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Results for 'Parker Picha'

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  1.  2
    Metagames 2023.Shantanu Tilak,Claire Audia,Issaga Bah,Kate Barta,Marina Bulazo,Brennan Colvard,Noah Dzierwa,Sam Ferretti,Braxton Fries,Christopher Gehrke,Lillia Gipson,Colleen Greve,Julia Guo,Sarah Hammill,Christopher Jaenke,Anna Jahn,Kavya Jayanthi,Megan Lencke,Lily Marsco,Paige Moonshower,ParkerPicha,Robek Bridgette,Leigha Schumaker,Kiersten Souders,Charlotte Stefani,Avery Tenerowicz,Ayla Wachowski,Landon Ward,Anna Woods,Nevin Woods &Laura Zalewski (eds.) -2023 - Columbus, Ohio: The Ohio State University.
    This paper, co-authored by undergraduate students and their instructor part of an educational psychology seminar, describes a participatory curriculum design approach for preservice teacher education that focuses on the use of the principles of second-order cybernetics to teach about teaching and learning. Using elements of an Open Source Educational Processes framework, our Spring ESEPSY2309 section created project-based collective hive minds of preservice teachers, relying on a cybernetic approach at the crossroads of Gregory Bateson and Gordon Pask's theories. The classroom community (...) used four innovative tool-mediated pillars to guide collaborative activity: 1) Live-chatting using the Reddit social media platform, 2) observation of the lives, strategies, and practices used by teachers and students in their own social networks through Soundcloud podcasting to expand their own perceptions of pedagogies and best practices that they could employ in their careers, 3) open-ended paper writing, exploring sources beyond the object language provided by the textbook through extensive dyadic conversations with the instructor, and 4) training in the use of the Alice 3 game creation tool for block programming enabling the accumulation of competence in designing classroom systems that may treat students these undergraduates would soon teach as active historical agents in learning environments, combining skills from varied subjects into transdisciplinary educational experiences. We showcase outcomes of our class projects using a narrative inquiry to describe podcast episodes, a topic network analysis to illustrate the expansive nature of Open Source writing activity, and a visual depiction of our class Alice 3 games. (shrink)
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  2. Self-Awareness in Animals and Humans: Developmental Perspectives.S. T.Parker,R. M. Mitchell &M. L. Boccia -1994 - Cambridge University Press.
  3.  132
    Whose Probabilities? Predicting Climate Change with Ensembles of Models.Wendy S.Parker -2010 -Philosophy of Science 77 (5):985-997.
    Today’s most sophisticated simulation studies of future climate employ not just one climate model but a number of models. I explain why this “ensemble” approach has been adopted—namely, as a means of taking account of uncertainty—and why a comprehensive investigation of uncertainty remains elusive. I then defend a middle ground between two camps in an ongoing debate over the transformation of ensemble results into probabilistic predictions of climate change, highlighting requirements that I refer to as ownership, justification, and robustness.
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  4. (1 other version)The Continuity of Peirce’s Thought.Kelly A.Parker -1998 -The Personalist Forum 15 (2):432-437.
  5.  23
    Processing Contradictory CSR Information: The Influence of Primacy and Recency Effects on the Consumer-Firm Relationship.Michael C. Peasley,Parker J. Woodroof &Joshua T. Coleman -2020 -Journal of Business Ethics 172 (2):275-289.
    Drawing on the influence of primacy and recency effects in processing information about corporate social responsibility, the authors examine how internal and external factors impact the consumer-firm relationship in the presence of contradictory CSR information. Evaluating these factors provides a more comprehensive understanding of how consumers react to unethical and socially irresponsible actions. Contrary to recent research that suggests a reactive CSR communication strategy to be best due to recency effects, the present findings show that past customer experiences with the (...) firm facilitate a ‘primacy effect’. Thus, when corporate social irresponsibility occurs, a customer’s prior experiences mitigate negative consequences. Conversely, a firm’s positive CSR reputation may provide goodwill, although it does not guarantee that consumers will process CSR information differently. Therefore, firms cannot build a strong CSR reputation and expect to be immune from the consequences of CSI. Given these new findings of how consumers process contradictory CSR information, firms should implement a strategic and deliberate communication plan that delivers different messages to different stakeholders. Specifically, these findings suggest that firms benefit most from a proactive communication strategy with their current customers and a reactive communication strategy with the general public. (shrink)
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  6.  109
    Simulation and Understanding in the Study of Weather and Climate.Wendy S.Parker -2014 -Perspectives on Science 22 (3):336-356.
    In 1904, Norwegian physicist Vilhelm Bjerknes published what would become a landmark paper in the history of meteorology. In that paper, he proposed that daily weather forecasts could be made by calculating later states of the atmosphere from an earlier state using the laws of hydrodynamics and thermodynamics (Bjerknes 1904). He outlined a set of differential equations to be solved and advocated the development of graphical and numerical solution methods, since analytic solution was out of the question. Using these theory-based (...) equations to produce daily forecasts, however, turned out to be more difficult than anticipated. Graphical solution techniques had limited success, and a first attempt to use .. (shrink)
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  7.  23
    The Clinical Ethics Consultant: What Role is There for Religious Beliefs?J. ClintParker -2019 -HEC Forum 31 (2):85-89.
    Religions often operate as comprehensive worldviews, attempting to answer the deepest existential questions that human beings can ask: Who am I? Where do I come from? Where am I going after I die? How should I live? Often ethical systems are embedded and justified within these broader narratives. Inevitably, the clinical ethics consultant will encounter and engage with religiously based ethical systems. In this issue, the authors reflect seriously and deeply on the implications of such engagement.
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  8.  268
    The ethics of open access publishing.MichaelParker -2013 -BMC Medical Ethics 14 (1):16.
    Should those who work on ethics welcome or resist moves to open access publishing? This paper analyses arguments in favour and against the increasing requirement for open access publishing and considers their implications for bioethics research. In the context of biomedical science, major funders are increasingly mandating open access as a condition of funding and such moves are also common in other disciplines. Whilst there has been some debate about the implications of open-access for the social sciences and humanities, there (...) has been little if any discussion about the implications of open access for ethics. This is surprising given both the central role of public reason and critique in ethics and the fact that many of the arguments made for and against open access have been couched in moral terms. In what follows I argue that those who work in ethics have a strong interest in supporting moves towards more open publishing approaches which have the potential both to inform and promote richer and more diverse forms of public deliberation and to be enriched by them. The importance of public deliberation in practical and applied ethics suggests that ethicists have a particular interest in the promotion of diverse and experimental forms of publication and debate and in supporting new, more creative and more participatory approaches to publication. (shrink)
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  9.  21
    The Pluralization of Regulation.ChristineParker -2008 -Theoretical Inquiries in Law 9 (2):349-369.
    This Article examines normative arguments for legal pluralism in regulation. First I briefly set out what we know in fact about how plural regulatory orderings interact and compete with state agency regulatory action. Second, I sketch, and reject, a simple legal pluralist response to regulatory pluralism. In the third part of the Article I show that "responsive" and "reflexive" approaches to intentional pluralization in the design of law should be seen as providing different but complementary pictures of pluralized law. Finally (...) I argue that this pluralized view of law might provide us with the conceptual tools to identify a type of emergent, pluralistic law, without or beyond the state, which would be relevant to thinking about both transnational regulation and multiculturalism. (shrink)
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  10.  48
    The Happy Hen on Your Supermarket Shelf: What Choice Does Industrial Strength Free-Range Represent for Consumers?ChristineParker,Carly Brunswick &Jane Kotey -2013 -Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 10 (2):165-186.
    This paper investigates what “free-range” eggs are available for sale in supermarkets in Australia, what “free-range” means on product labelling, and what alternative “free-range” offers to cage production. The paper concludes that most of the “free-range” eggs currently available in supermarkets do not address animal welfare, environmental sustainability, and public health concerns but, rather, seek to drive down consumer expectations of what these issues mean by balancing them against commercial interests. This suits both supermarkets and egg producers because it does (...) not challenge dominant industrial-scale egg production and the profits associated with it. A serious approach to free-range would confront these arrangements, and this means it may be impossible to truthfully label many of the “free-range” eggs currently available in the dominant supermarkets as free-range. (shrink)
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  11.  44
    Too much medicine: not enough trust? A response.JoshuaParker -2019 -Journal of Medical Ethics 45 (11):746-747.
    In their paper ’Too much medicine: not enough trust?' Zoë Fritz and Richard Holton explore the connection between trust and overtreatment and overinvestigation. Whilst their paper is insightful, here I argue that much more could be made of a doctor’s (mis)trust and how this exacerbates overtreatment and overinvestigation. By taking Fritz and Holton’s view of trust as having ‘our best interests at heart’ as my starting point, I argue that doctor’s do not always trust that patients or the system has (...) their interests at heart and so use overtreatment and overinvestigation to protect themselves. I also point to the tensions created by a lack of trust on the doctor’s part as a focal point for much needed sustained ethical analysis. (shrink)
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  12.  6
    Sufficiency and healthcare emissions.JoshuaParker -forthcoming -Bioethics.
    In this paper, I am concerned with how healthcare systems ought to transition away from the greenhouse gas emissions that they have historically relied on to provide care. I address two questions in relation to this issue. The first is what emissions target should healthcare systems adopt? Second, is how should the burdens of mitigation be shared fairly in light of that target? I argue that sufficientarianism offers an attractive way to answer both of these questions because it is better (...) situated to strike the right balance between healthcare benefits and the costs of mitigation than rivals. Sufficiency describes the view that what is important from the perspective of distributive justice is that individuals have enough. I argue that this ideal can be used to set a threshold of enough health from which an emissions threshold can be set. Once an emissions threshold is in place, this can be used to demarcate permissible from impermissible emissions in healthcare. In turn, the emissions threshold provides guidance on which emissions are liable to mitigation and when it would be fair for healthcare to shoulder the associated burdens. Permissible emissions, on the other hand, are necessary to secure sufficiency and so healthcare's mitigation responsibilities should be altered in light of this. I also discuss various alternative methods of setting an emissions target like net zero, zero emissions, emissions grandfathering and emissions egalitarianism. I point to several issues with these approaches. (shrink)
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  13.  46
    Social Justice, Federal Paternalism, and Feminism: Breast Implants in the Cultural Context of Female Beauty.Lisa S.Parker -1993 -Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 3 (1):57-76.
    In April 1992 the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced it was restricting the availability of silicone gel-filled breast implants to women enrolled in clinical trials. All candidates for breast reconstruction, but only a "very limited" number of augmentation candidates, would have access to the implants. This policy has been criticized as paternalistic, sexist, and unjustified by scientific data. I examine these charges and conclude that controversy surrounding the scientific data weakens the FDA's paternalistic mandate and that its policy of (...) treating reconstruction and augmentation candidates differently results in increased social injustice and perpetuates cultural biases concerning female beauty and women's rights to control their bodies. I also argue that these cultural biases shape women's subjective experience of their physical selves and should not, contrary to some feminist arguments, be viewed as precluding their giving informed consent to breast surgery. (shrink)
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  14.  71
    Using human tissue: when do we need consent?L.Parker -2011 -Journal of Medical Ethics 37 (12):759-761.
    Identifiable excess surgical tissue is an important resource for medical research but we have become overly restrictive about consent requirements. I suggest we devolve consent to ethics committees for ordinary research projects involving human tissue, retaining the requirement for explicit consent only for those sensitive research situations where there is significant risk of harm to individual interests in privacy.
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  15.  27
    The Membership and Function of the Research Ethics Committee.ColinParker -2008 -Research Ethics 4 (1):31-33.
    This paper focuses on the REC and its political context to clarify the process of ethical review. The examples initially considered are taken from a Research Ethics Review editorial to develop the social explanation of the membership and function of a research ethics committee. It is suggested that the management and administration of medical matters are not always best understood solely in medical terms. The conclusion of the paper is that the larger political relationships determine the membership and function of (...) the research ethics committee. The REC is defined as the political mechanism for formally socializing medical research and its lay members as similarly socializing the REC. (shrink)
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  16.  28
    The Lay Member in the Research Ethics Committee: A Reply to Green.C.Parker -2007 -Research Ethics 3 (4):131-133.
    This paper seeks to clarify the process of ethical review primarily through a consideration of the lay member's role; it considers some of the conventional accounts of the role and portrays weaknesses in them. Its positive account places the ethical review service in a wide political context allowing the definition of lay member as a politically-positioned individual in the REC with the function of formally representing the public standards of morality in the medical research context.
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  17.  38
    The Mysteries of the Goddess of Marmarini.RobertParker &Scott Scullion -2016 -Kernos 29:209-266.
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  18.  46
    The Role of Socially Embedded Concepts in Breast Cancer Screening: An Empirical Study with Australian Experts.Lisa M.Parker &Stacy M. Carter -2016 -Public Health Ethics 9 (3):276-289.
    It is not clear whether breast cancer screening is a public health intervention or an individual clinical service. The question is important because the concepts best suited for ethical reasoning in public health might be different to the concepts commonly employed in biomedical ethics. We consider it likely that breast screening has elements of a public health intervention and used an empirical ethics approach to explore this further. If breast screening has public health characteristics, it is probable that policy and (...) practice experts will employ socially embedded concepts when reasoning about it. We gathered data on whether and how these concepts existed in the discussion and reasoning of Australian breast screening experts. We found that experts employed these concepts when talking about the purpose and practices of breast screening, and the behaviour of breast screening professionals and consumers. Experts gave varied judgements about breast screening based on reasoning with these concepts, considering it to be more or less successful in contributing to the public interest and in incorporating socially embedded concepts into its operational agenda. Our findings are compatible with breast screening having public health characteristics. We advocate for the incorporation of socially embedded concepts in breast screening policy and practice. (shrink)
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  19.  210
    Greek Gospel manuscripts in Bucharest and Sofia.DavidParker -2003 -Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 85 (1):3-12.
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  20.  47
    The Principles of Aesthetics.Dewitt H.Parker -1921 -Philosophical Review 30:431.
  21.  40
    The Philosophy of Alfred North Whitehead.DeWitt H.Parker -1942 -Philosophical Review 51 (6):608.
  22.  112
    Why were the vestals virgins? Or the chastity of women and the safety of the Roman state.Holt N.Parker -2004 -American Journal of Philology 125 (4):563-601.
    Why were the Vestals virgins? An explanation drawing on anthropological studies of witchcraft and the work of Giovannini, Girard, and Douglas allows a partial solution to this and three other puzzles: 1) their unique legal status; 2) their murder at moments of political crisis; 3) the odd details of those murders. The untouched body of the Vestal Virgin is a metonymy for the untouched city of Rome. Her unique legal status frees her from all family ties so that she can (...) incarnate the collective. Thus, in times of crisis, she serves as a pharmakos/pharmakon. Equally, Roman society reveals a deep fear of witchcraft directed at its own matrons. Danger to the urbs is warded off by the punishment of women, both Vestals and wives, and the foundation of public cults of chastity with admonitory and apotropaic functions. A series of incidents over a thousand-year span reveals a world view deeply rooted in sympathetic magic, where the women embody the state and their inviolability is objectified as the inviolability of the community. (shrink)
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  23.  55
    Greek embryological calendars and a fragment from the lost work of Damastes,On the Care of Pregnant Women and of Infants.Holt N.Parker -1999 -Classical Quarterly 49 (02):515-.
    An eleventh-century manuscript in the Biblioteca Laurenziana in Florence preserves a short excerpt of a calendar outlining stages in the development of the foetus. It is headed Δαμναστού έκ τού Περί κυουσών καί βρεΦών θεραπείας, ‘Damnastes, from On the Care of Pregnant Women and of Infants’. Though its existence has long been noted, it has not been previously edited or published.
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  24.  23
    Gender Ideology, Gender Change: The Case of Marie Germain.PatriciaParker -1993 -Critical Inquiry 19 (2):337-364.
  25.  56
    G. Laudizi: D. Giunio Giovenale: Il frammento Winstedt. (Studi e Testi, Serie Latina, 1.) Pp. 104. Lecce: Adriatica Editrice Salentina, 1982. Paper.R. C. T.Parker -1985 -The Classical Review 35 (2):391-391.
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  26.  16
    Genealogies of Difference.IanParker -2007 -Contemporary Political Theory 6 (1):112-113.
  27.  74
    Greek Religion.R. C. T.Parker -1979 -The Classical Review 29 (01):86-.
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  28.  35
    Getting the Balance Right: Conceptual Considerations Concerning Legal Capacity and Supported Decision-Making.MalcolmParker -2016 -Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 13 (3):381-393.
    The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities urges and requires changes to how signatories discharge their duties to people with intellectual disabilities, in the direction of their greater recognition as legal persons with expanded decision-making rights. Australian jurisdictions are currently undertaking inquiries and pilot projects that explore how these imperatives should be implemented. One of the important changes advocated is to move from guardianship models to supported or assisted models of decision-making. A driving force behind these (...) developments is a strong allegiance to the social model of disability, in the formulation of the Convention, in inquiries and pilot projects, in implementation and in the related academic literature. Many of these instances suffer from confusing and misleading statements and conceptual misinterpretations of certain elements such as legal capacity, decision-making capacity, and support for decision-making. This paper analyses some of these confusions and their possible negative implications for supported decision-making instruments and those whose interests these instruments would serve, and advises a more incremental development of existing guardianship regimes. This provides a more realistic balance between neglecting the real limits of those with mental disabilities and thereby ignoring their identity and particularity, and continuing to bring them equally and fully into society. (shrink)
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  29.  27
    Senility: Two of Five Pieces.MalcolmParker -2014 -Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 11 (2):151-151.
    SenilityCalled from pleasuresI go tap-tapping down an old man’s backdown the skin of eighty summers wastingon a rib-ladder closingon a history of heart and lungs.These narrowly contracting bags I find, proclaim“Today his chest is clear as yours or mine.”This is the news requiredas the tide of vigilancelaps his sheets each surfacing dawn.“He’s doing very well.”He leans his gaze to the voice dintingthe routine of his roombut slides the focal point towards infinitypast those gatheredto the motes of memoryto wherepinned in the (...) windthrough their age and bondher sacrificial flags go flutteringbattered and fastened into the room’s cornerhinged haggard to his unhinging.In this too a workless son and centrelessclock-bound slaveto the incontinent brain and its seepage.Two tight-wire walkerswell talked out by nine each bed-wet daythe backyard hoist their prayer-wheel creaking.The sheets flap up the scent of their detentions.Time in its time will track them round their modest cornernovice at the f. (shrink)
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  30.  9
    Sage Advice from Ben's Mom.Scott F.Parker -2011-03-04 - In Fritz Allhoff, Scott F. Parker & Michael W. Austin,Coffee. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 71–88.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Socrates Café Café Philosophique Philosophy for Everyone Sophistry The Examined Life Oblivion Conclusion (Who is Ben's Mom?).
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  31.  17
    Species-specific acquisition vs. universal sequence of acquisition.Sue TaylorParker -1978 -Behavioral and Brain Sciences 1 (2):199-200.
  32.  25
    Some implications of the evolutionary hypothesis.G. H.Parker -1924 -Philosophical Review 33 (6):593-603.
  33.  44
    Strong Medicine -- Health Politics for the Twenty-first Century.GordonParker -1990 -Journal of Medical Ethics 16 (2):102-103.
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  34.  28
    The Curious Case of Pharaoh's Polyp, and Related Matters.DouglassParker -1985 -Substance 14 (2):74.
  35. The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari: Mental Anguish for All.AnsleyParker -2023 -Aletheia: The Alpha Chi Journal of Undergraduate Scholarship 8 (Fall).
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  36.  11
    The Date of the Material in “II Maccabees”: The Bureaucratic Evidence.VictorParker -2013 -Hermes 141 (1):34-44.
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  37.  22
    The Ethical Implications of Evolutionary Theory.Marc AnthonyParker -2009 -Stance 2:49-56.
    This essay is primarily concerned with important arguments involved in the debate about the relationship between evolution and morality. Though the paper holds that it is plausible that certain natural traits would have evolved into human moral sentiments, it argues that evolutionary theory cannot tell us how to be good people or why moral sentiments ought to take priority over immoral sentiments. Evolutionary theory is in this way an incomplete moral theory, analyzing how humans and human morality evolved through natural (...) selection can uncover implications of evolutionary theory, which have a strong impact on a theory of morality. (shrink)
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  38.  6
    The future of liberal arts.FranklinParker -1977 -Educational Studies 8 (2):vii-xi.
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  39.  41
    The greening of medicine.M.Parker -1993 -Journal of Medical Ethics 19 (2):126-127.
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  40. The Idea of Salvation in the World's Religions.J. W.Parker -1936 -Philosophy 11 (44):498-499.
     
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  41.  113
    Takin' it to the streets: Hare and Madden on civil disobedience.Kelly A.Parker -2010 -Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 46 (1):35-40.
    Peter Hare's writings on civil disobedience suggest that he was not a "quiet man," though he was indeed soft-spoken. He was certainly earnest about matters of conscience, about doing the right thing and doing things right. He was a model of intellectual integrity for several generations of American philosophers. Moreover, when he saw a need he seldom hesitated to take it on himself: sitting on many, many dissertation committees, editing a major philosophical journal, helping found new professional associations. Time after (...) time, he generously committed himself to make things happen. He was an engaged intellectual, tuned in and ready to act in his soft-spoken, earnest, and effective way.The depth of Peter Hare's .. (shrink)
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  42.  26
    The Legal Ethics Community.ChristineParker &Duncan Webb -2008 -Legal Ethics 11 (2):129-130.
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  43.  8
    The Metaphysics of Value. I.Dewitt H.Parker -1933 -International Journal of Ethics 44 (3):293.
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  44.  46
    The Metaphysics of Value. I.Dewitt H.Parker -1934 -International Journal of Ethics 44 (3):293-312.
  45.  61
    The Myth of the Hunter.RobertParker -1983 -The Classical Review 33 (01):69-.
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  46.  15
    The Objectives and Strategy of Cimon's Expedition to Cyprus.S. ThomasParker -1976 -American Journal of Philology 97 (1):30.
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  47.  19
    “the Peter Huchel Collection Of German Literature In The John Rylands University Library Of Manchester,”.StephenParker -1990 -Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 72 (2):135-152.
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  48.  12
    The Power of the People in the Unequal Metropolis.MyloParker-Emerson -2022 -Philosophy of Education 78 (3):34-37.
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  49.  19
    The principles of aesthetics.De Witt H.Parker -1946 - New York,: F. S. Crofts & Co..
    This book has been deemed as a classic and has stood the test of time. The book has been considered by academicians and scholars of great significance and value to literature. This forms a part of the knowledge base for future generations.
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  50.  21
    The Philosophy of Art.Dewitt H.Parker -1931 -Philosophical Review 40 (4):389.
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