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Results for 'Katherine Weissbourd'

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  1.  30
    Transcendence as an Aesthetic Concept: Implications for Curriculum.Katherine Lee -1993 -The Journal of Aesthetic Education 27 (1):75.
  2.  85
    Ethical Decision Making in Autonomous Vehicles: The AV Ethics Project.Katherine Evans,Nelson de Moura,Stéphane Chauvier,Raja Chatila &Ebru Dogan -2020 -Science and Engineering Ethics 26 (6):3285-3312.
    The ethics of autonomous vehicles has received a great amount of attention in recent years, specifically in regard to their decisional policies in accident situations in which human harm is a likely consequence. Starting from the assumption that human harm is unavoidable, many authors have developed differing accounts of what morality requires in these situations. In this article, a strategy for AV decision-making is proposed, the Ethical Valence Theory, which paints AV decision-making as a type of claim mitigation: different road (...) users hold different moral claims on the vehicle’s behavior, and the vehicle must mitigate these claims as it makes decisions about its environment. Using the context of autonomous vehicles, the harm produced by an action and the uncertainties connected to it are quantified and accounted for through deliberation, resulting in an ethical implementation coherent with reality. The goal of this approach is not to define how moral theory requires vehicles to behave, but rather to provide a computational approach that is flexible enough to accommodate a number of ‘moral positions’ concerning what morality demands and what road users may expect, offering an evaluation tool for the social acceptability of an autonomous vehicle’s ethical decision making. (shrink)
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  3.  40
    (1 other version)An Introduction to the Philosophy of Time.Katherine Fazekas -forthcoming -Tandf: Australasian Journal of Philosophy:1-4.
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  4.  149
    Social Science as a Guide to Social Metaphysics?Katherine Hawley -2018 -Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 49 (2):187-198.
    If we are sympathetic to the project of naturalising metaphysics, how should we approach the metaphysics of the social world? What role can the social sciences play in metaphysical investigation? In the light of these questions, this paper examines three possible approaches to social metaphysics: inference to the best explanation from current social science, conceptual analysis, and Haslanger-inspired ameliorative projects.
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  5.  40
    Can Psychoanalytic Theories Explain the Pakistani Woman? Intrapsychic Autonomy and Interpersonal Engagement in the Extended Family.Katherine P. Ewing -1991 -Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 19 (2):131-160.
  6.  9
    Addressing education: purposes, plans, and politics.Peggy A. Pittas &Katherine M. Gray (eds.) -2004 - [Philadelphia]: Xlibris.
    Addressing Education: Purposes, Plans, and Politics is the first in the 10-volume series, Lynchburg College Symposium Readings, 3rd edition. Each volume presents primary texts organized around an interdisciplinary, liberal arts theme such as education, politics, social issues, science and technology, morals and ethics. The series has been developed by Lynchburg College faculty for use in the Senior Symposium and the Lynchburg College Symposium Readings Program (SS/LCSR). While these programs are distinctive to Lynchburg College, the texts are used on many college (...) campuses across the nation, as well as by readers interested in significant original texts on important topics. Addressing Education: Purposes, Plans, and Politics offers primary source readings on a wide range of topics in education. Here are the original writings that readers often only read about. In this volume, the educators speak for themselves in selections and excerpts from Plato (360 B.C. E.) to Paolo Freire (1968). Familiar luminaries Mann, Rousseau, DuBois, Keller, Jefferson, 21 in all gather together all in one volume to deliver these pivotal ideas with incomparable impact. Whether consumed cover-to-cover or piece-by-piece, the volume invites useful, critical debate on this important topic. (shrink)
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  7.  220
    Conspiracy theories, impostor syndrome, and distrust.Katherine Hawley -2019 -Philosophical Studies 176 (4):969-980.
    Conspiracy theorists believe that powerful agents are conspiring to achieve their nefarious aims and also to orchestrate a cover-up. People who suffer from impostor syndrome believe that they are not talented enough for the professional positions they find themselves in, and that they risk being revealed as inadequate. These are quite different outlooks on reality, and there is no reason to think that they are mutually reinforcing. Nevertheless, there are intriguing parallels between the patterns of trust and distrust which underpin (...) both conspiracy theorising and impostor thinking. In both cases subjects distrust standard sources of information, instead regarding themselves as especially insightful into the underlying facts of the matter. In both cases, seemingly-anomalous data takes on special significance. And in both cases, the content of belief dictates the epistemic behaviour of the believer. This paper explores these parallels, to suggest new avenues of research into both conspiracy theorising and impostor syndrome, including questions about whether impostor syndrome inevitably involves a personal failure of rationality, and issues about how, if at all, it is possible to convince others to abandon either conspiracy theories or impostor attitudes. (shrink)
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  8.  31
    Clinical Psychoanalysis as an Ethnographic Tool.Katherine P. Ewing -1987 -Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 15 (1):16-39.
  9.  52
    The self-prophecy effect: Increasing voter turnout by vanity-assisted consciousness raising.Mark R. Klinger,Katherine L. Kerr &Mark E. Vande Kamp -unknown
    Persons registered to vote in Seattle, Washington for the November, 1986 general election and a September, 1987 primary election were randomly assigned to treatments in two telephoneconducted experiments that sought to increase voter tumout. The experiments applied and extended a "self-prophecy” technique, in which respondents are asked simply to predict whether or not they will perform a target action. In the present studies, voting registrants were asked to predict whether or not they would vote in an election that was less (...) than 48 hours away. This technique, which previously increased turnout in a small study done during the 1984 U.S. Presidential election, was again effective among moderate prior-turnout voters in the second of the present much larger experiments. The failure of the effect in Experiment 1 was plausibly a ceiling effect due to very high turnout for a U.S. Senate contest in the 1986 election. Successful applications of the self· prophecy technique are facilitated by social desirability of the target action (which leads subjects to predict that they will perform it). However, social desirability of the target behavior is not a sufficient condition for the effect, as indicated by an unexpected nonoccurrence of the effect among low prior-tumout voters in Experiment 2. (shrink)
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  10.  38
    BREAKUP: a preprocessing algorithm for satisfiability testing of CNF formulas.Robert Cowen &Katherine Wyatt -1993 -Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 34 (4):602-606.
  11.  21
    The Psychiatrist as the Repressor of the Extraordinary in Glass, directed by M. Night Shyamalan, 2019.Anna Sheen,Katherine Chung,Nashali Ferrara &Douglas Opler -2020 -Journal of Medical Humanities 41 (4):579-584.
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  12.  226
    Borderline Simple or Extremely Simple.Katherine Hawley -2004 -The Monist 87 (3):385-404.
    In his Material Beings, Peter van Inwagen distinguishes two questions about parthood. What are the conditions necessary and sufficient for some things jointly to compose a whole? What are the conditions necessary and sufficient for a thing to have proper parts? The first of these, the Special Composition Question (SCQ), has been widely discussed, and David Lewis has argued that an important constraint on any answer to the SCQ is that it should not permit borderline cases of composition. This is (...) a far-reaching claim, since many plausible-seeming accounts of composition do permit borderline cases. Ned Markosian has recently directed our attention to the second, the neglected Inverse Special Composition Question (ISCQ). I will argue that those who accept Lewis’s constraint on answers to the SCQ should accept an analogous constraint on answers to the ISCQ, and I will discuss the effects of such a constraint. (shrink)
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  13.  169
    David Lewis on Persistence.Katherine Hawley -2015 - In Barry Loewer & Jonathan Schaffer,A companion to David Lewis. Chichester, West Sussex ;: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 237–249.
    This chapter explores the connections between David Lewis's perdurance theory and his Humean supervenience, arguing that his influential argument about temporary intrinsics is best seen in this light. It presents domestic dispute within the anti‐endurantist camp and analyzes the following questions: why does Lewis identify ordinary objects with world‐bound parts of transworld objects, but not with time‐bound parts of transtemporal objects? Given that Lewis is a counterpart theorist about modality, why isn't he a stage theorist about persistence? Humean supervenience in (...) isolation does not entail perdurance theory, even for the actual world. Lewis's treatment of temporary intrinsics in On the Plurality of Worlds forms part of a discussion of both persistence and its modal analogue, for which there is no neutral term. Perdurance theory is challenged by the stage theory of persistence, which identifies ordinary objects with brief stages instead of transtemporal sums of those stages. (shrink)
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  14.  28
    Can Computers Create Meanings? A Cyber/Bio/Semiotic Perspective.N.Katherine Hayles -2019 -Critical Inquiry 46 (1):32-55.
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  15.  46
    The Common Good and Common Harm.E. David Cook &Katherine Wasson -2013 -The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 13 (4):617-623.
    This article offers a critical examination of the notion of the common good in Catholic social ethical teaching, comparing this concept with utilitarianism and examining parallels between them and common critiques of both. Rather than focusing on the common good and trying to reach agreement on its content as a maximum standard for persons and communities in society, we argue that it is preferable to focus on the common harm. The common harm serves as a minimum standard of what causes (...) harm to individuals and communities in society and should be avoided. The common harm provides both a conceptually sound and practically achievable construct for contributing positively to the social ethical discussion in an increasingly secular society. National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 13.4 : 617–623. (shrink)
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  16.  35
    (1 other version)The role of suspiciousness in understanding others’ goals.A. Palomares Nicholas,GrassoKatherine,Li Siyue &Li Na -2016 -Interaction Studies 17 (2):155-179.
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  17.  45
    Applied Metaphysics.Katherine Hawley -2016 - In Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen, Kimberley Brownlee & David Coady,A Companion to Applied Philosophy. Malden, MA: Wiley. pp. 163–179.
    Metaphysics can be used to help us understand the world, and has applications both within philosophy and beyond. Within philosophy, metaphysical questions arise whether we are thinking about ethics, art, religion, or science. Beyond philosophy, there are many areas where metaphysics can be applied. Case studies in this chapter include applied ontology in information science, social ontology in both philosophy and the social sciences, and questions about classification and kinds in psychiatry.
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  18.  285
    Why Temporary Properties Are Not Relations Be- tween Physical Objects and Times.Katherine Hawley -1998 -Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 98 (2):211–216.
    Take this banana. It is now yellow, and when I bought it yesterday it was green. How can a single object be both green all over and yellow all over without contradiction? It is, of course, the passage of time which dissolves the contradiction, but how is this possible? How can a banana ripen? These questions raise the problem of change. The problem is sometimes called the problem of temporary intrinsics, but, as I shall explain below, this emphasis on intrinsic (...) properties is misleading. For my more recent thoughts in this area, please see my 'David Lewis on Persistence' (2015). (shrink)
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  19.  24
    An Antiskeptical Theory of When and How We Know.byKatherine Badriyeh -1981 -Dialectica 35 (4):415-432.
    SummarySkepticism is very powerful and persuasive, yet it is not the basis upon which the reasonable person operates in the world. In this paper I've tried to articulate the criteria whereby the reasonable person determines what is a fact and determines that she/he knows. I've taken six areas where knowledge is a matter of contention between the reasonable person and the skeptic and constructed dialogues between the two. The six areas are things not directly perceived mathematical and tautological statements the (...) distinction between dream and reality other minds and the contents of other minds facts of the past both historical and invividual “scientific facts”. My position is that of the reasonable person.RésuméLe scepticisme est très puissant et persuasif, mais ce n'est pas une base à partir de laquelle la personne raisonnable agit dans le monde. Dans cet article, j'ai essayé?on; énoncer les critères selon lesquels la personne raisonnable détermine ce qu'est un fait et ce qu'elle sait. J'ai pris six domaines où la connaissance est objet de contestation entre la personne raisonnable et le sceptique et ai imaginé un dialogue entre eux. Ces six domaines sont: les choses non directement perçues les énoncés mathématiques et tautologiques la distinction entre rêve et réalité les autres esprits et leur contenu les faits appartenant au passé individuel et historique les faits scientifiques. Ma propre position s'identifie avec celle de la personne raisonnable.ZusammenfassungDer Skeptizismus mag zwar eine starke und überzeugende Doktrin sein, er bietet jedoch keine Grundlage für vernünftige Handlungen in der Welt an. Es wird versucht, die Kriterien anzugeben, aufgrund von welchen eine vernünftige Person bestimmt, was eine Tatsache ist und was sie weiss. Es werden sechs Bereiche angegeben, in welchen sich die vernünftige Person mit dem Skeptiker über Erkenntnisfragen in einen Konflikt verwickeln kann: Dinge, die nicht unmittelbar wahrgenommen werden mathematisch und tautologische Aussagen, die Unterscheidung zwischen Traum und Wirklichkeit, andere Geister und fremdpsychische Inhalte, Tatsachen der Vergangenheit , wissenschaftliche Tatsachen. Der Position der vernünftigen Person wird der Vorzug gegeben. (shrink)
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  20. On the Burka Ban.Eun-JungKatherine Kim -2012 -Public Affairs Quarterly 26 (4):293-312.
    This paper addresses the central moral issues regarding the burka ban in a liberal society: the freedoms of religion and expression, women's liberty, gender equality, state neutrality and public safety. The paper argues that the ban is unjustifiable in a liberal society for the following reasons: (1) liberal institutions increase the likelihood of voluntary decisions, (2) a legal measure that promotes a controversial conception of liberty is an undue interference with liberty, (3) the ban overrides women’s judgment regarding their own (...) interest rather than gives effect to it, (4) the principle of moral equality fails to support forced unveiling, and (5) the ban is discriminatory because it imposes a harsh burden on women by preventing religious observance. (shrink)
     
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  21.  34
    Impact of gender bias on women surgeons: a South African perspective.Shelley Lynn Wall &Katherine Troisi -2020 -Journal of Medical Ethics 46 (11):785-786.
    A recent article in this journal by Katrina Hutchison exposes and addresses the cumulative effects of implicit bias on women in surgery. We doubt that there is a single woman in any surgical field who has not experienced both implicit and explicit bias. Many of the issues facing women in surgery seem to be mirrored in both the developed and developing countries. There is little literature describing the exact situation in Africa. South African government institutions have made a concerted effort (...) to improve the representation of minorities in business, education and the health sector. In the hospital setting, hiring is done by means of a quota system based on demographics within that particular sector. This has also resulted in a number of unforeseen epistemic biases. This policy-driven ‘forced’ hiring of female candidates also led to feelings of doubt in the candidates themselves about their merits and competence and capabilities. This epistemic bias can then filter down, feeding the already prevalent imposter syndrome and confidence issues felt by many female surgical trainees. Not only do we need to aim to change the culture in surgical departments by changing the image of the ‘stereotypical surgeon’, we need to extend this message out into our training institutions, communities and peoples’ homes. We believe that this is the only way to change a culture steeped in implicit bias, to be more inclusive of women and other minority groups and shed the assumption that they are lesser. (shrink)
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  22.  76
    Comments onOntology Made Easy by Amie Thomasson.Katherine Hawley -2019 -Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 99 (1):229-235.
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  23.  45
    Introduction to morality, justice and the law.M.Katherine B. Darmer &Robert M. Baird -manuscript
    MORALITY, JUSTICE AND THE LAW is a co-edited volume pulling together selections on theories of the moral underpinnings of law, morality and lawyering (including the religious lawyering movement), civil disobedience, capital punishment and immigration. The book was published by Prometheus Books in 2007.
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  24.  38
    Acceptability, Impartiality, and Peremptory Norms of General International Law.Eun-JungKatherine Kim -2015 -Law and Philosophy 34 (6):661-697.
    Peremptory norms of general international law (jus cogens) are universally binding prohibitions that override any consideration for non-compliance (e.g., genocide and slavery). The question is how nonconsensual norms emerge from a consensual international legal order. It appears that either the peremptoriness of jus cogens renders consent superfluous to the norm’s binding force or consent divests jus cogens of its peremptory status. The goal of this paper is to resolve the dilemma by explaining why jus cogens is exempt from the general (...) requirement of consent that binds states to the rules of international law. The paper provides an impartiality-based account of enforcement that explains why a state’s refusal to give consent to jus cogens may be overridden in a consensual legal order. (shrink)
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  25.  66
    Ethical arguments for access to abortion services in the Republic of Ireland: recent developments in the public discourse.Joan McCarthy,Katherine O’Donnell,Louise Campbell &Dolores Dooley -2018 -Journal of Medical Ethics 44 (8):513-517.
    The Republic of Ireland has some of the most restrictive abortion legislation in the world which grants to the ‘unborn’ an equal right to life to that of the pregnant woman. This article outlines recent developments in the public discourse on abortion in Ireland and explains the particular cultural and religious context that informs the ethical case for access to abortion services. Our perspective rests on respect for two very familiar moral principles – autonomy and justice – which are at (...) the centre of social and democratic societies around the world. This article explains the context for the deployment of these concepts in order to support the claim that the current legislation and its operationalisation in clinical practice poses serious risks to the health, lives and well-being of pregnant women, tramples on their autonomy rights and requires of them a self-sacrifice that is unreasonable and unjust. (shrink)
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  26.  28
    An ERP Investigation of L2–L1 Translation Priming in Adult Learners.Gabriela Meade,Katherine J. Midgley &Phillip J. Holcomb -2018 -Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  27.  28
    Inattentional Blindness During Driving in Younger and Older Adults.Raheleh Saryazdi,Katherine Bak &Jennifer L. Campos -2019 -Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  28.  36
    (1 other version)Critical image configurations: The work of Georges didi-huberman.LauraKatherine Smith &Stijn De Cauwer -2018 -Angelaki 23 (4):1-2.
    In this text, Jacques Rancière critically discusses the work of Georges Didi-Huberman on images. He disagrees with various claims seemingly made by Didi-Huberman about images, such as that they can “take position” or that they are “active.” Rancière argues that Didi-Huberman adds another form of dialectics to the simpler form of dialectics adopted by Bertolt Brecht and Harun Farocki in their works, namely one that also involves a layering of different temporalities. However, both in Brecht’s War Primer and in Didi-Huberman’s (...) analysis of it, all the potencies credited to images as such are actually potencies of the words that accompany the images. Rancière comes to the conclusion that to “put images in motion,” as Didi-Huberman wants to do, or to regard them as being “active,” he has to put words, his own poetic and extensive writings, in motion. (shrink)
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  29.  33
    Debating point.Katherine Hall -1994 -Health Care Analysis 2 (4):336-338.
  30.  40
    Physicians prescribing “medicine” for enhancement: Why we should not and cannot overlook safety concerns.Katherine Drabiak-Syed -2011 -American Journal of Bioethics 11 (1):17 - 19.
  31. Defects produced in gaas crystals.Li During &Katherine B. Wolfstirn -1965 - In Karl W. Linsenmann,Proceedings. St. Louis, Lutheran Academy for Scholarship. pp. 3--187.
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  32.  59
    The Rational Expression of the Soul in the Aristotelian Psychology: Deliberating Reasoning and Action.Katherine Esponda Contreras -2018 -Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 29:339-365.
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  33.  42
    Children's Performance on the Sustained Attention to Response Task: A Cross-Sectional Analysis of Age-Related Changes.Lewis Frances,Reeve Robert &JohnsonKatherine -2015 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  34.  43
    Stimulus predifferentiation as a factor in transfer of training.R. M. Gagné &Katherine E. Baker -1950 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 40 (4):439.
  35. Politik und Verantwortung: zur Aktualität von Hannah Arendt.Waltraud Meints &Katherine Klinger (eds.) -2004 - Hannover: Offizin.
  36.  41
    Is sex comedy or tragedy? Directing desire and female auteurship in the cinema of Catherine breillat.Katherine Ince -2006 -Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 64 (1):157–164.
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  37. Making Meaning at the Intersections: Developing a Digital Archive for Multimodal Research.Michael Neal,Katherine Bridgman &Stephen J. McElroy -forthcoming -Topoi.
     
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  38.  29
    Orality and the Developing Text of Caedmon's Hymn.Katherine O'Brien O'Keeffe -1987 -Speculum 62 (1):1-20.
    The modern editorial practice of printing Old English poetry one verse to a line with a distinct separation between half-lines distracts attention from a well-known and important fact, that Old English poetry is copied without exception in long lines across the writing space. Normal scribal practice does not distinguish verses, reserving capitals and points for major divisions of a work. In manuscripts of Latin poetry, however, quite another practice holds. Latin verses copied in England after the eighth century are regularly (...) transmitted in a format familiar to modern readers: verses are set out one to a line of writing, capitals begin each line, and often some sort of pointing marks the end of each verse. The regularity of this distinction in copying practice and the difference in the nature and level of the graphic conventions used for verse in the two languages imply that such scribal practice was deliberate and was useful and significant for contemporary readers. (shrink)
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  39.  73
    From Pioneers to Professionals.Sonali S. Parnami,Katherine Y. Lin,Kathryn Bondy Fessler,Erica Blom,Matthew Sullivan &Raymond G. de Vries -2012 -Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 21 (1):104-115.
    Bioethics has made remarkable progress as a scholarly and applied field. A mere fledgling in the 1960s, it is now firmly established in hospitals, medical schools, and government agencies and boasts a number of professional associations and a handsome collection of journals.
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  40. The Trust Game and the Testimony Game.Katherine Hawley -2012 -Abstracta 6 (S6):84-91.
    This is part of a symposium on Paul Faulkner's book 'Knowledge on Trust'. The symposium also includes pieces by Guy Longworth, Arnon Keren, Edward S. Hinchman, and Peter J. Graham, with précis and replies by Paul Faulkner. For a more straightforward account of the book, see my review in Philosophical Quarterly 63.1 (2013), 170-71.
     
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  41.  22
    A nice attempt.Katherine Heit -2010 -Acm Sigcas Computers and Society 40 (1):17-22.
    Throughout history, one focus of society has been expanding and educating its less fortunate or less advanced. This has not change in the twenty-first century. It seems to be a topic in every political election: what are you going to do to help the poor? What are you going to do to help the poor in other countries? The mistreatment of others is all over the media. It fills the home and the head. The squalor of poorer countries is featured (...) on the nightly news. People typically say, send food. Send medicine. One man had a different idea. Send education in the form of inexpensive laptops. (shrink)
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  42.  23
    Scientific Research on Nanotechnology in Latin American Journals Published in SciELO: Bibliometric Analysis of Gender Differences.Elizabeth Duran,Katherine Astroza,Jaime Ocaranza-Ozimica,Damary Peñailillo,Iskra Pavez-Soto &Rodrigo Ramirez-Tagle -2019 -NanoEthics 13 (2):113-118.
    Papers on nanotechnology in the Scientific Electronic Library Online database were studied bibliometrically. The terms ‘nanotechnology’, ‘nanoparticle’, ‘graphene’, ‘fullerene’, ‘nanotube’ and ‘quantum dot’ were used for the search in their singular and plural forms in three languages, and a total of 1205 papers were selected for the study to assess the frequency rates of the study variables. The results of the study are presented in this article focusing on gender differences.
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  43.  44
    Unintelligible Silence.Katherine E. Entigar -2020 -Outlines. Critical Practice Studies 21 (1):06-18.
    What is silence? Is it a loss, an omission? Is it a stopping of the mouth, of the voice? An empty place where no meaning has come forward…or perhaps at times quite the opposite, an absence-as-presence Deleuze, 1990; Derrida, 1976)? Might silence evoke much more about what we assume is our monological, unitary reality, indexing possibilities yet unseen? This paper outlines the ways in which silence is typically understood according to scholarly orthodoxy: as omission in human communication or a silencing (...) of minoritized individuals or communities by those in power. It then moves to critique the preeminence of whitestream Western-centric academic authority, which self-perpetuates via the exclusion of outsider ways of doing, being and knowing such as those brought forward by silence, constituting a loss of meaning and knowledge from the social imaginary. This paper suggests that the pursuit of an articulate unknowing regarding silence as a creative, disruptive force beyond the control of rationality is a means of engaging with radical possibilities for a different, juster world. It proposes a socio-diologic politics of the real that welcomes silence as an unsettling of our current thinking about what is and will be possible, as well as who does and does not matter. It concludes by illustrating the ingenious force of silence in examples of subversive art that expose the hegemonizing, rational version of reality sold by academics and powerholders, bringing forward into the imagination what prospects for change, justice, and social transformation yet await. (shrink)
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  44.  45
    The Study of Mime as a Manifestation of Sociability, as Play and Artistic Expression.Edmond Radar &Katherine Bougarel -1965 -Diogenes 13 (50):43-56.
  45.  15
    The Sartrean Mind.Matthew Eshleman &Katherine Morris (eds.) -2018 - Routledge.
    Introduction to Global Military History provides a lucid and comprehensive account of military developments around the modern world from the eighteenth century up to the present day. Beginning with the background to the American War of Independence and the French Revolutionary wars and ending with the recent conflicts of the twenty-first century, this third edition combines fully up-to-date global coverage with close analysis not only of the military aspects of war but also its social, cultural, political and economic dimensions and (...) repercussions. The new edition includes a fully revised chapter on conflicts during the eighteenth century, updated coverage of events post-1990 and increased coverage of non-Western conflicts to provide a truly international account of the varied and changing nature of modern military history. Covering lesser-known conflicts as well as the familiar wars of history and illustrated throughout with maps, primary source extracts and case studies, it is essential reading for all students of modern military history and international relations. (shrink)
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  46. Foucault's Dog.Katherine E. Young -2016 - In Judith Grant & Vincent Jungkunz,Political theory and the animal/human relationship. Albany: State University of New York Press.
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  47.  37
    Planning for scarcity: Developing a hospital ventilator allocation policy for Covid-19.Emily Ferrell,Katherine Drabiak,Mary Alfano-Torres,Salman Ahmed,Azzat Ali,Brad Bjornstad,John Dietrick,Mary M. Foley,Alex Garcia-Gonzalez,Shannon Robb &Douglas Ross -2022 -Clinical Ethics 17 (2):198-204.
    Objective To develop an ethically, legally, and clinically appropriate ventilator allocation policy for AdventHealth Tampa and AdventHealth Carrollwood in Tampa, Florida, which could be enacted swiftly during the Covid-19 pandemic. Methods During Spring 2020, a subcommittee of the Medical Ethics Committee established consensus on the fundamental principles of the policy, then built on existing ethical, legal, and clinical guidance. Results The plan was finalized in May 2020. The plan triages patients based on exclusion criteria (imminent mortality), prognosis and expected benefit (...) of ventilation (using the Sequential Organ Failure Assessment), and change in prognosis over time. Decisions are made by committee in order to minimize moral distress among individual patient care providers. Conclusions Due to international concerns about healthcare resource shortages during the Covid-19 pandemic, hospitals need allocation policies informed by the crisis standard of care, the hospital’s ethical duty to plan for an emergency, and federal civil rights laws Policy Implications: This type of policy can serve as a model for other institutions to develop crisis standards of care resource allocation policies, which are a necessary component of disaster planning. (shrink)
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    Tocqueville’s Moderate Penal Reform.EmilyKatherine Ferkaluk -2018 - Cham: Springer Verlag.
    This book presents an interpretive analysis of the major themes and purpose of Alexis de Tocqueville’s and Gustave de Beaumont’s first work, On the Penitentiary System, thereby offering new insights into Tocqueville as a moderate liberal statesman. The book explores Tocqueville’s thinking on penitentiaries as the best possible solution to recidivism, his approach to colonial imperialism, and his arguments on moral reformation of prisoners through a close reading of Tocqueville’s first published text. The unifying political concept of all three discussions (...) is Tocqueville’s underlying concern to pursue moderation between institutional and imaginative extremes in order to maintain liberal values. In both thinking moderately and advocating for moderate political action, Tocqueville’s On the Penitentiary System renews an emphasis on the importance of civic engagement and the balance between philosophy and praxis. (shrink)
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  49.  35
    Impact of Donor-imposed Requirements and Restrictions on Standards of Prevention and Access to Care and Treatment in HIV Prevention Trials.Sean Philpott,Katherine West Slevin,Katharine Shapiro &Lori Heise -2010 -Public Health Ethics 3 (3):220-228.
    The number of women living with HIV/AIDS is increasing worldwide, and there is an urgent public health need to develop new user-initiated HIV prevention methods, including microbicides. Although funding for microbicide development has increased since 2000, financial support is provided predominantly by governmental agencies and private foundations. Many donors, including the US Agency for International Development and the US National Institutes of Health, have policies that restrict how research funds may be used. Among these are the now-rescinded Mexico City Policy, (...) elements of the US Foreign Assistance Act, and restrictions on non-study-related care. The effect of these restrictions on the design and conduct of clinical research is poorly understood. As part of a recent mapping exercise conducted by the Global Campaign for Microbicides, we reviewed the impact of donor restrictions on seven HIV prevention trials. We found considerable confusion within the HIV prevention field as to whether and how Mexico City and other policies affect the use of research funds. We also found that these donor-imposed policies limited the level of care provided to trial participants and the types of capacity building projects undertaken. (shrink)
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  50.  44
    Overcoming Violence in Practice.SarahKatherine Pinnock -2004 -Buddhist-Christian Studies 24 (1):73-85.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Overcoming Violence in Practice1Sarah K. PinnockIn Christian thought, the classic theological response to evil and suffering, known as "theodicy," operates on a metaphysical level. It aims to elucidate questions about God: God's power to prevent evil, God's goodness and justice, and God's purposes in allowing evil. It also examines questions about humanity: Are humans chronically prone to sin and violence? Does suffering serve good purposes? Does God redeem suffering? (...) In recent Christian attempts at theodicy, attention has focused on divine omnipotence and human freedom in attempts to exculpate God for cruelty in allowing the magnitude of suffering visible in such events as the Holocaust, where six million Jews and five million Poles, gypsies, homosexuals, and other noncombatants were killed under Nazi orders. Symmetrical with exploration of the "front end" explanatory questions of why bad things happen in a supposedly good world, theodicies also explore the "back end" justificatory questions of how God can heal the damage, unevenly and unfairly distributed, in this life or the afterlife. Key exemplars of modern theodicy are Leibniz and Hegel, thinkers who have greatly influenced twentieth-century analytic and continental philosophy of religion, respectively. Despite the urgency of responding to evil, theodicy has been criticized for its abstract, global approach to suffering and its programmatic focus on justifying God in the face of violence. My own critique of theodicy has epistemic and moral components. Theodicy rests on epistemological hubris, building precarious intellectual systems in pursuing knowledge of God. Additionally, theodicy is guilty of moral turpitude on account of its single-minded focus on explanation, which smooths over the scandal of suffering and overlooks the prevention and alleviation of violence.2Fortunately, there are more promising alternatives than theodicy in Christian thought. Particularly in the twentieth century, existentialist and Marxian philosophical movements have contributed to practical rather than theoretical emphases in response to theodicy questions. Reflection on the situatedness of the subject has prompted this shift as theology becomes more self-conscious of its cultural assumptions. Especially since the 1960s, contextual varieties of theology have emerged that recognize its socially embedded character. Theology is never purely dislocated conceptual reflection, innocent of ethical consequences, but a discourse with practical origins and effects. To use Marxian vocabulary, all theology is an "ideology" expressing the conscious and unconscious interests of a social group or class. This insight [End Page 73] does not dismiss the truth and power of theology, but forces closer examination of its production and implications. As Marx wrote in his "Theses on Feuerbach," "philosophers [and theologians] have only interpreted the world in various ways; the point, however, is to change it."3 Theology as a discourse must attend to how it functions within society to motivate opposition or acceptance of violence. Also, it must attend to how reliably it exposes and articulates violence within its vocabulary, and what social cases of violence it addresses.I propose that the shift toward practical or contextual Christian anti-theodicy responses to violence resonates with Buddhist attention to practice, rather than speculation, in answer to suffering. To use a well-known image from the Buddha's teaching, all human beings are like persons pierced with poisoned arrows. All suffer grievously because of craving and desire, and desperately long for relief. In such a condition of life, sliding toward death while suffering, what is the most urgent need: to find out how to remove the poisoned arrow and heal the wound, or to find out where the arrow came from and why it was shot?4 Of course, the moral of the story is that the alleviation of suffering is primary and urgent. It would be foolish to searchfor an explanation instead of a cure for the poison. Understanding the cosmic origins of suffering is a distraction, irrelevant to alleviating suffering and detrimental to practice. Preoccupation with metaphysical speculation does not produce wisdom. Such wisdom is the fruit of awareness resulting from meditation training.In presenting my ideas to a forum for Buddhist-Christian dialogue, I am very much aware of the perils of comparative thinking. My understanding of Buddhism reflects the Westernized transmission of Mahayana Zen Buddhist traditions, based on writings intended for an... (shrink)
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