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Results for 'Marcia D. Lind'

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  1.  27
    Dose-response relationship between naloxone injections and intake of sucrose solution.Ming-Fung Wu,Marcia D.Lind,June M. Stapleton &Larry D. Reid -1981 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 17 (2):101-103.
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  2.  21
    Naloxone reduces fluid consumption in water-deprived and nondeprived rats.June M. Stapleton,Nancy L. Ostrowski,Vicki J. Merriman,Marcia D.Lind &Larry D. Reid -1979 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 13 (4):237-239.
  3.  33
    Transfer of a pattern versus component discrimination following training in a probabilistic situation.Marcia D. Johns -1965 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 70 (5):506.
  4.  26
    Ethically incentivising healthy behaviours: views of parents and adolescents with type 1 diabetes.Seema Shah,Faisal Malik,Kristen D. Senturia,CaraLind,Kristen Chalmers,Joyce Yi-Frazier,Catherine Pihoker &Davene Wright -2021 -Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (12):e55-e55.
    BackgroundTo assess ethical concerns associated with participation in a financial incentive programme to help adolescents with type 1 diabetes improve diabetes self-management.MethodsFocus groups with 46 adolescents with type 1 diabetes ages 12–17 and 38 of their parents were conducted in the Seattle, Washington metropolitan area. Semistructured focus group guides addressed ethical concerns related to the use of FI to promote change in diabetes self-management. Qualitative data were analysed and emergent themes identified.ResultsWe identified three themes related to the ethical issues adolescents (...) and parents anticipated with FI programme participation. First, FI programmes may variably change pressure and conflict in different families in ways that are not necessarily problematic. Second, the pressure to share FIs in some families and how FI payments are structured may lead to unfairness in some cases. Third, some adolescents may be likely to fabricate information in any circumstances, not simply because of FIs, but this could compromise the integrity of FI programmes relying on measures that cannot be externally verified.ConclusionsMany adolescents with type 1 diabetes and their parents see positive potential of FIs to help adolescents improve their self-management. However, ethical concerns about unfairness, potentially harmful increases in conflict/pressure and dishonesty should be addressed in the design and evaluation of FI programmes. (shrink)
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  5.  24
    Informed Consent Procedures: Responsibilities of Researchers in Developing Countries.Soledad S.Ánchez,Gloria Salazar,Marcia Tijero &Soledad D.Íaz -2001 -Bioethics 15 (5-6):398-412.
    We describe the informed consent procedures in a research clinic in Santiago, Chile, and a qualitative study that evaluated these procedures. The recruitment process involves information, counseling and screening of volunteers, and three or four visits to the clinic. The study explored the decision‐making process of women participating in contraceptive trials through 36 interviews. Women understood the research as experimentation or progress. The decision to participate was facilitated by the information provided; time to consider it and to discuss it with (...) partners or relatives; and perceived benefits such as quality of care, non‐cost provision of methods and medical care. For some women, participation was an opportunity to express altruism. The main obstacles for participation were perceived side effects or risks. The final risk‐benefit balance was strongly influenced by women’s needs. Women perceived that the consent form benefited the clinic, proving that participants had made a free decision, and benefited the volunteers by warranting their right to free medical care. The most important problem detected was occasional misunderstanding of the information given on the form. We concluded that a full decision‐making process enhances women’s ability to exercise their right to choose, and assures research institutions that trials are conducted without coercion and that the participants are committed to the study. Researchers have the responsibility of conducting this process. (shrink)
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  6.  18
    Contact Heat Evoked Potentials Are Responsive to Peripheral Sensitization: Requisite Stimulation Parameters.Lukas D. Linde,Jenny Haefeli,Catherine R. Jutzeler,Jan Rosner,Jessica McDougall,Armin Curt &John L. K. Kramer -2020 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 13.
  7.  89
    Memory for tacit implications of sentences.Marcia K. Johnson,John D. Bransford &Susan K. Solomon -1973 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 98 (1):203.
  8.  32
    Provider adherence to COPD guidelines: relationship to organizational factors.Marcia M. Ward,Jon W. Yankey,Thomas E. Vaughn,Bonnie J. BootsMiller,Stephen D. Flach,Shea Watrin &Bradley N. Doebbeling -2005 -Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 11 (4):379-387.
  9. Experimental analysis of hysterical blindness.J. P. Brady &D. L.Lind -1961 -Archives of General Psychiatry 4:331-39.
  10.  39
    Context effects in sentence memory.Marcia K. Johnson,Theodore J. Doll,John D. Bransford &Robert H. Lapinski -1974 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 103 (2):358.
  11.  14
    Teoria e história: uma relação tensionada.Marcia M. D'Alessio -2013 -Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 2 (1).
    Existe uma tensão entre Teoria e História: “[...] a poesia é mais filosófica e de caráter mais elevado que a história, porque a poesia permanece no universal e a história estuda apenas o particular” (Aristóteles, 2007, 43). Esta afirmação de Aristóteles talvez tenha sido a primeira indicação da referida tensão entre as duas formas de conhecimento: a histórica e a teórica. Na citação acima, a filosofia é a referência de um pensamento hierarquicamente superior, sendo que sua legitimação enquanto tal passa (...) pela universalidade de suas verdades. É importante salientar que a poesia nesta reflexão aristotélica é uma forma de conhecimento, embora difira da história no que concerne à matéria do conhecido: na primeira, o fato poderia ter acontecido; na segunda, aconteceu. Porque aconteceu, o fato é singular, e que poderia ter acontecido cai no âmbito do universal. Neste sentido, a chave para a compreensão da tensão entre história e teoria é a universalidade ou singularidade do conhecimento adquirido: “[...] é evidente que não compete ao poeta narrar exatamente o que aconteceu; mas sim o que poderia ter acontecido, o possível, segundo a verossimilhança ou a necessidade. O historiador e o poeta não se distinguem um do outro, pelo fato de o primeiro escrever em prosa e o segundo em verso [...]. Diferem entre si porque um escreveu o que aconteceu e o outro o que poderia ter acontecido” (Aristóteles, 2007, 43). Ao situar a história em nível menos elevado que a poesia, Aristóteles parece ter suscitado em pensadores contemporâneos a ideia da distinção entre conhecimento histórico e conhecimento teórico. O presente estudo versa sobre a natureza do conhecimento histórico e seus impasses metodológicos no uso dos referenciais teóricos necessários às suas indagações fundamentais. (shrink)
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  12.  33
    Recognition memory and source monitoring.D. Stephen Lindsay &Marcia K. Johnson -1991 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 29 (2):203-205.
  13.  30
    The reversed eyewitness suggestibility effect.D. Stephen Lindsay &Marcia K. Johnson -1989 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 27 (2):111-113.
  14.  55
    Reminders of behavioral disinhibition increase public conformity in the Asch paradigm and behavioral affiliation with ingroup members.Kees van den Bos,E. A.Lind,Jeroen Bommelé &Sebastian D. J. VandeVondele -2015 -Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  15.  44
    Teaching Corner: “First Do No Harm”: Teaching Global Health Ethics to Medical Trainees Through Experiential Learning.Marcia Glass,James D. Harrison,Phuoc Le &Tea Logar -2015 -Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 12 (1):69-78.
    Recent studies show that returning global health trainees often report having felt inadequately prepared to deal with ethical dilemmas they encountered during outreach clinical work. While global health training guidelines emphasize the importance of developing ethical and cultural competencies before embarking on fieldwork, their practical implementation is often lacking and consists mainly of recommendations regarding professional behavior and discussions of case studies. Evidence suggests that one of the most effective ways to teach certain skills in global health, including ethical and (...) cultural competencies, is through service learning. This approach combines community service with experiential learning. Unfortunately, this approach to global health ethics training is often unattainable due to a lack of supervision and resources available at host locations. This often means that trainees enter global health initiatives unprepared to deal with ethical dilemmas, which has the potential for adverse consequences for patients and host institutions, thus contributing to growing concerns about exploitation and “medical tourism.” From an educational perspective, exposure alone to such ethical dilemmas does not contribute to learning, due to lack of proper guidance. We propose that the tension between the benefits of service learning on the one hand and the respect for patients’ rights and well-being on the other could be resolved by the application of a simulation-based approach to global health ethics education. (shrink)
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  16.  44
    Mapping Bioethics in Latin America: History, Theoretical Models, and Scientific Output.Lucas F. Garcia,Marcia S. Fernandes,Jonathan D. Moreno &Jose R. Goldim -2019 -Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 16 (3):323-331.
    Objective: To present a narrative review of the history of bioethics in Latin America and of scientific output in this interdisciplinary field. Methods: This was a mixed-methods study. Results: A total of 1458 records were retrieved, of which 1167 met the inclusion criteria. According to the Web of Science classification, the predominant topics of study were medical ethics, social sciences and medicine, and environmental and public health topics. Four themes of bioethics output in the Latin American literature have emerged: issues (...) involving the beginning and end of life, ethics in human research, patient–provider relationships, and ethics training for health professionals. Conclusion: Although bioethics is a growing interdisciplinary field in Latin America, its academic impact is still very low, and programmes are highly concentrated in large urban centres in a few countries. Challenges includes the regional and international impact of local scientific output. (shrink)
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  17. WISE design for knowledge integration.Marcia C. Linn,Douglas Clark &James D. Slotta -2003 -Science Education 87 (4):517-538.
     
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  18.  64
    Long-lasting effects of subliminal affective priming from facial expressions.Timothy D. Sweeny,Marcia Grabowecky,Satoru Suzuki &Ken A. Paller -2009 -Consciousness and Cognition 18 (4):929-938.
    Unconscious processing of stimuli with emotional content can bias affective judgments. Is this subliminal affective priming merely a transient phenomenon manifested in fleeting perceptual changes, or are long-lasting effects also induced? To address this question, we investigated memory for surprise faces 24 h after they had been shown with 30-ms fearful, happy, or neutral faces. Surprise faces subliminally primed by happy faces were initially rated as more positive, and were later remembered better, than those primed by fearful or neutral faces. (...) Participants likely to have processed primes supraliminally did not respond differentially as a function of expression. These results converge with findings showing memory advantages with happy expressions, though here the expressions were displayed on the face of a different person, perceived subliminally, and not present at test. We conclude that behavioral biases induced by masked emotional expressions are not ephemeral, but rather can last at least 24 h. (shrink)
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  19.  46
    Sounds exaggerate visual shape.Timothy D. Sweeny,Emmanuel Guzman-Martinez,Laura Ortega,Marcia Grabowecky &Satoru Suzuki -2012 -Cognition 124 (2):194-200.
  20.  29
    Filosofia na Escola.Joana D'Arc Beserra dos Santos &Márcia Pereira da Silva -2011 -Revista Sul-Americana de Filosofia E Educação 1 (1).
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  21. Dividing the self.Marcia Cavell -1994 - In Gerhard Preyer, Frank Siebelt & Alexander Ulfig,Language, Mind and Epistemology: On Donald Davidson’s Philosophy. Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
     
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  22.  39
    Book Review Section 2. [REVIEW]Joseph L. DeVitis,Marcia E. Turner,Mara Sapon-Shevin,Richard A. Brosio,Keith L. Raitz,Flemming M. Larsen,Lee Edgington,Kenneth D. Benne &D. Bob Gowin -1990 -Educational Studies 21 (2):35-83.
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  23.  33
    Preparing for a Sustainable Future.Fayez Albadri,Najwa Ashal,Ambareen Beebeejaun,Khoyratty Bushra,David Crowther,Maria Costa,Marcia Juliana D’Angelo,Bheekharry Normada Devi,Cristina Góis,Srushti Govilkar,Kritika Jaiswal,Vimi Neeroo Lockmun-Bissessur,Chris McLean,José Lázaro Oliveira Nunes,Flávio Oliveira,Swaleha Peeroo,Dineshwar Ramdhony,Raysa Geaquinto Rocha,Martin Samy,Maria João Santos,Aatman Shukla,Ruchi Tewari,Subrun Veerunjaysingh &Clara Viseu -2023 - Springer Nature Singapore.
    The term sustainability has become one of the most significant in the current era. It seems to be ubiquitous amongst academics, politicians, business leaders, media personnel and even the general public. It is no exaggeration to state that it is considered all over the world to be the most pressing issue to be addressed for the long-term future of the planet and its inhabitants. The topic is of course complex, and the issue of sustainability is under much debate as to (...) what it actually is and how it can be achieved, but it is completely certain that the resources of the planet are fixed in quantity and, once used, cannot be reused except through being reused in one form or another. At present, much of the discourse of sustainability has focused upon the environment and in particular upon climate change and the effects that this is having. Thus, the discourse has tended to be about mitigation. Sustainability of course requires all three pillars of the triple bottom line—economic, environmental and social—to be addressed. Indeed, it might be considered that the effects upon the social, and how we choose to live our lives, might well be the most profound effect of achieving sustainability. This book therefore focuses upon some of the many aspects of the social and how we can adapt our lives to accommodate the requirements of sustainability. it therefore takes a very different approach to addressing the issues of sustainability, while of course not ignoring the other pillars. This book therefore sets out to examine various aspects of the changes to personal, corporate and institutional behaviour which may have to come about in our search for sustainability. It is tended to address some of the issues and how they are being dealt with in various parts of the world. As always, our concept is to share best practice and thereby enrich both the discourse and our progress towards sustainability. Thus, we focus upon the current situation while also considering the extent to which the focus is changing so much that we need to think about new approaches to our understanding of behaviour and differing effects in practice. The international origins of the contributors to this book make this an original contribution taking some of the best ideas from around the world. This book therefore addresses these issues from a perspective not generally addressed by researchers, or even by politicians and the press. It therefore provides fresh perspectives upon the important issue of our common future. As always, this approach is based on the tradition of the Social Responsibility Research Network srrnet.org (a worldwide body of scholars with membership of several thousand), which in its 20-year history has sought to broaden the discourse and to treat all research as inter-related and relevant to business. This tradition has always been to explore the subject widely and to seek relevant solutions, while also sharing best practice. This book is based primarily upon some of the contributions from the network at our recent conference and shows both commonality and diversity in approaches and effects. (shrink)
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  24.  80
    Morality as a Back-up System: Hume's View?Marcia Baron -1988 -Hume Studies 14 (1):25-52.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:25 MORALITY AS A BACK-UP SYSTEM: HUME'S VIEW? The sense of duty is a useful device for helping men to do what a really good man would do without a sense of duty..... Nowell-Smith A certain picture of morality — arguably a Humean one — has come to have a prominent place in contemporary philosophy. On this picture, morality, as Richard Brandt asserts, is "a back-up system, which operates (...) when spontaneous personal caring fails 2 to motivate us to do as we ought." Morality — at least in the form of moral principles, whose force is felt through one's sense of duty — is, on this view, ideally superfluous. As a guide for one's own conduct it is needed only insofar as the agent's affective network is deficient. If one only spontaneously desired a, cared about b, cared for c, felt aversion towards d as, ideally, one should, moral principles and a sense of duty would be of no use. There are good reasons for supposing that this is Hume's view. After all, his characterization of acting from duty is more than a little disparaging: When any virtuous motive or principle is common in human nature, a person, who feels his heart devoid of that motive, may hate himself upon that account, and may perform the action without the motive, from a certain sense of duty, in order to acquire by practice, that virtuous principle, or at least, to disguise to himself,,as much as possible, his want of it. I will argue, however, that there is tension in Hume's ethics between two lines of thought. According to the first line of thought, and the one 26 usually associated with Hume, good conduct is conduct which is spontaneously prompted by virtuous desires. Unless our desires either are not what they should be or are motivationally weak, there is no need for mediation or tempering by a sense of duty or moral principles. According to the second line, the very good desires of a very good person may nonetheless need to be filtered, tempered, redirected or checked. This line is most evident in "Of the Origin of the Natural Virtues and Vices." Before arguing that these strains of thought are in tension in Hume's ethics, I need to clarify what is at issue and to develop the two competing pictures of moral motivation. First the issue. The issue is not 'Who is better: someone with a sense of duty but corrupt desires or someone with no sense of duty but ideal desires?' Nor is the issue one of the moral worth of actions ('Can an action have moral worth if it is not performed out of duty?') The issue, rather, is how to characterize morally good (or right) conduct. What role, if any, does a sense of duty or a Butlerian principle of reflection, i.e., an overarching, guiding conception of what is right or good which is 'juridically' supreme within the self, play in good conduct? Is morally good conduct ideally a matter of acting as one should from the proper desires? Or should the desires be governed and guided by moral principles? Consider two models of moral conduct. Model I: Morality as a Back-Up System On this picture, wrongness in conduct is traceable to an affective deficiency. The claim underlying this picture seems to be as follows: One 27 acts wrongly because one's passions are not quite what they should be. One person cheats in her business dealings because she cares too little about the welfare of others (and too much about her own); another is harsh and abrupt to a student because he cares too little about his students' concerns and is jealous and possessive when it comes to 'his time.' In each case the problem can be traced to an affective deficiency. Hume appears to be supporting this view when he asserts, "it may be establish'd as an undoubted maxim, that no act can be virtuous, or morally good, unless there be in human nature some motive to produce it, distinct from a sense of its morality' (T 479). A few pages later he writes, "[E]very immorality... (shrink)
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  25.  19
    Heidegger et la traduction occidentale.Marcia Sá Cavalcante Schuback &Jean-Luc Nancy -2014 -Les Cahiers Philosophiques de Strasbourg 36:Fr.
    On lira ici un dialogue qui ne s’est donné ni règles préliminaires de progression ni aboutissement calculé d’avance, mais qui s’est inventé au fur et à mesure de son avancée. L’intention initiale était d’examiner ce que Heidegger nomme « la traduction occidentale » dans La parole d’Anaximandre : d’une part, que veut dire « traduction » là où l’on se guide sur des « traces » dont la nature même, comme traces, est problématique? D’autre part, comment comprendre le Brauch qui (...) porte la charge finale de cette « traduction »? En arrière-plan surgit la question : quelle est donc l’histoire dont Heidegger se réclame? (shrink)
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  26.  58
    Book Reviews Section 4.Adelia M. Peters,Mary B. Harris,Richard T. Walls,George A. Letchworth,Ruth G. Strickland,Thomas L. Patrick,Donald R. Chipley,David R. Stone,Diane Lapp,Joan S. Stark,James W. Wagener,Dewane E. Lamka,Ernest B. Jaski,John Spiess,John D.Lind,Thomas J. la Belle,Erwin H. Goldenstein,George R. la Noue,David M. Rafky,L. D. Haskew,Robert J. Nash,Norman H. Leeseberg,Joseph J. Pizzillo &Vincent Crockenberg -1973 -Educational Studies 4 (3):169-185.
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  27.  9
    Pour une écclésiologie écologique: l'actualité de la vision teilhardienne dans l'émergence de la sensibilité écologique.Andreas GonçalvesLind -2019 - Namur (Belgique): Presses Universitaires de Namur.
    Face à la nouvelle sensibilité de l'homme contemporain envers les questions écologiques, à l’importance qu’il accorde au soin de la planète, et dans le sillage de la publication de Laudato Si’, la vision de Teilhard de Chardin apparaît à nouveau actuelle. Bien que les questions et l’état des sciences aient changé considérablement depuis sa mort en 1955, la portée cosmologique de la christologie teilhardienne fait de la perspective du jésuite paléontologue une source inespérée pour une pratique chrétienne adaptée aux exigences (...) du monde moderne. À partir de sa notion d’Église en tant que Corps cosmique du Christ, où toutes les créatures de notre vaste univers sont englobées au sein de la sphère ecclésiale elle-même, la communion entre les êtres s’étend au-delà des êtres humains, fondant un profond respect pour toutes les créatures. Le présent ouvrage cherche à préciser et à justifier, d’un côté, l’insertion de Teilhard au sein de la tradition chrétienne et à envisager, d’un autre, les conséquences pratiques de cette ecclésiologie écologique, notamment dans la spiritualité, l’éthique et la liturgie. Andreas GonçalvesLind est un prêtre jésuite luso-allemand qui, pour le moment, fait une thèse doctorale sur la phénoménologie henryenne de la Vie à l’Université de Namur comme boursier de la FCT – Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (Portugal). (shrink)
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  28.  59
    ∑2-constructions and I∑1.Marcia Groszek &Tamara Hummel -1998 -Annals of Pure and Applied Logic 93 (1-3):83-101.
    The consistency strength of the ∑2 priority method is I∑2, yet classical theorems proven by this method have been proved from I∑1. Is there a statement about the structure of the r.e. degrees that can be proved using a ∑2 argument and cannot be proved from I∑1?We rule out statements in the language of partial orderings of the form …[], where is quantifier-free, by showing that the following can be proved in I∑1.If P is any recursive partial ordering with a (...) maximal point d, and a is any nonrecursive incomplete r.e. degree, then P can be embedded into the r.e. degrees by an embedding sending d to a. (shrink)
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  29.  39
    Semantic memory and sentence verification time.Theodore J. Doll,James R. Tweedy,Marcia K. Johnson,John D. Bransford &Carl Flatow -1973 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 100 (2):429.
  30.  2
    A Dialética do corpóreo e do incorpóreo – pressupostos e desdobramentos da inversão de Hegel por Marx.Márcia dos Santos Fontes -2025 -Dois Pontos 21 (3).
    A partir dos pressupostos corpóreos elaborados por Marx nos Manuscritos de 1844, que fundamentam o seu posicionamento materialista-dialético, tais como a teorização antropológica do corpo como unidade dialética entre natureza e história, o conceito-processo de objetivação que requer como condição transhistórica a ligação corpo-terra e a identificação da cisão dessa ligação como a condição histórica de advento da forma social do capital, buscaremos neste artigo analisar a inversão feita pelo jovem Marx da dialética hegeliana. Para tal análise trilharemos o seguinte (...) percurso: 1. Apontaremos os pressupostos corpóreos como conteúdo material da dialética marxiana presente nos Manuscritos de 1844; 2. Analisaremos a crítica do Marx jovem ao idealismo hegeliano a partir do “humano corpóreo” e em acordo com a crítica à economia política; 3. Identificaremos o desdobramento dessa inversão, mantidos os pressupostos, na análise madura de Marx no livro I d’O Capital. (shrink)
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  31.  107
    Republicanism, Religion, and Machiavelli's Savonarolan Moment.Marcia L. Colish -1999 -Journal of the History of Ideas 60 (4):597-616.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Republicanism, Religion, and Machiavelli’s Savonarolan MomentMarcia L. ColishMachiavelli’s readers often take at face value his claim that Christianity has weakened Italy’s civic spirit and martial valor, leaving it open to priestcraft and foreign invasion. Some scholars see this critique of Christianity as an expression of the irreligious, immoral, neopagan, or scientific Machiavelli, making it the chief index of his modernity. 1 One subset within this group treats Machiavelli’s [End (...) Page 597] anthropology as a secularized version of Augustine on original sin, absent an Eden behind it and a redemption before it. 2 Another view of Machiavelli on religion sees him as treating religion, whatever its teachings, functionally, as an instrument promoting desirable political behavior. 3 This is why they regard [End Page 598] Machiavelli as original and modern; although Maury D. Feld notes rightly that Machiavelli is here simply imitating the ancient Roman historians, who all treat religion in just this way. 4 For some proponents of the functionalist interpretation, it does not preclude Christian belief on Machiavelli’s part. For them his brief is not against Christianity itself but against clericalism, the papacy, and Christianity as it is currently interpreted. 5 Still others recognize Machiavelli’s acceptance of signs and portents, saintly behavior and miracles, and other indices of God’s existence and action in human history. They also note Machiavelli’s praise of biblical leaders seen as divinely inspired and his inclusion of them among the founders of religions and states who head his list of heroes. 6 Going farther, some scholars argue that Machiavelli was a conventional, if not an ardent or impeccable, Christian, who joined a religious confraternity before which he preached his Exhortation to Penitence, and the apparent recipient of the last rites of his church after a deathbed confession. 7 [End Page 599]Can these conflicting assessments of Machiavelli and religion be integrated? To some extent, yes. Once, that is, we consider a number of issues not always brought to bear on this question. Machiavelli recognizes that the foreigners who have overrun Italy and deprived Florence of the republic he had served are as Christian as the Italians. At home and abroad, their Christianity has not undermined their military strength or the civic virtue Machiavelli associates with republics. Within contemporary Florence there were three kinds of republicanism on offer, for those unhappy with the Medici restoration of 1512. One group sought to restore the pre-Medici governo stretto constitution dominated by the ottimati. Their opponents defended governo largo republicanism. Machiavelli advocated this type of polity, informed by his reading of ancient history and his assessment of human nature. But another, competing version of governo largo was put forth by Girolamo Savonarola during the Dominican friar’s stormy career as de facto head of the Florentine state from 1494 to 1498. Savonarola’s republican theory combined a number of ideas that Machiavelli loathed: the appeal to the Venetian Great Council as a model, the wish to purge Florence of her sins so that she could serve as the New Jerusalem in the coming apocalypse, and the notion that governo largo was a means to these religious ends, since the more broad-based the government, the more readily could it legislate and enforce moral reform. And, far from self-destructing after the friar’s ashes had been strewn on the Arno, Savonarolan republicanism continued to draw support from a diverse and substantial group of Florentines. Equally alarming, the agents [End Page 600] of this protracted Savonarolan moment seemed to have preempted Machiavelli’s own anticlerical, antipapal, antioligarchic, and antiMedicean positions, as well as a theory of governo largo. If we foreground Machiavelli’s desire to defend his own version of republicanism by undermining the Savonarolan alternative and if we recall that he treats Christianity positively in other contexts, it becomes possible to read those passages where he criticizes Christianity as practiced in Italy as texts with an antiSavonarolan subtext. Read this way, they are not incompatible with his acceptance of Christianity as true or as politically constructive elsewhere. In approaching this topic, we should also remember the longstanding associations that bound Christianity to politics and warfare.Addressing this last point... (shrink)
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  32.  28
    D. L. d'Avray, Rationalities in History: A Weberian Essay in Comparison. Cambridge, Eng., and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010. Pp. x, 214. $89. ISBN: 978-0521199209.D. L. d'Avray, Medieval Religious Rationalities: A Weberian Analysis. Cambridge, Eng., and New York: Cambridge University Press, 2010. Pp. x, 198. $85. ISBN: 978-0521767071. [REVIEW]Marcia L. Colish -2012 -Speculum 87 (1):202-204.
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  33.  18
    Michel Henry, Lecteur de Paul. Les Vivants Dans L’Archi-Chair du Christ.Andreas GonçalvesLind -2022 -Síntese Revista de Filosofia 49 (155):495.
    Résumé: L’interprétation des concepts clefs de saint Paul à partir des intuitions fondamentales de la phénoménologie de la vie cherche surtout à nous faire saisir l’intersubjectivité possible dans l’immanence de la chair acosmique. Le corps mystique du Christ correspond, ainsi, à cette intersubjectivité acosmique qui peut d’ailleurs fonder, en tant que communauté transcendantale, une inter- subjectivité intramondaine qui se veut pacifique. Il nous semble que, de cette façon, une nouvelle ontologie sociale émerge dans l’appropriation que Henry fait de l’ecclésiologie paulinienne. (...) Il s’agit d’une ontologie qui, pour respecter la singularité de chaque individu n’a pas besoin de l’isoler ou de le concevoir par le biais d’une abstraction totalement séparée d’une quelconque relation aux autres egos. Ce faisant, Henry élabore une ontologie sociale qui n’est réfléchie ni par l’idée de contrat social des philosophes libéraux ni par les vues des communautariens, pour qui l’individu est socialement produit comme être essentiellement déjà-au-monde. Mots-clés: Michel Henry. Corps mystique. Chair. Intersubjectivité. (shrink)
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  34.  21
    L’'me à la lettre – mutation de l’entre-deux (autour de Jean-Luc Nancy).Marcia Sá Cavalcante Schuback -2017 -Les Cahiers Philosophiques de Strasbourg 42:73-84.
    Cet article présente une discussion sur la pensée de la mutation chez Jean-Luc Nancy, elle-même une mutation des idées philosophiques traditionnelles sur la transformation. Il entend montrer que devant le sens intransformé de transformation dans la tradition philosophique de Platon à la philosophie contemporaine, Jean-Luc Nancy ouvre une autre voie lorsqu’il comprend transformation plutôt comme touche de l’âme. Loin de soumettre la mutation à une arche-téléologie des significations, la pensée de la mutation, une pensée de la touche de l’âme, trouve (...) le sens de la mutation dans l’« en train de se faire », plutôt que dans la quête de forme et de figuration. C’est dans la mutation du sens de l’entre-deux compris comme « en train d’être », que le sens d’une mutation de sens se donne à voir dans son non-figuration. Par-là, on découvre dans la pensée de Nancy non plus un autre sens d’âme, mais comment l’âme du sens touche le monde. (shrink)
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  35.  21
    Book Review - Lambert, Dominique; Bayon de La Tour, Marie; Malphettes, Paul. Le Phénomène Humain de Pierre Teilhard de Chardin : Genèse d’une publication hors normes. Bruxelles: Éditions Jésuites, 2022. [REVIEW]Andreas GonçalvesLind -2023 -Revista Portuguesa de Filosofia 78 (4):1793-1798.
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  36.  46
    MarciaLind, 1951-2000.Adrian M. S. Piper -2001 -Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 75 (2):118 - 121.
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  37.  21
    “WhyMarcia you've changed!”: Male clerical temporary workers doing masculinity in a feminized occupation.Jackie Krasas Rogers &Kevin D. Henson -2001 -Gender and Society 15 (2):218-238.
    This research provides a look at men doing gender in the highly feminized context of temporary clerical employment. Male clerical temporaries, as with other men who cross over into “women's work,” face institutionalized challenges to their sense of masculinity. In particular, male clerical temporary workers face gender assessment—highlighting their failure to live up to the ideals of hegemonic masculinity. The resulting gender strategies these men adopt reveal how male clerical temporary workers “do masculinity”—often in a collaborative performance shaped by the (...) gendered expectations of their agencies, their clients, and even themselves—to reassert the feminine identification of the job while at the same time rejecting its application to them. Paradoxically, rather than disrupting the gender order, the gender strategies used by these male clerical temporaries help to reproduce and naturalize the gendered organization of work and reinvigorate hegemonic masculinity and its domination over women and subaltern men. (shrink)
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  38.  26
    “O tambor fala, a palavra cria”: resson'ncias valorativas no ladrão de Marabaixo Aonde tu vai rapaz.Gercilene Vale dos Santos &Márcia Cristina Greco Ohuschi -2023 -Bakhtiniana 18 (3):e60487.
    ABSTRACT In this study, we present an analysis of the utterance Aonde tu vai rapaz [Where’d Ya Go Man], focusing on linguistic-enunciative resources from a dialogic perspective. The methodology consists of a dialogic analysis interconnected to the concepts of chronotope, ideology, utterance, dialogism, and social axiologies. Results reveal that institutionalized ideologies tend to nullify the one in everyday life. However, those results are confronted in some way with the counter word that is manifested by the ladrão de marabaixo chants. Intonation (...) refracts pain, lamentation, indignation, anger, and slander, in addition to expressing value judgments of disapproval and opposition. Re-enunciation of the everyday-life word allows us to take a glimpse at segregation, denunciation, powerlessness, and the silencing of culture and identity. However, at the same time, it reverberates consolidated values such as African descent, identity, resistance, resilience, and re-existence. (shrink)
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  39.  61
    L. R.Lind: Vergil's Aeneid. Translated with an introduction and notes. Pp. xxiv+301. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1963. Paper, $ 1.95. [REVIEW]R. D. Williams -1964 -The Classical Review 14 (2):219-219.
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  40.  3
    Full Collection of Personal Narratives.Jake Beery,Neethi Pinto,Marcia King,Laura Wachsmuth, Alisha,Katie L. Gholson,T. S. Moran,Calvin R. Gross,Joanne Alfred,Cindy Bitter,Jenna Bennett,Nadia Khan,Clarice Douille,Kristen Carey Rock,Adrienne Feller Novick,Andrea Eisenberg,Japmehr Sandhu,Katherine Bakke,Heer Hendry,Karan K. Mirpuri &Katerina V. Liong -2024 -Narrative Inquiry in Bioethics 14 (2):70-93.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Full Collection of Personal NarrativesJake Beery, Neethi Pinto,Marcia King, Laura Wachsmuth, Alisha, Katie L. Gholson, T.S. Moran, Calvin R. Gross, Joanne Alfred, Cindy Bitter, Jenna Bennett, Nadia Khan, Clarice Douille, Kristen Carey Rock, Adrienne Feller Novick, Andrea Eisenberg, Japmehr Sandhu, Katherine Bakke, Heer Hendry, Karan K. Mirpuri, and Katerina V. Liong• Being the Difference• Grieving One More Time• Echoes of Grief: Tales from an Emergency Medicine and (...) Critical Care Nurse• Searching for Peace in Death• “I’d Love to go Off the Grid and Never Come Back”• “A Mother’s Love”• Tiny Person, Big Impact• Night Shift• Cracked Armor• Who Tells the Story• Navigating Hard Situations that Medical School Cannot Prepare You For• The Wish• Break• Five More Minutes• I Saw My Reflection• The Aftermath• Where the Journey Begins• Lessons Learned in Room 208• Joint and Grief Aches• My First Loss: Carrying His Legacy• Grieving the Loss of What Medicine Was Supposed to BeCopyright © 2024 Johns Hopkins University Press... (shrink)
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  41.  649
    Kant's Taxonomy of the Emotions.Kelly D. Sorensen -2002 -Kantian Review 6:109-128.
    If there is to be any progress in the debate about what sort of positive moral status Kant can give the emotions, we need a taxonomy of the terms Kant uses for these concepts. It used to be thought that Kant had little room for emotions in his ethics. In the past three decades,Marcia Baron, Paul Guyer, Barbara Herman, Nancy Sherman, Allen Wood and others have argued otherwise. Contrary to what a cursory reading of the Groundwork may indicate, (...) Kant thinks the emotions play an important role in the moral life. I want to extend the work of Baron, Guyer, Herman, Sherman and Wood in three ways. First, I will set out in a diagram Kant's taxonomy of feelings and emotions. Agreement on such a taxonomy should make it easier to evaluate debates about Kant and the emotions. Second, I will focus on a certain subclass of emotions – reason-caused affects – that have previously received little attention, even from these Kant scholars. Third, these scholars base much of their defence of Kant on his later works – especially the Metaphysics of Morals and the Anthropology – but Kant's fairly rich taxonomy of the emotions, including reason-caused affects, is clearly in place at least as early as the Critique of Judgment . I believe that the Critique of Judgment is an importantly ignored resource for understanding the moral role of the emotions for Kant. The third Critique makes positive, philosophically interesting claims about the emotions and morality. Kant emphasizes certain roles for emotions in this work that he develops to the same extent nowhere else. Nevertheless, the Critique of Judgment goes all but unmentioned by many who write on these issues. In what follows, I will defend as many of my claims as possible using the third Critique. (shrink)
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  42.  22
    ArleenMarcia Tuchman.Science Has No Sex: The Life of Marie Zakrzewska, M.D. 336 pp., illus., bibl., index. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2006. $34.95. [REVIEW]Marsha Richmond -2007 -Isis 98 (3):658-659.
  43.  14
    Faith, Fiction & Force in Medieval Baptismal Debates. ByMarcia L. Colish. Pp. xi, 370, Washington, D.C. The Catholic University of America Press, 2014, $69.95. [REVIEW]Terrance Klein -2021 -Heythrop Journal 62 (4):780-780.
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  44.  58
    The Loeb Nonnos - Nonnos: Dionysiaca. With an English translation by W. H. D. Rouse, mythological introduction and notes by H. J. Rose, and notes on text criticism by L. R.Lind. In three volumes: I (Books I-XV), pp. li+533. II (Books XVI-XXXV), pp. xi+547. (Loeb Classical Library.) London: Heinemann, 1940. Cloth, 10s. (leather, 12s. 6d.) net each. [REVIEW]A. W. Pickard -1940 -The Classical Review 54 (4):188-191.
  45.  304
    Quantum cosmologies and the "beginning".Willem B. Drees -1991 -Zygon 26 (3):373-396.
    The cosmology proposed by Stephen Hawking has been understood as support for an atheistic stance, due mainly to its view of the nature of time in combination with the absence of explicit boundary conditions. Against such a view, this article argues that one might develop a theistic understanding of the Universe in the context of Hawking's cosmology. In addition, the quantum cosmologies of Andrej Linde and Roger Penrose are presented. The coexistence of different research programs and their implicit metaphysical views (...) about the nature of quantum reality and time may have profound implications for philosophy and theology. (shrink)
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  46.  722
    Space-Time Dimension Problem as a Stumbling Block of Inflationary Cosmology.Rinat M. Nugayev -2013 - In Vadim V. Kazutinsky, Elena A. Mamchur, Alexandre D. Panov & V. D. Erekaev,Metauniverse,Space,Time. Institute of Philosophy of RAS. pp. 52-73.
    It is taken for granted that the explanation of the Universe’s space-time dimension belongs to the host of the arguments that exhibit the superiority of modern (inflationary) cosmology over the standard model. In the present paper some doubts are expressed . They are based upon the fact superstring theory is too formal to represent genuine unification of general relativity and quantum field theory. Neveretheless, the fact cannot exclude the opportunity that in future the superstring theory can become more physical. Hence (...) this paper does not aim to query neither string cosmology, nor superstring theory; it asks for “tolerance in the matters cosmological”. It advices the researchers not to dwell on the common way of unification and to take into consideration the other ways as well. (shrink)
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  47.  75
    Space, time and consciousness.J. Smythies -2003 -Journal of Consciousness Studies 10 (3):47-56.
    This paper describes a new theory of consciousness based on previous work by C.D. Broad, H.H. Price, Andrei Linde and others. This hypothesis states that the Universe consists of three fundamental entities - space-time, matter and consciousness, each with their own degrees of freedom. The paper pays particular attention to three areas that impact on this theory: the demonstration by neuroscience and psychophysics that we do not perceive the world as it actually is but as the brain computes it most (...) probably to be; the need to delineate between phenomenal space-time and physical space-time. Recent theories in physics that suggest that the Universe has more than three spatial dimensions are relevant here; the role of consciousness in the block Universe described by Special Relativity. The integration of these topics suggests a new physical theory of the nature of consciousness. (shrink)
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  48.  43
    The Dating of Seneca'sAd Marciam De Consolatione.Jane Bellemore -1992 -Classical Quarterly 42 (01):219-.
    In a.d. 25, Aulus Cremutius Cordus, a Senator and a historian, was charged with ‘maiestas’. He committed suicide, and immediately his books, the ostensible source of the charge against him, were officially burnt. Some years later, Seneca referred in detail to these events in a philosophical study he had composed forMarcia, the daughter of Cremutius Cordus. Seneca wrote the work to consoleMarcia on the death of her son Metilius. In the Ad Marciam, Seneca notes in passing (...) that the worksof Cremutius Cordus have been re-published. (shrink)
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  49.  12
    Lineamenti della filosofia delle persone di Robert Spaemann: una fisionomia della realtà della persona come essere-per-sé-una ed essere-per-altri.Massimiliano Pollini -2021 - Roma: G&BPress, Pontificia Università Gregoriana, Pontificio Istituto biblico.
    Scritto complesso, compatto e volutamente non sistematico - all'acme della carriera accademica e dell'attività filosofica di Robert Spaemann (1927 - 2018) -, Persone. Sulla differenza tra 'qualcosa' e 'qualcuno' (1996) non è solo un capolavoro del grande pensatore tedesco, ma è innanzitutto una pietra miliare nella filosofia del Novecento sul realismo delle persone. La sua acuta riflessione sa pro-vocare e destare l'uomo di oggi alla 'grande questione' ch'egli da sempre è a se stesso, ponendolo di fronte al senso autentico del (...) suo essere-persona che, dentro i drammi e i rinnegamenti delle persone reali e dentro le traversìe della storia è stato prima obliato dal modo d'esistere dell'uomo moderno, per poi scorrere come fiume carsico nei meandri della travagliata storia della personologia, con un concomitante imporsi, nella forma mentis oggi imperante, della 'dialettica di naturalismo e spiritualismo'. Si offre qui uno studio rigoroso e inedito della filosofia delle persone di Spaemann - miniera ricchissima tutta da scavare -, che prende sul serio la domanda esistenzialmente decisiva sull'enigma della persona, per arrischiare una comprensione della realtà personale che ognuno di noi è, lasciandoci guidare dal 'Socrate tedesco' in un avvincente percorso che raccoglie a piene mani l'eredità e le sfide della tradizione filosofica e restituisce al lettore precisi segnavìa del senso, cioè della vettorialità fondamentale tracciata nell'essere-persona e, resi memori dell'origine e della meta, del senso dimarcia a ognuno di noi affidato come compito per divenire le persone uniche che già siamo e sempre più saremo. (shrink)
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  50.  11
    Espressiva Come Me.Marta Benenti &Cristina Meini -2018 -Sistemi Intelligenti 30 (3):505-526.
    Caterina può apparire arrabbiata, ma anche un brano musicale può manifestare emozioni: un passaggio triste, unamarcia gioiosa, una modulazione che apre a nuovi sentimenti. Anche gli oggetti inanimati possono manifestare emozioni che pure, a differenza di quanto accade per persone e animali, non possono esperire. Sebbene le attribuzioni di emozioni agli oggetti inanimati possano essere trattate, in linea di principio, come esempi di metafore, esse sembrano invero catturare un’esperienza reale. Per quanto anche un bollitore possa fischiare gioiosamente o (...) un salice piangente apparire malinconico, non vi è dubbio che le opere d’arte siano particolarmente suscettibili di manifestare emozioni - essere espressive di emozioni1. Tra queste, la musica occupa da sempre una posizione privilegiata. Un brano musicale, che in quanto oggetto inanimato non può provare alcunché, è nondimeno in grado di raggiungere straordinarie vette di espressività emotiva. Ciò avviene del tutto indipendentemente da vari elementi - il testo, il titolo del brano o il programma di sala che lo accompagna - i cui eventuali significati emotivi espliciti possono semmai innestarsi, arricchendoli o persino contraddicendoli, su quelli di per sé manifestati della cosiddetta “musica pura”. (shrink)
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