maatschappelijke thema's.Karen François -1997 -Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 59 (2):376-376.
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  22. Ethnomathematics as a Human Right.Karen François -2011 -Philosophy of Mathematics Education Journal 26.
     
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  23. Recensies-Gert goeminne, politiek Van de wiskunde.Karen François -2010 -Algemeen Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte 102 (1).
     
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  24.  20
    The Interplay of Psychology and Mathematics Education: From the Attraction of Psychology to the Discovery of the Social.Karen François,Kathleen Coessens &Jean van BendegemPaul -2012 -Journal of Philosophy of Education 46 (3):370-385.
    It is a rather safe statement to claim that the social dimensions of the scientific process are accepted in a fair share of studies in the philosophy of science. It is a somewhat safe statement to claim that the social dimensions are now seen as an essential element in the understanding of what human cognition is and how it functions. But it would be a rather unsafe statement to claim that the social is fully accepted in the philosophy of mathematics. (...) And we are not quite sure what kind of statement it is to claim that the social dimensions in theories of mathematics education are becoming more prominent, compared to the psychological dimensions. In our contribution we will focus, after a brief presentation of the above claims, on this particular domain to understand the successes and failures of the development of theories of mathematics education that focus on the social and not primarily on the psychological. (shrink)
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  25.  38
    Differential extinction performance to two stimuli following within-subject acquisition.Karen Galbraith -1971 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 89 (2):343.
  26.  20
    Sacred Emblems of Faith.Karen V. Guth -2019 -Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 39 (2):375-393.
    This paper explores the power of womanist ethics to illuminate the Confederate monuments debate. First, I draw on Emilie Townes’s analysis of the “cultural production of evil” to construe Confederate monuments as products of the “fantastic hegemonic imagination” that render visible for whites the invisibility of “whiteness.” Second, I argue that Angela Sims’s work on lynching provides a vivid example of how “countermemory” functions as an antidote to the fantastic hegemonic imagination. Finally, I argue that Delores Williams’s re-evaluation of the (...) cross as a sacred symbol enables a reading of Confederate monuments as realist symbols of violence that require displacement from the center to the periphery of national sacred space. I conclude that although the debate on Confederate monuments is important, womanist analysis warns against an overly-narrow focus on this issue, lest we neglect the already obscured gendered, classist, homophobic, and xenophobic dimensions of structural injustice that the monuments represent. (shrink)
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  27.  44
    Christian Sexual Ethics and the #MeToo Movement.Karen Ross,Megan K. McCabe &Sara Wilhelm Garbers -2019 -Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 39 (2):339-356.
    These three reflections look at the theological and ethical implications of sexual violence in light of the attention brought by #MeToo. The first explores ethnographic interviews which indicate that Church leaders, teachers, and parents contribute to rape culture by leaving sexual violence unaddressed in Christian sexual education, arguing that it must be reconstructed to eliminate the Church’s participation in a culture that promotes gender-based violence. The second notes that feminist scholarship has made the case that rape and “unjust sex” are (...) associated with what is considered acceptable heterosexuality, require the category of “cultural sin” to account for the social responsibility of persons. Finally, the third explores how a feminist political theological ethics of “dangerous memory” is required to critique of the structures and systems that violate women’s selves and bodies. (shrink)
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  28.  12
    Hoop en verraad: wat moslimjongeren verwachten van vertegenwoordigers met een etnische minderheidsachtergrond.Soumia Akachar,Karen Celis &Eline Severs -2017 -Res Publica 59 (4):463-483.
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  29.  13
    A different order of difficulty: literature after Wittgenstein.Karen Zumhagen-Yekplé -2020 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    This innovative critical study reinterprets Ludwig Wittgenstein's philosophy for the study of modernist and contemporary literature and brings Wittgenstein into literary conversations around problems of difficulty, ethical instruction, and the yearning for transformation. Central toKaren Zumhagen-Yekple͹'s book are her critical readings of key modernist texts by Franz Kafka, Virginia Woolf, and James Joyce. Throughout, Zumhagen-Yekplé brings to bear an interpretive framework that she derives from Wittgenstein's gnomic "Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus" (first published in English in 1922, the "annus mirabilis" of (...) modernism), which she treats not as a theory of logic or metaphysics but as a complex mock-theoretical puzzle. The book's final chapter turns to recent fiction by J. M. Coetzee, a living author conscious of his debts both to Wittgenstein and his modernist literary precursors. This book will interest students of literary modernism, Wittgenstein, and the interconnections between fiction and ordinary language philosophy. (shrink)
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  30.  45
    Re‐Imagining the Philosophical Conversation.Karen Green -2017 - In Russell Blackford & Damien Broderick,Philosophy's Future. Hoboken: Wiley. pp. 201–211.
    From its inception, philosophy has represented itself as a dialogue, or conversation, among those who are lovers of wisdom. It has also been largely a conversation among men. Diotima, the absent female presence, who teaches Socrates about love and philosophy, consigns the lovers of women to bodily reproduction, and associates men with the polis and invention of law. But the polis is composed of both women and men, and a truly progressive philosophy would be a conversation between them. Since at (...) least the fifteenth century, women in Europe have dreamed of a philosophy that would be a conversation that included them. This chapter looks back at the history of women's attempts to refashion philosophy as a dialogue between the sexes, and their dreams for the progress of the polis. Contemporary academic philosophy largely excludes these attempts from the history of philosophy, and distorts and represses an important aspect of the reality of our philosophic past. This chapter argues that the progress in civilization that has taken place in Europe cannot be disentangled from the contributions already made by women to our shared political assumptions. Progress in moral and political philosophy, if it is possible, will involve retrieving, extending, and deepening that contribution, so that the polis, along with the philosophy that sustains it, becomes fully conscious of itself as the outcome of a negotiation between humans who are embodied and sexually diverse. (shrink)
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  31.  5
    Integrating Scientonomy with Scientometrics.Karen Yan,Meng-Li Tsai &Tsung-Ren Huang -2021 - In Paul E. Patton,Scientonomy and the sociotechnical domain. Willmington, Delaware: Vernon Press. pp. 67-82.
    Scientonomy is the field that aims to develop a descriptive theory of the actual process of scientific change (Barseghyan, 2015). Scientometrics is the field that aims to employ statistical methods to investigate the quantitative features of scientific research, especially the impact of scientific articles and the significance of scientific citations (Leydesdorff & Milojević, 2013). In this paper, we aim to illustrate how to methodologically integrate scientonomy with scientometrics to investigate both qualitative and quantitative changes of a scientific community. We will (...) use a case study to achieve our aim. The case study is about a scientific community studying a physiological phenomenon called heart-rate variability (HRV). Moreover, we will argue that this methodological integration outperforms cases in which researchers only employ the resources from one of the two fields. (shrink)
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  32. Cavendish and Conway on the individual human mind.Karen Detlefsen -2018 - In Rebecca Copenhaver,History of the Philosophy of Mind, Vol. 4: Philosophy of Mind in the Early Modern and Modern Ages. Routledge.
  33. The Nature and Utility of the Temporally Extended Self.Lemmon Chris MooreKaren -2001 - In Chris Moore & Karen Lemmon,The Self in Time: Developmental Perspectives. Erlbaum.
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  34.  22
    Ungefahrliche Experimente Das Studio als Labor.Karen van den Berg -2012 -Zeitschrift für Ästhetik Und Allgemeine Kunstwissenschaft 57 (2):307-320.
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  35. Physical literacy and individuals with a disability.Philip Vickerman &Karen DePauw -2010 - In Margaret Whitehead,Physical literacy: throughout the lifecourse. New York: Routledge.
     
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  36.  41
    What Actually Happened: An Informed Review of the Linares Incident.Gilbert M. Goldman,Karen M. Stratton &Max Douglas Brown -1989 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 17 (4):298-307.
  37. Multiculturalism in Germany: Rhetoric, scattered experiments, and future chances.Peter A. Kraus &Karen Schönwälder -2006 - In Keith Banting & Will Kymlicka,Multiculturalism and the Welfare State: Recognition and Redistribution in Contemporary Democracies. Oxford University Press.
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  38.  534
    Reframing the director: distributed creativity in film-making practice.Karen Pearlman &John Sutton -2022 - In Ted Nannicelli & Mette Hjort,A Companion to Motion Pictures and Public Value. Wiley Blackwel. pp. 86-105.
    Filmmaking is one of the most complexly layered forms of artistic production. It is a deeply interactive process, socially, culturally, and technologically. Yet the bulk of popular and academic discussion of filmmaking continues to attribute creative authorship of films to directors. Texts refer to “a Scorsese film,” not a film by “Scorsese et al.” We argue that this kind of attribution of sole creative responsibility to film directors is a misapprehension of filmmaking processes, based in part on dubious individualist assumptions (...) about creative minds. Such a misapprehension is effacing the public value that a more inclusive and accurate understanding of filmmaking offers. By “public value” we mean the potential to enhance social and cultural well-being, particularly in working lives and collaborative undertakings in the screen industries. Better understanding of the systemic and social nature of creativity in filmmaking can potentially help in democratising aesthetics, which we consider a clear public good. (shrink)
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  39.  66
    A Path Analytic Model of Ethical Conflict in Practice and Autonomy in a Sample of Nurse Practitioners.Connie M. Ulrich &Karen L. Soeken -2005 -Nursing Ethics 12 (3):305-316.
    The purpose of this study was to test a causal model of ethical conflict in practice and autonomy in a sample of 254 nurse practitioners working in the primary care areas of family health, pediatrics, adult health and obstetrics/gynecology in the state of Maryland. A test of the model was conducted using a path analytic approach with LISREL 8.30 hypothesizing individual, organizational and societal/market factors influencing ethical conflict in practice and autonomy. Maximum likelihood estimation was used to estimate the parameters (...) most likely to have generated the data. Forty-five percent of the total variance in ethical conflict was explained by the variables of ethical environment and ethical concern. Ethical concern, idealistic philosophy, ethics education in continuing education, percentage of client population enrolled in managed care, and market penetration explained 15% of the total variance in autonomy. The findings of this study indicate that the causal model of ethical conflict in practice and autonomy is consistent with the data and contributed to a fuller understanding of clinical decision making associated with practicing in a managed care environment. The final model supported a conceptual framework that is inclusive of three domains: individual, organizational and societal/market variables. (shrink)
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  40.  64
    On Semantic and Ontic Truth.Karen Green -2024 -Acta Analytica 39 (3):523-541.
    It is argued that we should distinguish ontic truth––the True––that Frege claimed is sui generis and indefinable, from the semantic concept, for which Tarski provided a definition. Frege’s argument that truth is not definable is clarified and Wittgenstein’s introduction of the distinction between saying and showing is interpreted as an attempted response to Frege’s rejection of the correspondence theory. It is argued that conflicts between realism and Dummettian anti-realism result from their proponents not thoroughly distinguishing between the two closely connected (...) ways of thinking about truth. Last, the distinction is used to clarify and endorse the Fregean claim that all true sentences indicate the True, identified as ontic truth. (shrink)
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  41.  435
    A Scientometric Approach to the Integrated History and Philosophy of Science: Entrenched Biomedical Standardisation and Citation-Exemplar.Karen Yan,Meng-Li Tsai &Tsung-Ren Huang -2023 -International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 36 (2):143-165.
    1. Biomedical sciences are fast-growing fields with unprecedented speed of research outputs, especially in the quantities of papers. Philosophers aiming to study ongoing biomedical changes face cha...
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  42. (1 other version)In het belang van vrouwen. Vertegenwoordigers (m/v) en de constructie van de vertegenwoordigde (v).Karen Celis -2004 -Res Publica: Tijdschrift Voor Politologie 4:487.
     
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  43.  67
    Précis ofMaking Things Up.Karen Bennett -2019 -Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 98 (2):478-481.
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  44.  62
    Ethics and world pictures in Kamm on enhancement.Richard E. Ashcroft &Karen P. Gui -2005 -American Journal of Bioethics 5 (3):19 – 20.
    Frances Kamm's characteristically subtle paper in response to Michael Sandel is an intriguing intervention in the long-standing and increasingly frustrating debate over the morality of enhancement...
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  45. Paediatric Intensive Care Nursing.Karen Harrison-White -2011 - In Gosia M. Brykczynska & Joan Simons,Ethical and Philosophical Aspects of Nursing Children and Young People. Wiley. pp. 173.
     
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  46.  52
    White Matter Integrity and Treatment-Based Change in Speech Performance in Minimally Verbal Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder.Karen Chenausky,Julius Kernbach,Andrea Norton &Gottfried Schlaug -2017 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 11.
  47.  25
    Social Metadata for Libraries , Archives and Museums Part 2 : Survey Analysis.Karen Smith-Yoshimura,Carol Jean Godby,Ken Varnum &Elizabeth Yakel -forthcoming -Analysis.
    Metadata helps users locate resources that meet their specific needs. But metadata also helps us to understand the data we find and helps us to evaluate what we should spend our time on. Traditionally, staff at libraries, archives, and museums (LAMs) create metadata for the content they manage. However, social metadata—content contributed by users—is evolving as a way to both augment and recontextualize the content and metadata created by LAMs. Many cultural heritage institutions are interested in gaining a better understanding (...) of social metadata and also learning how to best utilize their users' expertise to enrich their descriptive metadata and improve their users' experiences. (shrink)
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  48. Affirming the California Experience with Affirmative Action.Gwendolyn Yip &Karen Narasaki -1996 -Nexus 1:22.
    -/- CONCLUSION “The experience in California is clear. Affirmative action has helped to dismantle barriers such as "old boys' networks" that have excluded not only women and individuals of racial or ethnic minorities, but also white American men who did not belong to networks of privilege. Affirmative action has also worked to ensure that our schools, workplaces, and other social institutions fully use our diverse talents, thereby helping our government and social institutions to better serve their communities. -/- In short, (...) affirmative action has helped to bring out the best in us as a society. It challenges us to have the courage of our convictions that: (1) we do want a truly equal opportunity society; and (2) we believe that all Americans, including women and minorities, are competent individuals who have talents to contribute. Passing the CCRI would completely eliminate affirmative action, and thus have the same effect as "throwing the baby out with the bathwater." The "baby" —active and affirmative commitment to equal opportunity— is barely out of its infancy. We must not now abandon our commitment, just when we have taken our first steps towards creating a truly equal opportunity society.” -/- (This essay was written against the backdrop of legislative efforts in the mid 1990s, to overturn “affirmative action” policies at educational institutions, which had given more equal access to higher education for students from previously under-represented communities, particularly white women but also racialized communities. By mischaracterizing affirmative action programs as “gender or racial preferences”, opponents were able to pass the 1996 ballot measure, Proposition 209, the so-called “California Civil Rights Initiative” (CCRI). The ban on “preferences” gained the support of 54.6% of all California voters, including 58% of white women and 66% of white men voters. Use of language was key, as a slight majority of Americans approved of some affirmative actions but opposed racial preferences. The CCRI has had a huge toll on Latino and African American enrollment at UC Berkeley and UCLA, which has never recovered. State contracts for firms owned by women and minorities also dropped sharply. Similar initiatives failed in some states but succeeded elsewhere. See online Encyclopedia). (shrink)
     
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  49.  32
    Tainted Legacies and the Journal of Religious Ethics.Karen V. Guth -2024 -Journal of Religious Ethics 51 (4):673-689.
    This essay reflects on the role academic journals like the JRE can play in facilitating and addressing tainted legacies. As an institution in religious ethics, the journal not only determines whose work is important, but it also replicates such judgments, passing certain sets of issues, concerns, and methods down from the past to the present, shaping future work. Journals highlight the systemic, structural elements of legacies that we often neglect in heated debate over how to respond to them. Consequently, they (...) illuminate the complexity of the problems tainted legacies present. I first discuss three ways a journal like the JRE facilitates the structural features of tainted legacies in religious ethics. I then suggest how the JRE might implement a position I call the “reformer” in response to such legacies. This position emphasizes practices of moral repair designed to challenge the systemic injustices that underlay tainted legacies. (shrink)
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    Public service media as drivers of innovation: A case study analysis of policies and strategies in Spain, Ireland, and Belgium.Karen Donders &Sabela Direito-Rebollal -2023 -Communications 48 (1):43-67.
    In the post-broadcast era, public service media (PSM) organizations have to innovate, stay up-to-date with new ways of consuming content, and experiment with the manifold opportunities that interactivity offers for audience engagement. At the same time, they are still obligated to achieve their public service remit and guarantee that services comply with values such as universality, diversity, creativity, and innovation. This article analyzes the innovation policies and strategies of PSM to understand if these are shifting from a technology-centric to a (...) user-centric approach. It evaluates what areas of innovation are prioritized by both policy-makers and public broadcasters and whether these areas correspond with the innovation goals entrusted to PSM organizations by scholars. To this end, we adopted a multi-case study approach. The focus is on three public broadcasters of varying size and situated in different political, cultural, and economic backgrounds: RTVE (Spain), RTÉ (Ireland), and VRT (Belgium). Based on a qualitative document analysis, we conclude that innovation remains largely technology-centric. Strategies are oriented to the implementation of new technologies, the digital distribution of the content, and the collaboration with external partners. However, these public broadcasters have not yet promoted concrete actions to encourage the participation of their audiences. (shrink)
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