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Results for 'Noel T. Mueller'

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  1.  58
    Bacterial Baptism: Scientific, Medical, and Regulatory Issues Raised by Vaginal Seeding of C-Section-Born Babies.Noel T.Mueller,Suchitra K. Hourigan,Diane E. Hoffmann,Lauren Levy,Erik C. von Rosenvinge,Betty Chou &Maria-Gloria Dominguez-Bello -2019 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 47 (4):568-578.
    Several lines of evidence suggest that children born via Cesarean section are at greater risk for adverse health outcomes including allergies, asthma and obesity. Vaginal seeding is a medical procedure in which infants born by C-section are swabbed immediately after birth with vaginal secretions from the mother. This procedure has been proposed as a way to transfer the mother's vaginal microbiome to the child, thereby restoring the natural exposure that occurs during vaginal birth that is interrupted in the case of (...) babies born via C-section. Preliminary evidence indicates partial restoration of microbes. However, there is insufficient evidence to determine the health benefits of the procedure. Several studies, including trial, are currently underway. At the same time, in the clinic setting, doctors are increasingly being asked to by expectant mothers to have their babies seeded. This article reports on the current research on this procedure and the issues it raises for regulators, researchers, physicians, and patients. (shrink)
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  2.  41
    Value for the future and preventive health behavior.Gretchen B. Chapman,Noel T. Brewer,Elliot J. Coups,Susan Brownlee,Howard Leventhal &Elaine A. Levanthal -2001 -Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied 7 (3):235.
  3.  51
    Anchors aweigh: A demonstration of cross-modality anchoring and magnitude priming.Daniel M. Oppenheimer,Robyn A. LeBoeuf &Noel T. Brewer -2008 -Cognition 106 (1):13-26.
  4.  45
    Two Early Chinese Bronze Weapons with Meteoritic Iron Blades.Noel Barnard,Rutherford J. Gettens,Roy S. Clarke &W. T. Chase -1973 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 93 (4):639.
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  5.  20
    Event calculus and temporal action logics compared.Erik T.Mueller -2006 -Artificial Intelligence 170 (11):1017-1029.
  6.  60
    Daydreaming in Humans and Machines: A Computer Model of the Stream of Thought.Erik T.Mueller -1990 - Ablex.
    Chapter Introduction The field of artificial intelligence is concerned with the construction of computer systems which exhibit intelligent behavior in order ...
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  7.  45
    Crossword expertise as recognitional decision making: an artificial intelligence approach.Kejkaew Thanasuan &Shane T.Mueller -2014 -Frontiers in Psychology 5.
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  8.  58
    A partial implementation of the Bica cognitive decathlon using the psychology experiment building language.Shane T.Mueller -2010 -International Journal of Machine Consciousness 2 (2):273-288.
    The Cognitive Decathlon is a proposed set of tasks that can be tested on both human and artificially intelligent agents, and which constitutes a modern specification for the Turing Test. In this paper, a partial implementation of the Cognitive Decathlon is described using the Psychology Experiment Building Language (PEBL). The tasks focus not simply on generic human abilities, but on critical skills that highlight aspects of human performance that are at odds with common artificial intelligence approaches. The differences between human (...) and algorithmic behavior in such tasks can reveal properties of the human cognitive architecture, and production of similar behavior by artificial systems can help constrain and validate biologically-inspired systems. (shrink)
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  9.  167
    The Palgrave Handbook of the Philosophy of Film and Motion Pictures.Noël Carroll,Laura T. Di Summa &Shawn Loht (eds.) -2019 - Springer.
    This handbook brings together essays in the philosophy of film and motion pictures from authorities across the spectrum. It boasts contributions from philosophers and film theorists alike, with many essays employing pluralist approaches to this interdisciplinary subject. Core areas treated include film ontology, film structure, psychology, authorship, narrative, and viewer emotion. Emerging areas of interest, including virtual reality, video games, and nonfictional and autobiographical film also have dedicated chapters. Other areas of focus include the film medium’s intersection with contemporary social (...) issues, film’s kinship to other art forms, and the influence of historically seminal schools of thought in the philosophy of film. Of emphasis in many of the essays is the relationship and overlap of analytic and continental perspectives in this subject. (shrink)
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  10.  116
    The American Symphony Orchestra: A Social History of Musical TasteBach and Handel. The Consummation of the Baroque in MusicBaroque Book Illustration.John H.Mueller,Archibald T. Davison &Philip Hofer -1952 -Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 11 (2):178.
  11.  26
    Learning to learn in verbal discrimination learning with single- and double-function lists.John H.Mueller,Roy T. Bamber &Dennis J. Lissa -1973 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 97 (2):182.
  12. Story understanding.Erik T.Mueller -2002 - In Lynn Nadel,Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. Macmillan.
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  13.  16
    (1 other version)The Study of Time.J. T. Fraser,F. C. Haber &G. H.Mueller (eds.) -1972 - Springer Verlag.
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  14.  33
    In situobservation of pore evolution during melting and solidification of Al–Pd–Mn quasicrystals by synchrotron X-ray radiography.J. Gastaldi *,T. Schenk,G. Reinhart,H. Klein,J. Härtwig,N. Mangelinck-Noël,B. Grushko,H. Nguyen Thi,P. Pino,B. Billia &J. Baruchel -2006 -Philosophical Magazine 86 (3-5):335-340.
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  15.  171
    Physician perspectives and compliance with patient advance directives: the role external factors play on physician decision making. [REVIEW]Christopher M. Burkle,Paul S.Mueller,Keith M. Swetz,C. Christopher Hook &Mark T. Keegan -2012 -BMC Medical Ethics 13 (1):31-.
    Background Following passage of the Patient Self Determination Act in 1990, health care institutions that receive Medicare and Medicaid funding are required to inform patients of their right to make their health care preferences known through execution of a living will and/or to appoint a surrogate-decision maker. We evaluated the impact of external factors and perceived patient preferences on physicians’ decisions to honor or forgo previously established advance directives (ADs). In addition, physician views regarding legal risk, patients’ ability to comprehend (...) complexities involved with their care, and impact of medical costs related to end-of-life care decisions were explored. Methods Attendees of two Mayo Clinic continuing medical education courses were surveyed. Three scenarios based in part on previously court-litigated matters assessed impact of external factors and perceived patient preferences on physician compliance with patient-articulated wishes regarding resuscitation. General questions measured respondents’ perception of legal risk, concerns over patient knowledge of idiosyncrasies involved with their care, and impact medical costs may have on compliance with patient preferences. Responses indicating strength of agreement or disagreement with statements were treated as ordinal data and analyzed using the Cochran Armitage trend test. Results Three hundred eighty-eight of 951 surveys were completed (41% response rate). Eighty percent reported they were likely to honor a patient’s AD despite its 5 year age. Fewer than half (41%) would honor the AD of a patient in ventricular fibrillation who had expressed a desire to “pass away in peace.” Few (17%) would forgo an AD following a family’s request for continued resuscitative treatment. A majority (52%) considered risk of liability to be lower when maintaining someone alive against their wishes than mistakenly failing to provide resuscitative efforts. A large percentage (74%) disagreed that patients could not appreciate complexities surrounding their care while 69% agreed that costs should never impact a physician’s decision as to whether to comply with a patient’s AD. Conclusions Our findings highlight the impact, albeit small, external factors have on physician AD compliance. Most respondents based their decision on the clinical situation at hand and interpretation of the patient’s initial wishes and preferences expressed by the AD. (shrink)
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  16.  17
    ‘My daughter is a free woman, so she can’t marry a Muslim’: The gendering of ethno-religious boundaries.Noel Clycq -2012 -European Journal of Women's Studies 19 (2):157-171.
    Discourses often uncover underlying social boundaries related to concepts such as ethnicity, gender and religion. By applying an intersectional approach, this article shows how the gendering of ethno-religious boundaries is central in the narratives of parents of Belgian, Italian and Moroccan origin, living in Flanders, Belgium. These processes are extremely salient when discourses on partner choice are discussed, as is the focal point in the current study. The construction of boundaries and identities are deeply influenced by dominant social representations. The (...) results show how the construction and justification of boundaries can also have restrictive consequences for individuals. Parents want to restrict daughters for their own good, and exogamy seems to be the prerogative of sons. (shrink)
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  17.  16
    Watson: Beyond Jeopardy!David Ferrucci,Anthony Levas,Sugato Bagchi,David Gondek &Erik T.Mueller -2013 -Artificial Intelligence 199:93-105.
  18.  34
    Questions concerning attention and Stiegler’s therapeutics.Noel Fitzpatrick -2020 -Educational Philosophy and Theory 52 (4):348-360.
    The article sets out to develop the concept of attention as a key aspect to building the possible therapeutics that Bernard Stiegler’s recent works have pointed to (The Automatic Society, 2016, The Neganthropocene, 2018 and Qu’appelle-t-on Panser, 2018). The therapeutic aspect of pharmacology takes place through processes that are neganthropic; therefore, which attempt to counteract the entropic nature of digital technologies where there is flattening out to the measurable and the calculable of Big Data. The most obvious examples of this (...) flattening out can be seen in relation to the use of natural language processing technologies for text interpretation and the use of text analytics alongside student analytics. However, the process of exosomatisation of knowledge takes place in forms of hypomnesic tertiary retentions or digital technologies. The loss of knowledge is inherent to these processes of exteriorisation, this loss of knowledge takes place through a process proletarianisation which Marx had pointed to in the Grundisse (1939). The therapeutic gesture is, therefore, an intrinsically educational one, where the loss of knowledge of the pharmacological nature of digital technologies is counteracted by other forms of knowledge construction that can be enabled by digital technologies. Hence, there is a profound educational gesture necessary to enable the re-harnessing of technology to enable the therapeutics. This paper will argue that the positive re-harnessing, the therapeutics, can take place through the development of new forms of neganthropic gestures which can be afforded by the development of specific forms of digital technologies. These also enable a contributive research process whereby the rationalisation of the production of knowledge within the university can be challenged by collaborative, interpretative processes of knowledge production. (shrink)
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  19.  83
    Is Identity Essentialism a Fundamental Feature of Human Cognition?Edouard Machery,Christopher Y. Olivola,Hyundeuk Cheon,Irma T. Kurniawan,Carlos Mauro,Noel Struchiner &Harry Susianto -2023 -Cognitive Science 47 (5):e13292.
    The present research examines whether identity essentialism, an important component of psychological essentialism, is a fundamental feature of human cognition. Across three studies (Ntotal = 1723), we report evidence that essentialist intuitions about the identity of kinds are culturally dependent, demographically variable, and easily malleable. The first study considered essentialist intuitions in 10 different countries spread across four continents. Participants were presented with two scenarios meant to elicit essentialist intuitions. Their answers suggest that essentialist intuitions vary dramatically across cultures. Furthermore, (...) these intuitions were found to vary with gender, education, and across eliciting stimuli. The second study further examined whether essentialist intuitions are stable across different kinds of eliciting stimuli. Participants were presented with two different scenarios meant to elicit essentialist intuitions—the “discovery” and “transformation” scenarios. Their answers suggest that the nature of the eliciting stimuli influences whether or not people report essentialist intuitions. Finally, the third study demonstrates that essentialist intuitions are susceptible to framing effects. Keeping the eliciting stimulus (i.e., the scenario) constant, we show that the formulation of the question eliciting a judgment influences whether or not people have essentialist intuitions. Implications of these findings for identity essentialism and psychological essentialism, in general, are discussed. (shrink)
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  20.  53
    Neural correlates of subliminal and supraliminal letter processing—An event-related fMRI study.A. Heinzel,H. Hautzel,T. D. Poeppel,F. Boers,M. Beu &H. -W.Mueller -2008 -Consciousness and Cognition 17 (3):699-713.
    One problem of interpreting research on subconscious processing is the possibility that participants are weakly conscious of the stimuli. Here, we compared the fMRI BOLD response in healthy adults to clearly visible single letters with the response to letters presented in the absence of any behavioural evidence of visibility . No letter catch trials served as a control condition. Forced-choice responses did not differ from chance when letter-to-background contrast was low, whereas they were almost 100% correct when contrast was high. (...) A comparison of fMRI BOLD signals for supraliminal and subliminal letters with the control trials revealed a signal increase in left BA 37 . Comparison of supraliminal with subliminal letters showed a significant increase in the right inferior frontal gyrus . Finally, a comparison of subliminal with supraliminal letters showed increases in the left middle temporal gyrus and the right extrastriate cortex. (shrink)
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  21. Street-Level Bureaucracy: Dilemmas of the Individual in Public Services.Michael Lipsky,Jeffrey Manditch Prottas,David Street,Georte T. Martin,Laura Kramer &Noel Timms -1983 -Ethics 93 (3):588-595.
     
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  22. India: Introducing the Standard Days Method in urban and rural sites.M. B. Hossain,J. Fullerton,N. J. Piet-Pelon,W. Trayfors,S. Wilcox,T. S. Osteria,A. Martin,R. Vernon,D. Mansour &M. P.Mueller -2013 -Journal of Biosocial Science 37 (24):529-554.
  23.  23
    In situstudy of quasicrystal growth by synchrotron X-ray imaging.J. Gastaldi,G. Reinhart,H. Nguyen-Thi,N. Mangelinck-Noel,B. Billia,T. Schenk,J. Härtwig,B. Grushko,H. Klein,A. Buffet,J. Baruchel,H. Jung,P. Pino &B. Przepiarzynski -2007 -Philosophical Magazine 87 (18-21):3079-3087.
  24.  223
    The Paradox of Junk Fiction.Noël Carroll -1994 -Philosophy and Literature 18 (2):225-241.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Noël Carroll THE PARADOX OFJUNK FICTION Perhaps on your way to some academic conference, if you had no papers to grade, you stopped in die airport gift shop for something to read on the plane. You saw racks of novels authored by die likes of Mary Higgins Clark, Michael Crichton, John Grisham, Danielle Steele, Sidney Sheldon, Stephen King, Sue Grafton, Elmore Leonard, Sara Paretsky, Tom Clancy, and so on. (...) These are the kinds of novels that, when you lend them to friends, you don't care, unless you live in Bowling Green, Ohio, whether you ever get them back. They are mass, popular fictions. In another era, they would have been called pulp fictions. Following Thomas Roberts,1 I will call diem junk fictions, under which rubric I will also include things like Harlequin romances; sci-fi, horror, and mystery magazines; comic books; and broadcast narratives on either the radio or TV, as well as commercial movies. There are a number of interesting philosophical questions diat we may ask aboutjunk fiction. We could, for example, attempt to characterize its essential features. However, for the present, I will assume that the preceding examples are enough to provide you with a rough-andready notion of what I am calling junk fiction, and I will attempt to explore anotiier feature of the phenomenon, viz., what I call the paradox ofjunk fiction. Thejunk fictions that I have in mind are all narratives. Indeed, dieir story dimension is die most important thing about diem. Stephen King, for instance, makes diis point by saying that he is primarily a story teller rather than a writer. Junk fictions aspire to be page-turners—the blurb on the cover of Stillwatch by Mary Higgins Clark says that it is "designed to be read at breatiitaking speed"—and what motivates turning die page so quickly is our interest in what happens next. We do not dawdle Philosophy and Literature, © 1994, 18: 225-241 226Philosophy and Literature over Clark's diction as we might over Updike's nor do we savor die complexity of her sentence structure, as we do widi Virginia Woolfs. Radier, we read for story. Moreover, junk fictions are die sort of narratives that commentators are wont to call formulaic. That is, junk fictions generally belong to well-entrenched genres, which diemselves are typified by tiieir possession of an extremely limited repertoire of story-types. For example, as John Cawelti has pointed out, one such recurring Western narrative is diat of the recendy pacifist gunfighter, like Shane, who is forced by circumstances to take up his pistols again, widi altogedier devastating effect.2 Junk fictions tell diese generic stories again and again with minor variations. Sometimes diese variations may be quite clever and unexpected. Agatiia Christie was the master of this; she was able to use the conventions of the mystery genre in order to "hide" her murderers. In TheMurderofRogerAckroyd, she "secrets" the murderer in the personage of the narrator; in Ten Little Indians, die murderer is a "dead man"; while in Murder on the Orient Express, all the suspects did it. In each of these cases, Christie's brilliance hinges upon her playing (and preying) upon conventional expectations. Neverdieless, even diese surprising variations require a well-established background of narrative forms. That is, in order to appreciate diese variations, die reader must in some sense know die standard story already. And with junk fiction, it is generally fair to say that in some sense, the reader—or, at least, the reader who has read around in die genre before—knows in rough oudine how die story is likely to go. Readers and/or viewers of Jurassic Park surmised, once die dinosaur enclosures were described, diat in fairly short order die dinosaurs would trample them down and go on the rampage—after all we had already seen or read The Lost World, King Kong, and their progeny. So, junk fictions are formulaic. They rehearse certain narrative formats again and again. And, furthermore, in some very general sense, the audience already knows die story in question. But this knowledge on die part of die audience provokes a question, specifically, why if the reader, viewer or listener already... (shrink)
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  25.  25
    Item-Level Story Recall Predictors of Amyloid-Beta in Late Middle-Aged Adults at Increased Risk for Alzheimer’s Disease.Kimberly D.Mueller,Lianlian Du,Davide Bruno,Tobey Betthauser,Bradley Christian,Sterling Johnson,Bruce Hermann &Rebecca Langhough Koscik -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    BackgroundStory recall tests have shown variable sensitivity to rate of cognitive decline in individuals with Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers. Although SR tasks are typically scored by obtaining a sum of items recalled, item-level analyses may provide additional sensitivity to change and AD processes. Here, we examined the difficulty and discrimination indices of each item from the Logical Memory SR task, and determined if these metrics differed by recall conditions, story version, lexical categories, serial position, and amyloid status.Methodsn = 1,141 participants from (...) the Wisconsin Registry for Alzheimer’s Prevention longitudinal study who had item-level data were included in these analyses, as well as a subset of n = 338 who also had amyloid positron emission tomography imaging. LM data were categorized into four lexical categories, and by serial position. We calculated difficulty and discriminability/memorability by item, category, and serial position and ran separate repeated measures ANOVAs for each recall condition, lexical category, and serial position. For the subset with amyloid imaging, we used a two-sample t-test to examine whether amyloid positive and amyloid negative groups differed in difficulty or discrimination for the same summary metrics.ResultsIn the larger sample, items were more difficult in the delayed recall condition across both story A and story B. Item discrimination was higher at delayed than immediate recall, and proper names had better discrimination than any of the other lexical categories or serial position groups. In the subsample with amyloid PET imaging, proper names were more difficult for Aβ+ than Aβ−; items in the verb and “other” lexical categories and all serial positions from delayed recall were more discriminate for the Aβ+ group compared to the Aβ− group.ConclusionThis study provides empirical evidence that both LM stories are effective at discriminating ability levels and amyloid status, and that individual items vary in difficulty and discrimination by amyloid status, while total scores do not. These results can be informative for the future development of sensitive tasks or composite scores for early detection of cognitive decline. (shrink)
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  26.  9
    Le point aveugle: l'intention imprévue de la psychanalyse.Jean-FrançoisNoel -2000 - Paris: Cerf.
    Y a-t-il une psychanalyse chrétienne? Cette question a-t-elle un sens? Un croyant souffrant doit-il ou non s'assurer que son psychanalyste est lui-même croyant pour protéger sa foi? Autrement dit, comment l'analyse intègre-t-elle ou modifie-t-elle une donnée religieuse? Faire une analyse, c'est accepter de traverser le tragique de sa propre vie. En raison du dévoilement de la vérité que ce processus met en œuvre, le patient voit se dégager devant lui la perspective d'un désir dont la nouvelle mesure est infinie. Ce (...) désir avait été comblé par des objets qui, jusque-là, semblaient le satisfaire. Puis, le symptôme surgit, déstabilise, perturbe les petits arrangements que le patient s'était autorisés. Première ou dernière scène de son tragique? Dans le huis clos théâtral qu'est la séance analytique, le patient-acteur reprend et parle toute son histoire. Comme à son insu, il se voit contraint de redéfinir ce qui donne sens à sa vie : sens religieux? sens éthique? Bref, tout ce qui échappe à l'analyse et que, paradoxe imprévisible, elle évoque et convoque... Pourtant, un point restera toujours aveugle pour lui, à l'instar d'Œdipe qui, les yeux crevés, poursuit son chemin. C'est peut-être en ce même point - tragique-aveugle - que l'homme reconnaît sous une lumière nouvelle que son histoire personnelle rejoint la détresse commune et ordinaire de toute l'humanité. (shrink)
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  27.  55
    ‘Here’s Me Being Humble’: The Strangeness of Modeling Intellectual Humility.Noel L. Clemente -2024 -Social Epistemology 38 (2):235-248.
    There’s something paradoxical with a person saying ‘I am humble’; it doesn’t seem so humble to self-attribute humility in general, and intellectual humility in particular. In light of the recent interest in educating for intellectual virtues, this paradox has interesting implications to educating for intellectual humility. In particular, one might wonder how a teacher can be a model of intellectual humility to her students. If a teacher says something like ‘Here’s me being an exemplar of intellectual humility’, the paradox above (...) takes on a pedagogical angle. In this paper, I analyze the paradoxes in self-attributing and learning intellectual humility using three different accounts of this virtue, before proceeding to untangle what could be called the ‘Modeling Paradox’ of teaching intellectual humility and figure out whether this virtue can be non-problematically demonstrated to one’s students. (shrink)
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  28.  80
    On some academic theories of mathematical objects.IanMueller -1986 -Journal of Hellenic Studies 106:111-120.
    In his critical study of Speusippus Leonardo Tarán (T.) expounds an interpretation of a considerable part of the controversial books M and N of Aristotle's Metaphysics. In this essay I want to consider three aspects of the interpretation, the account of Plato's ‘ideal numbers’ (section I), the account of Speusippus’ mathematical ontology (section II), and the account of the principles of that ontology (section III). T. builds his interpretation squarely on the work of Harold Cherniss (C.), to whom I will (...) also refer. I concentrate on T. because he has brought the ideas in which I am interested together and given them a concise formulation; he is also meticulous in indicating the secondary sources with which he agrees or disagrees, so that anyone interested in pursuing particular points can do so easily by consulting his book. (shrink)
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  29.  38
    Seeing the Soul.Noel Fleming -1978 -Philosophy 53 (203):33 - 50.
    1. ‘“But aren't you saying that all that happens is that he moans, and that there is nothing behind it?” I am saying that there is nothing behind the moaning ’ . This passage seems to me to epitomize a conception of the mind and its relation to the body found in the later work of Wittgenstein. It will be convenient to write as if this is his view of the mind. He suggests elsewhere that he is not advancing philosophical (...) theses in his later work; so maybe this view is not a philosophical thesis in some relevant sense; or maybe Wittgenstein is not wholly consistent; or maybe he puts it forward only dialectically, and in other philosophical contexts would have espoused other views of the mind as much as he espouses this one. In any case, what does this one amount to? ‘There is nothing behind the moaning.’ What does this mean? (shrink)
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  30.  660
    Löst Brandoms Inferentialismus bedeutungsholistische Kommunikationsprobleme?AxelMueller -2014 -Zeitschrift Für Semiotik 34 (3-4):141-185.
    This article analyzes whether Brandom’s ISA (inferential-substitutional-anaphoric) semantics as presented in Making It Explicit (MIE) and Articulating Reasons (AR) can cope with problems resulting from inferentialism’s near-implied meaning holism. Inferentialism and meaning holism entail a radically perspectival conception of content as significance for an individual speaker. Since thereby its basis is fixed as idiolects, holistic inferentialism engenders a communication-problem. Brandom considers the systematic difference in information among individuals as the „point“ of communication and thus doesn’t want to diminish these effects (...) of inferentialism. Instead, explains communication with a model of “navigating among perspectives without sharing contents”. The crucial element in this navigation-model is the functioning of anaphoric connections between tokens uttered in discourse that can be used by every individual speaker in their own perspectival semantic substitution-economies. The heart of Brandom’s semantics is the thesis of the purely inferential, hence non-referential nature of anaphora, coupled with the claim that anaphoric-inferential semantic mechanisms yield sufficient conditions for mutually successful “information-extraction” or interpretation. This article disputes the thesis and denies the claim. Regarding the former it is observed that all of Brandom’s plausible reconstructions of anaphoric discourse-structures rely on covert “reference-infiltrations” that can’t be eliminated. Regarding the latter, a new argument based on context-sensitive semantic phenomena in anaphoric settings shows that the crucial distinction between initiator or anaphoric antecedent and anaphoric dependent cannot be drawn according to Brandom’s own premises without overt and irreducible referential premises. The article concludes that either Brandom’s semantics can offer determinate contents, but then must accept genuinely referential semantic primitives, or else it leaves utterance-contents undeterminable and hence cannot explain communication. (shrink)
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  31. NOEL, L. -Notes d'épistémologie Thomiste. [REVIEW]A. E. T. A. E. T. -1926 -Mind 35:116.
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  32.  16
    Repeatability and Reproducibility of in-vivo Brain Temperature Measurements.Ayushe A. Sharma,Rodolphe Nenert,ChristinaMueller,Andrew A. Maudsley,Jarred W. Younger &Jerzy P. Szaflarski -2020 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
    Background: Magnetic resonance spectroscopic imaging is a neuroimaging technique that may be useful for non-invasive mapping of brain temperature over a large brain volume. To date, intra-subject reproducibility of MRSI-based brain temperature has not been investigated. The objective of this repeated measures MRSI-t study was to establish intra-subject reproducibility and repeatability of brain temperature, as well as typical brain temperature range.Methods: Healthy participants aged 23–46 years were scanned at two time points ~12-weeks apart. Volumetric MRSI data were processed by reconstructing (...) metabolite and water images using parametric spectral analysis. Brain temperature was derived using the frequency difference between water and creatine for 47 regions of interest delineated by the modified Automated Anatomical Labeling atlas. Reproducibility was measured using the coefficient of variation for repeated measures, and repeatability was determined using the standard error of measurement. For each region, the upper and lower bounds of Minimal Detectable Change were established to characterize the typical range of TCRE values.Results: The mean global brain temperature over all subjects was 37.2°C with spatial variations across ROIs. There was a significant main effect for time [F = 37.0, p< 0.0001] and for brain region [F = 2.66, p< 0.0001]. The time*brain region interaction was not significant [F = 0.80, p = 0.83]. Participants' TCRE was stable for each ROI across both time points, with ROIs' COVrep ranging from 0.81 to 3.08% ; majority of ROIs had a COVrep<2.0%.Conclusions: Brain temperature measurements were highly consistent between both time points, indicating high reproducibility and repeatability of MRSI-t. MRSI-t may be a promising diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic tool for non-invasively monitoring brain temperature changes in health and disease. However, further studies of healthy participants with larger sample size and numerous repeated acquisitions are imperative for establishing a reference range of typical brain TCRE, as well as the threshold above which TCRE is likely pathological. (shrink)
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  33.  49
    La frontière entre allégorie et typologie.Jean-Noël Guinot -2011 -Recherches de Science Religieuse 99 (2):207-228.
    N’a-t-on pas jusqu’à l’excès opposé l’exégèse allégorique d’Alexandrie à l’exégèse historico-littérale des Antiochiens ? Si l’on se réfère au débat des années 50 autour du « sens spirituel » des Écritures, ne peut-on pas penser que l’on a été tenté de le plaquer sur les auteurs anciens, enrôlés pour la circonstance dans l’un ou l’autre camp ? Il vaut donc la peine de rouvrir sans passion le dossier. En réalité, la contestation de l’exégèse spirituelle d’Origène, reprise à l’époque moderne, est (...) fort ancienne : elle se rattache au débat, plus ancien encore, autour de l’allégorie des poèmes homériques et des mythes grecs. Mais précisément le texte biblique peut-il être traité comme les fables des Grecs ? Les exégètes d’Antioche le nient énergiquement. Pourtant, s’ils refusent de faire de l’allégorie une méthode d’exégèse, ils ne renoncent pas, sous certaines conditions, à dépasser la lettre du texte et son sens historique. Ce sens supérieur ou spirituel qu’Origène découvre par l’allégorie – quel que soit du reste le mot qu’il utilise -, les exégètes d’Antioche cherchent à l’atteindre grâce à l’explication dite typologique. Il s’agira donc ici de préciser la frontière entre ces deux modes d’explication.Was not the opposition between the allegorical exegesis of the School of Alexandria and the historic-literary analysis of the School of Antioch pushed to the extreme? If we think back to the 1950s debate about the “spiritual meaning or sense” of the Scriptures, might we not discern there a temptation to project this debate back onto the ancient authors, forced to fit into one camp or the other? It is thus quite worthwhile to open up this file again in a more dispassionate way. In fact, the arguments against Origen’s spiritual exegesis, taken up in modern times, is very old and is connected with the even older debate about the allegorical nature of the Homeric poems and Greek myths. However, is it possible to deal with the Biblical text in the same way as with the Greek fables? The Antioch exegetes denied this vehemently. Still, although they refused to take allegory as a method of exegesis, they did not renounce – in some circumstances – looking beyond the letter of the text and its historical meaning. This superior or spiritual meaning which Origen discovered through allegory – whatever might be the term he utilized – was sought for by the Antioch School through the so-called typological explanation. (shrink)
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  34.  369
    The Conventionality of Parastatistics.David John Baker,Hans Halvorson &Noel Swanson -2015 -British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 66 (4):929-976.
    Nature seems to be such that we can describe it accurately with quantum theories of bosons and fermions alone, without resort to parastatistics. This has been seen as a deep mystery: paraparticles make perfect physical sense, so why don’t we see them in nature? We consider one potential answer: every paraparticle theory is physically equivalent to some theory of bosons or fermions, making the absence of paraparticles in our theories a matter of convention rather than a mysterious empirical discovery. We (...) argue that this equivalence thesis holds in all physically admissible quantum field theories falling under the domain of the rigorous Doplicher–Haag–Roberts approach to superselection rules. Inadmissible parastatistical theories are ruled out by a locality-inspired principle we call charge recombination. 1 Introduction2 Paraparticles in Quantum Theory3 Theoretical Equivalence3.1 Field systems in algebraic quantum field theory3.2 Equivalence of field systems4 A Brief History of the Equivalence Thesis4.1 The Green decomposition4.2 Klein transformations4.3 The argument of Drühl, Haag, and Roberts4.4 The Doplicher–Roberts reconstruction theorem5 Sharpening the Thesis6 Discussion6.1 Interpretations of Quantum Mechanics6.2 Structuralism and haecceities6.3 Paraquark theories. (shrink)
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  35.  60
    (1 other version)Calamity Jane, Lettres à sa fille, traduit de l'anglais par Marie Sully, Paris, Payot et Rivages, 1997 (édition de poche), 114 p. [REVIEW]Laure NOËL -1999 -Clio: A Journal of Literature, History, and the Philosophy of History 2:18-18.
    « Ma Chérie, ceci n'est pas censé être un journal, et il se peut même que ça ne te parvienne jamais, mais j'aime penser à toi en train de le lire, page après page, un jour dans les années à venir, après que je serai partie. J'aimerais t'entendre rire en regardant ces photos de moi. Je suis seule dans ma cabane ce soir et fatiguée ». Avertissement ou défi, ceci est la première lettre écrite par Calamity Jane à sa fille (...) le 25 septembre 1877. Une vingtaine d'autres lettres suivront, de fa.. (shrink)
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  36.  46
    St. Caesarius of Arles, Sermons, Vol. I-II, (The Fathers of the Church, Vol. 31 & 47). Translated by Sister Mary MagdeleineMueller, O. S. F. [REVIEW]T. Hartmann -1965 -Augustinianum 5 (1):182-182.
  37.  44
    Slugan, Mario. Noël Carroll and Film: A Philosophy of Art and Popular Culture. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019, xii + 218 pp., 10 b&w illus., £85.00 cloth. [REVIEW]Laura T. di Summa -2020 -Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 78 (1):129-131.
    The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Volume 78, Issue 1, Page 129-131, Winter 2020.
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  38.  129
    The Great State. H. G. Wells, Frances Evelyn Warwick, L. G. Chiozza Money, E. Ray Lankester, C. J. Bond, E. S. P. Haynes, Cecil Chesterton, Cicely Hamilton, Roger Fry, G. R. S. Taylor, ConradNoel, Herbert Trench, Hugh P. Vowels. [REVIEW]T. Whittaker -1913 -International Journal of Ethics 23 (2):242-245.
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  39.  30
    New illusory effect of the Müller-Lyer figure.Paul T. Mountjoy -1966 -Journal of Experimental Psychology 71 (1):119.
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  40.  571
    Preemption effects in visual search: Evidence for low-level grouping.Ronald A. Rensink &James T. Enns -1995 -Psychological Review 102 (1):101-130.
    Experiments are presented showing that visual search forMueller-Lyer (ML) stimuli is based on complete configurations, rather than component segments. Segments easily detected in isolation were difficult to detect when embedded in a configuration, indicating preemption by low-level groups. This preemption—which caused stimulus components to become inaccessible to rapid search—was an all-or-nothing effect, and so could serve as a powerful test of grouping. It is shown that these effects are unlikely to be due to blurring by simple spatial filters (...) at early visual levels. It is proposed instead that they are due to more sophisticated processes that rapidly bind contour fragments into spatially-extended assemblies. These results support the view that rapid visual search cannot access the primitives formed at the earliest stages of visual processing; rather, it can access only higher-level, more ecologically-relevant structures. (shrink)
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  41.  24
    Dr.Noel Preston: Understanding Ethics, 3rd edition: The Federated Press, Leichhardt, New South Wales, 2007, 233 pages, ISBN 978 186287 662 0.Rona Smeak -2014 -Journal of Academic Ethics 12 (2):161-163.
    IntroductionThis paperback text is an intermediate text and is simply written. As the author himself states, “the book aims to speak to that growing number of interested persons who want to understand more about the study of ethics, ethical issues and the ways ethicists approach them” . The author intends for this book to be an introduction to ethics and uses the first few chapters to swiftly and succinctly provide an introduction to the basics of ethics and the main ethical (...) theories. He then uses later chapters to carry these theories into current ethical realms, such as business, bioethics, environmental, and political and allows the reader to attach the rudimentary ethical theories examined in the earlier chapters to real life issues in order to emphasize the main points. The final section discusses how to internalize ethics and incorporate them into the reader’s daily lives.SummaryFollowing the acknowledgement, he provides a valuable preface piece aptly titled “How t .. (shrink)
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  42. BOCHENSKI J. M.- BLAKELEY T.- KUENG G.- LOBKOWICZ N.- DAHM H.- FLEISCHER H.-MUELLER S.- JORDAN Z.- VRTACIC L.- BUCHHOLZ A., "Studies in Soviet Thought". [REVIEW]B. A. B. A. -1962 -Rivista di Filosofia Neo-Scolastica 54:514.
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  43.  72
    Whither the Welfare State? Professionalization, Bureaucracy, and the Market Alternative:Street-Level Bureaucracy: Dilemmas of the Individual in Public Services. Michael Lipsky; People-Processing: The Street-Level Bureaucrat in Public Service Bureaucracies. Jeffrey Manditch Prottas; The Welfare Industry: Functionaries and Reprients in Public Aid. David Street, Georte T. Martin, Jr., Laura Kramer; Social Welfare: Why and How?Noel Timms. [REVIEW]Clarence N. Stone -1983 -Ethics 93 (3):588-.
  44. Compte-rendu de John P. Meier, "Un certain juif Jésus". T. IV. "La loi et l'amour". Traduit de l'anglais par Dominique Barrios, Charles Ehlinger et Noël Lucas (coll. lectio divina), Paris, Cerf, 2009. [REVIEW]Camille Focant -2009 -Revue Théologique de Louvain 40 (3):405-409.
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  45.  25
    Philosophical Problems of Classical Film Theory byNoel Carroll.Robert E. Lauder -1991 -The Thomist 55 (3):535-538.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:BOOK REVIEWS 535 eluded. Have Straussians proved that there is no higher human knowledge than philosophy? One hopes that they will meet their critics, because Stmussians are deeply serious men and women, and we can all learn from their mentor. Hillsdale, College Hillsdale, Michigan D. T. ASSELIN Philosophical Problems of Classical Film Theory. ByNOEL CARROLL. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1988. Pp. 268. This book is a (...) provocative, clearly written, and carefully argued presentation of a philosophical critique of traditional film criticism. If film is taken as a serious art form, one which can stand alongside of music, painting, theatre, and literature, then Carroll's book is a good example of the type of philosophical study that is needed. Assistant professor of philosophy at Wesleyan University, Carroll knows the world of film well and attacks with vigor what he takes to be erroneous in traditional film criticism. His three targets are the film theories of Rudolf Arnheim, Andre Bazin, and V. F. Perkins. It would be difficult to overemphasize the influence of Arnheim and Bazin on the history of the aesthetics of film: each man is a giant in the history of theorizing about film. Though much less influential, Perkins does present an mteresting view of film. Philosophical Problems of Classical Film Theory consists of an introduction, three central chapters, and a conclusion. Each of the three chapters is devoted to one of the film theorists, and each chapter begins with an explanation of the theory being discussed. In trying to present the theory in its strongest form, Carroll includes a detailed discussion of its historical setting, and this makes its contextual importance clear. But most of each chapter is devoted to criticism of the theory iii question. Thinking of film theories as a series of answers to abstract questions, Carroll suggests that Arnheim, Bazin, and Perkins address the same central questions and expect the answers to these questions to be related logically in the same way. Carroll lists three questions that he thinks suggest a similar structure in the three theories he is studying: " What is the determinant or special feature of film? What is the value or role of cinema? What are the processes of articulation in film in relation to the previous two answers? " Concerning the answers to these questions Carroll writes 586 BOOK REVIEWS Most classical film theories-including those of Amheim, Bazin, and Perkins-relate answers to the three basic questions in the following way: the determinant characteristic stands to the role of cinema as a means to an end, while the articulatory processes are assessed as instances of the determinant characteristic of cinema (pp. 14-15). Arnheim represents an early type of film theorizing which Carroll names the silent-film paradigm. Those who embrace this approach, and Carroll would include the Soviet montagists of the twenties such as Sergei Eisenstein, insist that film is not merely a record of reality but rather manipulates reality expressively. Though Arnheim wrote after sound had entered film, he disdained talkies and looked back to silent film to discover the paradigm of film. Carroll's treatment of Arnheim relies on the latter's 1957 Film As Art, which is a condensed version of his 1933 book Film. The 1957 condensation can he considered the authoritative articulation of Arnheim's position. The prejudice against cinema in its early days derived from the fact that a major constituent of film was photography. Many felt that photography could not be an art form because it was merely a copying process. Arnheim's theory can be called creationist because he successfully showed how cinema could be creative in capturing and re-presenting reality. Arnheim showed that film transcends the simple viewpoint that simple recording implies. Carroll summarizes Arnheim's view: In summary, Arnheim holds that one role of filmmaking-the one that concerns him-is art. He also contends that the determinant characteristics of the medium-those relevant to the purpose of art makingare the various ways that the medium diverges from the mechanical duplication of reality, and finally, Arnheim spends the bulk of Film As Art on lengthy examinations of the various modes of cinematic articulalation, in order to demonstrate... (shrink)
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  46.  9
    Dieu pour l'homme d'aujourd'hui.Jacques Duquesne -1970 - Paris,: B. Grasset.
    Dieu existe-t-il encore pour l'homme d'aujourd'hui? À cette question essentielle, parfois étouffée par le tintamarre des contestations quotidiennes, la mode est aujourd'hui de répondre par la négative. Au terme d'une vaste enquête, Jacques Duquesne, au contraire, n'hésite pas à donner une réponse positive. Alors que l'on clame la mort de Dieu, il montre que la faim d'un Dieu n'a jamais été aussi vive que dans notre monde tourmenté. Alors que l'on trace un portrait-robot de l'homme moderne animé seulement par les (...) froides impulsions de la raison, il décèle dans l'art, l'astrologie, mais aussi le phénomène hippie ou les événements de mai 1968, les mille signes d'un mouvement de re-sacralisation. Les trois-quarts des Français et des Allemands, la quasi-totalité des Américains affirment croire en Dieu. Mais en quel Dieu? Sortie de secours pour homme angoissé, divertissement pour homme programmé, père Noël barbu, rival malintentionné, grand architecte de l'univers, ou force lointaine et inconnue le Dieu des hommes d'aujourd'hui présente mille visages, archaïques ou modernes. Mais il est rarement le Dieu de Jésus-Christ même chez les chrétiens, dont la foi est en morceaux. Et à son sujet, les Églises, affairées aux problèmes de leur propre organisation, sont trop souvent silencieuses. Dans ces pages denses, vigoureuses et sereines, Jacques Duquesne brosse en une vaste fresque le panorama des croyances, des incroyances et des refus des hommes d'aujourd'hui : détruisant bien des idées reçues, son livre fera date. Collaborateur de l'Express, " Europe no 1 ", et Panorama aujourd'hui, Jacques Duquesne a déjà publié chez Grasset plusieurs livres : les Prêtres, les Catholiques sous l'Occupation, Demain une Église sans prêtres? qui ont eu un grand retentissement. (shrink)
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  47. The Civic Responsibilities of Historians.Jean-Noel Jeanneney -2008 -Agora (History Teachers' Association of Victoria) 43 (4):31.
  48. Art, intention, and conversation.Noël Carroll -1992 - In Gary Iseminger,Intention and interpretation. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. pp. 97--131.
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  49.  45
    Ethical evaluations of business activities and personal religiousness.Noel Y. M. Siu,John R. Dickinson &Betsy Y. Y. Lee -2000 -Teaching Business Ethics 4 (3):239-256.
  50.  10
    Roger T. Ames Responds.Roger T. Ames -2018 - In James Behuniak,Appreciating the Chinese Difference: Engaging Roger T. Ames on Methods, Issues, and Roles. Albany: SUNY Press. pp. 249-293.
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