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Results for 'Pia Haver'

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  1.  39
    First Steps in Using Multi-Voxel Pattern Analysis to Disentangle Neural Processes Underlying Generalization of Spider Fear.Renée M. Visser,PiaHaver,Robert J. Zwitser,H. Steven Scholte &Merel Kindt -2016 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 10:177755.
    A core symptom of anxiety disorders is the tendency to interpret ambiguous information as threatening. Using EEG and BOLD-MRI, several studies have begun to elucidate brain processes involved in fear-related perceptual biases, but thus far mainly found evidence for general hypervigilance in high fearful individuals. Recently, multi-voxel pattern analysis (MVPA) has become popular for decoding cognitive states from distributed patterns of neural activation. Here, we used this technique to assess whether biased fear generalization, characteristic of clinical fear, is already present (...) during the initial perception and categorization of a stimulus, or emerges during the subsequent interpretation of a stimulus. Individuals with low spider fear (LSF, n = 20) and high spider fear (HSF, n = 18) underwent functional MRI scanning while viewing series of schematic flowers morphing to spiders. In line with previous studies, individuals with high fear of spiders were behaviorally more likely to classify ambiguous morphs as spiders than individuals with low fear of spiders. Univariate analyses of BOLD-MRI data revealed stronger activation towards spider pictures in high fearful individuals compared to low fearful individuals in numerous areas. Yet, neither average activation, nor support vector machine classification (i.e. a form of MVPA) matched the behavioral results - i.e., a biased response towards ambiguous stimuli - in any of the regions of interest. This may point to limitations of the current design, and to challenges associated with classifying emotional and neutral stimuli in groups that differ in their judgment of emotionality. Improvements for future research are suggested. (shrink)
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  2.  15
    Patientenautonomie Und Informierte Einwilligung: Schlüssel Und Barriere Medizinischer Behandlungen.Pia Becker -2019 - J.B. Metzler.
    Pia Becker entwirft eine Konzeption von Patientenautonomie, die sich im Gegensatz zu in der Medizinethik bisher dominierenden Konzeptionen an der grundsätzlichen Fähigkeit des Patienten zur Autonomie orientiert. Ausgangspunkt bildet die Notwendigkeit der informierten Einwilligung, die neben der Patientenautonomie vor allem auch die körperliche Integrität des Patienten schützt. Als Adäquatheitsbedingungen dienen die beiden normativen Funktionen der Patientenautonomie als Barriere und Schlüssel einer medizinischen Behandlung. Diese Konzeption von Patientenautonomie hat den Vorteil, Patienten besser vor Überforderungen zu bewahren und deren Bedarf an Unterstützungsangeboten (...) zur Förderung der Patientenautonomie deutlicher hervorzuheben. (shrink)
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  3.  52
    Being Disabled and Disability Theology.Pia Matthews -2019 -Journal of Catholic Social Thought 16 (2):295-317.
    A recent report in the UK, Being Disabled in Britain: A Journey Less Equal, highlights the many inequalities, threats to dignity and discriminatory attitudes faced by disabled people. No doubt these are replicated in other countries. Using the evidenced-based findings from this report and the report’s invitation for those concerned to join the conversation on disability, this paper explores both the way in which the experiences of people with disabilities can sharpen up an understanding of Catholic social teaching and the (...) way in which that teaching contributes to a deeper theology of disability. Moreover, insights from this teaching demonstrate that people with disabilities contribute significantly and positively to society and to interpersonal relationships. (shrink)
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  4.  59
    The influence of the immediate visual context on incremental thematic role-assignment: evidence from eye-movements in depicted events.Pia Knoeferle,Matthew W. Crocker,Christoph Scheepers &Martin J. Pickering -2005 -Cognition 95 (1):95-127.
  5.  40
    The Coordinated Interplay of Scene, Utterance, and World Knowledge: Evidence From Eye Tracking.Pia Knoeferle &Matthew W. Crocker -2006 -Cognitive Science 30 (3):481-529.
    Two studies investigated the interaction between utterance and scene processing by monitoring eye movements in agent–action–patient events, while participants listened to related utterances. The aim of Experiment 1 was to determine if and when depicted events are used for thematic role assignment and structural disambiguation of temporarily ambiguous English sentences. Shortly after the verb identified relevant depicted actions, eye movements in the event scenes revealed disambiguation. Experiment 2 investigated the relative importance of linguistic/world knowledge and scene information. When the verb (...) identified either only the stereotypical agent of a (nondepicted) action, or the (nonstereotypical) agent of a depicted action as relevant, verb‐based thematic knowledge and depicted action each rapidly influenced comprehension. In contrast, when the verb identified both of these agents as relevant, the gaze pattern suggested a preferred reliance of comprehension on depicted events over stereotypical thematic knowledge for thematic interpretation. We relate our findings to language comprehension and acquisition theories. (shrink)
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  6.  13
    Leo Strauss and Anglo-American Democracy: A Conservative Critique.Grant N. Havers -2013 - DeKalb, Illinois: Northern Illinois University Press.
    In this original new study, Grant Havers critically interprets Leo Strauss’s political philosophy from a conservative perspective. Most mainstream readers of Strauss have either condemned him from the Left as an extreme right-wing opponent of liberal democracy or celebrated him from the Right as a traditional defender of Western civilization. Rejecting both of these portrayals, Havers shifts the debate beyond the conventional parameters of our age. He persuasively shows that Strauss was neither a man of the Far Right nor a (...) conservative. He was in fact a secular Cold War liberal who taught his followers to uphold Anglo-American democracy as the one true universal regime that does not need a specifically Christian foundation. Strauss firmly rejects the traditional conservative view held by Edmund Burke that Anglo-American democracy needs the leavening influence of Christian morality. Havers maintains that Strauss’s refusal to recognize the role of Christianity in shaping Western civilization, though historically unjustified, is crucial to Strauss and the Straussian portrayal of Anglo-American democracy. In the Straussian view, the Anglo-American ideals of liberty, equality, and constitutional government owe more to the ancient Greek philosophers Plato and Aristotle than to the Christian tradition. In the process, Havers argues, Straussians end up rewriting history by falsely idealizing the ancient Greeks as the forerunners of modern liberal democracy, despite the Greek toleration of practices such as slavery and infanticide. Straussians also misrepresent statesmen of the Anglo-American political tradition such as Abraham Lincoln and Sir Winston Churchill as heirs to the ancient Greek tradition of statecraft, despite their indebtedness to Christianity. Havers contends that the most troubling implication of Straussianism is that it provides an ideological rationale for the aggressive spread of democratic values on a global basis while ignoring the preconditions that make these values possible. Concepts such as the rule of law, constitutional government, Christian morality, and the separation of church and state are not easily transplanted beyond the historic confines of Anglo-American civilization, as recent wars to spread democracy in the Middle East and Central Asia have demonstrated. This excellent study will be of interest not only to longtime readers of Strauss but also philosophers, political scientists, historians, religious studies scholars, and theologians. (shrink)
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  7.  8
    Question[s].Pia Lauritzen -2018 - Aarhus, Denmark: Aarhus University Press.
    How many questions do we ask each day? Why do we ask them in the first place? Do we always ask because we're trying to learn something? Or are there some questions we don't expect to have answered - and some questions that simply can't be answered at all? What do our questions tell us about ourselves? Do they define who we are? Who asked the world's first question? Can anyone answer all these questions? Is that a stupid question, or (...) is it a really good one? And what does Pia Lauritzen, Aarhus University's questioner-in-chief, think of all of this? (shrink)
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  8.  56
    Human Dignity and the Profoundly Disabled.Pia Matthews -2011 -Human Reproduction and Genetic Ethics 17 (2):185-203.
    One challenge to the concept of human dignity is that it is a rootless notion invoked simply to mask inequalities that inevitably exist between human beings. This privileging of humans is speciesist and its weak point is the profoundly disabled human being. This article argues that far from being a weak point, the profoundly disabled person is a source of strength and witness to the intrinsic dignity that all human beings have by virtue of being human. The disabled represent the (...) reality of human existence that is both strong and fragile. Although human dignity can be understood philosophically its depth is rooted in Christian theological insights. The profoundly disabled occupy a privileged position and share in a theology of mission since they testify to the interdependence of every human being and human dependence on God to a myopic world that only values strength, autonomy and independence. Content Type Journal Article Category Article Pages 185-203 DOI 10.1558/hrge.v17i2.185 Authors Pia Matthews, Theology, Philosophy, and History, St Mary’s University College, Waldegrave Road, Strawberry Hill, TW1 4SX Journal Human Reproduction & Genetic Ethics Online ISSN 2043-0469 Print ISSN 1028-7825 Journal Volume Volume 17 Journal Issue Volume 17, Number 2 / 2011. (shrink)
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  9.  43
    Why Nationalism.Grant N. Havers -2021 -The European Legacy 27 (3-4):402-404.
    The purpose of this book is to make “a case for nationalism, highlighting the ways it shaped public policy and made the years between the end of the world wars and the eruption of neoliberal global...
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  10.  8
    4. Nuklear steigend-fallende Kontur.Pia Bergmann -2008 - InRegionalspezifische Intonationsverläufe Im Kölnischenspecific Regional Intonation Patterns in the German of Cologne. Formal and Functional Analyses of Rise-Fall Contours: Formale Und Funktionale Analysen Steigend-Fallender Konturen. Walter de Gruyter – Max Niemeyer Verlag.
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  11. Dio perchè?Pia Bruzzichelli &Luigi Bovo (eds.) -1971 - Assisi,: Pro civitate christiana.
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  12.  68
    La desarticulación de lo habitual. Consideraciones fenomenológicas sobre el espacio a partir de la intervención arquitectónica haus U r de Gregor Schneider.Pía Cordero -2017 -Alpha (Osorno) 44:265-273.
    Resumen Este artículo ofrece una lectura de la pintura renacentista según los principios establecidos por Leon Battista Alberti, uno de los primeros teóricos de la perspectiva en cuyo Tratado de pintura se refiere al cuadro como “una ventana abierta a la historia”. El concepto de historia empleado por Alberti, que se presta a numerosas interpretaciones, es abordado a partir de las reflexiones de Erwin Panofsky en torno a la perspectiva como “forma simbólica”, avanzando hacia una hipótesis en torno al carácter (...) simbólico de la configuración y representación del tiempo en el cuadro-ventana albertiano.This paper offers a reading of the renaissance painting according to the principles established by Leon Battista Alberti, one of the first theorists of perspective in painting which Trattato della pittura define the frame of the painting as “an open window into history”. The concept of history employed by Alberti, which lends itself to many interpretations, is approached from the reflections of Erwin Panofsky about the prospect as “symbolic form”, moving towards a hypothesis about the symbolic nature of the configuration and representation of time in the alberti’s window. (shrink)
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  13. Bertrand Russell on Values, with Allusions to Lord Byron.Haver C. Currie -1959 -Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 40 (1):13.
     
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  14.  33
    Autobiographical memory and life-history narratives in aging and dementia (Alzheimer type).Pia Fromholt &Steen F. Larsen -1992 - In Martin A. Conway, David C. Rubin, H. Spinnler & W. Wagenaar,Theoretical Perspectives on Autobiographical Memory. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 413--426.
  15.  48
    Leo Strauss and the Challenge of Revealed Religion.Grant N. Havers -2020 -The European Legacy 25 (3):347-353.
    Leo Strauss was one of the few philosophers of the twentieth century to see religion as the premier challenge to his own field of study. Most of his contemporaries in philosophy had arrived at the...
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  16.  19
    The Problem of Answered Prayer.Pia Maria Huber -1996 -Feminist Theology 5 (13):108-111.
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  17.  20
    What's non-linguistic visual context?Pia Knoeferle &Ernesto Guerra -2012 - In Rita Finkbeiner, Jörg Meibauer & Petra B. Schumacher,What is a Context?: Linguistic Approaches and Challenges. John Benjamins. pp. 196--129.
  18.  8
    El drama nietzscheano en Robert Pippin.María Pía Lara -2015 -Dianoia 60 (75):141-149.
    Resumen: Spinoza afirma que las decisiones, elecciones y acciones de un agente son necesarias porque están determinadas causalmente. ¿Acaso los seres humanos no son agentes morales? ¿son sólo eslabones de una cadena de causas cuyo curso no pueden controlar y que los exime de las consecuencias de sus actos, así como de premios y castigos? ¿ser un individuo libre significa aceptar pasivamente lo que ocurre y abandonar la pretensión de modificarlo? Este artículo responde a estas preguntas mediante la distinción en (...) la obra spinoziana de dos conceptos de libertad, la verdadera libertad y el libre albedrío, así como con la distinción entre la responsabilidad civil fundada en el concepto de potestas humana -y no en la verdadera libertad, aunque la posibilita-.: Spinoza sustains that the agents' decisions are necessary because they are causally determined. But then, are humans really moral agents? Is it possible that they are only passengers in a train of causes, whose course they cannot control and exempts them from the consequences of their acts, of reward or punishment? Is accepting whatever happens and quitting the aspiration of changing things the hallmark of the free man? This paper answers these questions by distinguishing two concepts of freedom, real freedom and free will, as well as two concepts of responsibility. Civil responsibility is grounded in free will, whereas moral responsibility is not grounded in true freedom, but in human power. (shrink)
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  19.  12
    Aspekty antropocentryzmu.Zdzisława Piątek -1988 - Kraków: Nakł. Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego.
  20.  69
    Om teori i estetik.Pia Salmela -1996 -Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 9 (15).
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  21.  38
    Varje förklaring är en hypotes.Pia Salmela -1995 -Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 8 (14).
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  22. Ethics of Dizziness.Pia Seltoft -1999 -Kierkegaardiana 20:213.
     
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  23.  19
    Development and Validation of the Readiness for End-of-Life Conversations (REOLC) Scale.Pia Berlin,Nico Leppin,Katharina Nagelschmidt,Carola Seifart,Winfried Rief &Pia von Blanckenburg -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Background: Engaging in end-of-life care considerations is beneficial when the time is right. The purpose of this study is to provide a valid instrument to assess peoples readiness for end-of-life conversations before they are initiated.Materials and Methods: A community sample was recruited in study one for exploratory factor analysis of a 13-item questionnaire. In study two, psychometric properties were analyzed with structural equation modeling in a population affected by cancer. Convergent and discriminant validity were assessed with questionnaires measuring distress, depression, (...) anxiety, fear of progression, and distress of death and dying.Results: In study one exploratory factor analysis resulted in three subscales readiness, communication, and values with a possible common factor for a community sample. In study two the three-factor solution with 13 items was not supported for cancer patients. Factor structure was adapted to 12 items with one common factor readiness. Model fit was good: χ2 = 59.18, p>0.05, with χ2/df = 1.184, rRMSEA = 0.053, and rSRMR = 0.072. Convergent validity was supported by moderate correlations to trait gratitude, ratings of readiness to provide a living will or talk with family about the end of life. Divergent validity was supported by no or small correlation with distress, depression, general and death anxiety and fear of progression, respectively.Conclusions: Results support usage of the REOLC Scale in different settings with adapted factor structure. The questionnaire is interpreted as valid and reliable instrument to assess objective readiness for end-of-life conversations. (shrink)
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  24.  20
    Integrating Citizenship, Embodiment, and Relationality: Towards a Reconceptualization of Dance and Dementia in Long-Term Care.Pia Kontos &Alisa Grigorovich -2018 -Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 46 (3):717-723.
    Dance, as aesthetic self-expression, is a unique arts-based program that combines the physical benefits of exercise with psychosocial therapeutic benefits. While dance has also been shown to support empowerment, meaningful self-expression, and pleasurable experience, it is rarely adopted to support these aspects of engagement in the context of dementia care. The instrumental reduction of dance to its application as a therapeutic tool can be traced to the contemporary movement towards cognitive science with an emphasis on embodied cognition. This has effectively (...) elided a consideration of how the body itself, separate and apart from cognition, could be a source of intelligibility, inventiveness, and creativity. We argue for the need to broaden the therapeutic model of dance to more fully support embodied and creative self-expression by persons living with dementia. To achieve this, we explore how a relational model of citizenship that recognizes corporeality and relationality as fundamental to human existence brings a new and critical dimension to understanding the importance of dance in the context of dementia. Drawing on this model, we articulate a new kind of ethic characterized by a pre-reflective intercorporeal sensibility that requires the mobilization of public structures and practices to cultivate a relational environment for individuals living with dementia that supports human flourishing. (shrink)
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  25.  35
    A Book Forged In Hell: Spinoza’s Scandalous Treatise and the Birth of the Secular Age.Grant Havers -2014 -The European Legacy 19 (4):507-508.
  26.  18
    3. Material und Methoden.Pia Bergmann -2008 - InRegionalspezifische Intonationsverläufe Im Kölnischenspecific Regional Intonation Patterns in the German of Cologne. Formal and Functional Analyses of Rise-Fall Contours: Formale Und Funktionale Analysen Steigend-Fallender Konturen. Walter de Gruyter – Max Niemeyer Verlag.
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  27.  13
    Notationskonventionen.Pia Bergmann -2008 - InRegionalspezifische Intonationsverläufe Im Kölnischenspecific Regional Intonation Patterns in the German of Cologne. Formal and Functional Analyses of Rise-Fall Contours: Formale Und Funktionale Analysen Steigend-Fallender Konturen. Walter de Gruyter – Max Niemeyer Verlag.
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  28. Karl Barth and German Mysticism.Haver C. Currie -1949 -Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 30 (2):161.
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  29.  21
    Die ‚patria potestas‘ in Boccaccios ‚Decameron‘.Pia Claudia Doering -2020 -Das Mittelalter 25 (1):66-82.
    The power of fathers over their children – especially over their daughters – is a central theme of Boccaccio’s ‘Decameron’. Novella V,7 situates the ‘patria potestas’ in a tension-filled position between honour and law, vigilante justice and public prosecution. The legitimation of cruelty and violence by invoking the ‘patria potestas’ is questioned through the confrontation with poetic justice.
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  30.  8
    Spørgsmål: mellem identitet og differens.Pia Lauritzen -2016 - Aarhus: Aarhus Universitetsforlag.
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  31.  14
    Sintering of a bcc structure of spherical particles of equal and different sizes.Pia Redanz &Robert M. McMeeking -2003 -Philosophical Magazine 83 (23):2693-2714.
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  32.  56
    Consanguinity on Robinson crusoe island, an isolated chilean population.Pia Villanueva,Maria A. Fernández,Zulema de Barbieri &Hernán Palomino -2013 -Journal of Biosocial Science 46 (4):1-10.
  33.  40
    Boundary Work and Power in the Controversy Over Therapeutic Touch in Finnish Nursing Science.Pia Vuolanto -2015 -Minerva 53 (4):359-380.
    The boundary work approach has been established as one of the main ways to study controversies in science. However, it has been proposed that it does not meet the power dynamics of the scientific field sufficiently. This article concentrates on the intertwining of boundary work and power. It combines the boundary work approach developed by Thomas Gieryn and the analysis of power in the work of Pierre Bourdieu. Based on a literature review and an analysis of a controversy over therapeutic (...) touch, it finds four forms of boundary work: intradisciplinary, interdisciplinary, between science and society, and between science and other knowledge systems. The article shows how the different forms of boundary work reveal multiple power struggles, hierarchisations and tensions. The controversy appeared in Finnish nursing science when the Finnish Association of Sceptics gave its annual Humbug Award to a book on therapeutic touch. The book was based on a master’s thesis at the University of Tampere department of nursing science. The nursing scholars in the department reacted abruptly and banned certain books, which astonished the students, and a lively public debate followed. In the debate, nursing science was both defended and challenged. The framework of the study shows that the boundary work approach can be used to study different aspects of power. The article proposes that the framework could be used in other controversies as well to study the layers of power in boundary work. (shrink)
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  34.  54
    La unidad de las dualidades humanas. Sobre «El hombre como ser dual» de Salvador Piá Tarazona.Piá Tarazona de Salvador &Juan Fernando Sellés -2002 -Studia Poliana 4:181-208.
    Salvador Piá Tarazona’s book, El hombre como ser dual is an important methodical-thematic advance in the research of transcendental anthropology as much as it does not detain its focus on human nature nor its development , but rather on th readicality of personal intimacy and its openness to transcendence.
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  35.  64
    Reflective judgment as world disclosure.María Pía Lara -2008 -Philosophy and Social Criticism 34 (1-2):83-100.
    In this article I deal with Kant's concept of reflective judgment, and recover it through its links to the aesthetic dimension as its fundamental scenario. Then I go on to explain why Hannah Arendt understood this important Kantian connection, and why she thought it would allow her to develop it through a political dimension. Last, having reviewed both Kant and Arendt's contributions to the concept of reflective judgment, I recover my own input to the concept by showing its linguistic dimension (...) based on the Heideggerian notion of world-disclosure. With this in mind, I show how the concept of reflective judgment is the most suitable to analyze evil actions. (shrink)
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  36.  7
    Ontology of Production: Three Essays.WilliamHaver (ed.) -2012 - Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
    _Ontology of Production_ presents three essays by the influential Japanese philosopher Nishida Kitarō, translated for the first time into English by WilliamHaver. While previous translations of his writings have framed Nishida within Asian or Oriental philosophical traditions,Haver's introduction and approach to the texts rightly situate the work within Nishida's own commitment to Western philosophy. In particular,Haver focuses on Nishida's sustained and rigorous engagement with Marx's conception of production. Agreeing with Marx that ontology is production (...) and production is ontology, Nishida in these three essays—"Expressive Activity", "The Standpoint of Active Intuition", and "Human Being" —addresses sense and reason, language and thought, intuition and appropriation, ultimately arguing that in this concept of production, ideality and materiality are neither mutually exclusive nor oppositional but, rather, coimmanent. Nishida's forceful articulation of the radical nature of Marx's theory of production is,Haver contends, particularly timely in today's speculation-driven global economy. Nishida's reading of Marx, which points to the inseparability of immaterial intellectual labor and material manual labor, provokes a reconsideration of Marxism's utility for making sense of—and resisting—the logic of contemporary capitalism. (shrink)
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  37.  7
    Sacred retreat: using natural cycles to recharge your life.Pia Orleane -2017 - Rochester, Vermont: Bear & Company.
    Restoring our biological cycles to heal ourselves, our culture, and our planet Shows how, just like the tides and the moon phases, both women and men have biological cycles of growth and renewal necessary for healthy bodies and minds. Explains how the seclusion of women during menstruation and of men during vision quests offers a cleansing process for body and mind to awaken innate creativity and sensitivity, re-attune us with the deeper rhythms of the body and nature, and restore harmony (...) between the divine feminine and divine masculine. Reveals how the need for sacred retreat was forgotten when the divine feminine was suppressed by patriarchal culture. All of life is interwoven into a living system of cycles, from Earth's seasons to the enzymatic pathways that provide energy to a cell. Waxing and waning from times of growth to times of rest, renewal, and healing, cycles map the most auspicious time for everything in life. Both women and men have biological cycles of active growth and quiet renewal, led by our hormones. By understanding how everything in life moves in cycles, you can become more aware of and comfortable with your own cyclic nature, something that has been forgotten by the modern world's linear views of time. Drawing on the wisdom of ancient cultures, the natural cycles of life, and her own groundbreaking research, Pia Orleane, Ph.D., offers a template for how we can restore balance to our emotions and health, ease tensions between the sexes, and heal our fractured culture by honoring divine feminine consciousness and re-embracing natural cycles, including our innate need for rest and retreat. She explains the biology of how our bodies operate by hormones released in cycles and shows how balanced hormones help eliminate anger, depression, insomnia, anxiety, and fatigue. Exploring ancient traditions and rituals surrounding blood and sacred retreat, she explains how the seclusion of women during menstruation and of men during vision quests offered a cleansing process for body and mind, alone time to clear suppressed emotions, awaken our innate creativity and sensitivity, re-attune us with the deeper rhythms of the body and nature, and restore harmony between the genders and balance between the divine feminine and masculine. Outlining the sacred retreat process, the author explores dream cycles, divine sexuality, and practices for reconnecting to nature, increasing creativity and intuition, and clearing suppressed emotions. She also looks at the benefits for women and men of separate sleeping during menstruation. Through this wisdom, we can restore our natural cycles, allow the divine feminine to once again blossom alongside the divine masculine, and, with the return of balance, heal our world and our hearts. (shrink)
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  38.  16
    Rethinking Evil: Contemporary Perspectives.María Pía Lara (ed.) -2001 - University of California Press.
    This innovative volume will be welcomed by moral and political philosophers, social scientists, and anyone who reflects seriously on the twentieth century's heavy burden of war, genocide, ethnic cleansing, and other evidence of people's desire to harm one another. María Pía Lara brings together a provocative set of essays that reexamine evil in the context of a "postmetaphysical" world, a world that no longer equates natural and human evil and no longer believes in an omnipotent God. The question of how (...) and why God permits evil events to occur is replaced by the question of how and why humans perform radically evil acts. (shrink)
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  39.  23
    The Importance of Being Dead: the Dead Donor Rule and the Ethics of Transplantation Medicine.Pia Becker -2014 -Ethik in der Medizin 26 (3):255-258.
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  40.  10
    Regionalspezifische Intonationsverläufe Im Kölnischenspecific Regional Intonation Patterns in the German of Cologne. Formal and Functional Analyses of Rise-Fall Contours: Formale Und Funktionale Analysen Steigend-Fallender Konturen.Pia Bergmann -2008 - Walter de Gruyter – Max Niemeyer Verlag.
    Die Arbeit zur regionalen Variation der Intonation bietet einen Forschungsüberblick über existierende Studien zum Thema und widmet sich dann der Analyse der Intonation der kölnischen Regionalvarietät auf der Basis von spontansprachlichen Daten. Die Analyse kombiniert Methoden des autosegmental-metrischen Ansatzes mit denen der Interaktionalen Linguistik. Da sich der autosegmental-metrische Ansatz in den letzten Jahren zum gängigen Beschreibungsansatz in der Intonationsforschung entwickelt hat, ist auf diese Weise eine Vergleichbarkeit der verschiedenen Untersuchungsergebnisse gewährleistet. Der Ansatz der Interaktionalen Linguistik erlaubt es darüber hinaus, die (...) tatsächliche Verwendungsweise der Intonationsverläufe durch die Interaktionsteilnehmer aufzuzeigen. Im Zentrum des Interesses stehen zwei steigend-fallende Konturen, die typisch für das Kölnische sind. Sie werden auf phonetischer, tonologischer und phonologischer (d.h. konversationell-funktionaler) Ebene analysiert. Die Arbeit verdeutlicht die große Bandbreite formaler Variation und zeigt, wie die Beteiligten Intonation als Ressource zur Gestaltung der Interaktion nutzen. (shrink)
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  41.  10
    6. Schlussbetrachtung.Pia Bergmann -2008 - InRegionalspezifische Intonationsverläufe Im Kölnischenspecific Regional Intonation Patterns in the German of Cologne. Formal and Functional Analyses of Rise-Fall Contours: Formale Und Funktionale Analysen Steigend-Fallender Konturen. Walter de Gruyter – Max Niemeyer Verlag.
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  42.  16
    1. Zielsetzung und Fragestellung.Pia Bergmann -2008 - InRegionalspezifische Intonationsverläufe Im Kölnischenspecific Regional Intonation Patterns in the German of Cologne. Formal and Functional Analyses of Rise-Fall Contours: Formale Und Funktionale Analysen Steigend-Fallender Konturen. Walter de Gruyter – Max Niemeyer Verlag.
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  43.  39
    Irregular Feelings: Mimesis, Poikilia, and the Emotions in Plato's Republic.Pia Campeggiani -2018 -Rivista di Storia Della Filosofia 4:541-567.
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  44.  58
    (1 other version)James Burnham's Elite Theory and the Postwar American Right.Grant Havers -2011 -Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2011 (154):29-50.
    ExcerptThere is a long tradition of suspicion toward the power of “elites” in the history of American politics. Since the days of the Revolution, Americans have often worried about the rise of small and unaccountable powers that threaten the democratic will and adulterate the traditions of the republic. What Richard Hofstadter pejoratively termed the “paranoid style” of postwar conservative politics has deep roots across the political spectrum in American history. On both the Left and the Right, Americans have opposed the (...) centralization of authority in the hands of a privileged few who enjoy disproportionate access to wealth and control of…. (shrink)
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  45.  85
    Lincoln, Macbeth , and the Illusions of Tyranny.Grant Havers -2010 -The European Legacy 15 (2):137-147.
    What Shakespeare reveals in Macbeth is the all too human temptation to embrace tyranny. In exposing this temptation, however, Shakespeare also shows that the alleged inevitability of tyranny is a contradictory illusion that cannot survive the cycle of violence that it spawns. In comparable terms Abraham Lincoln exposed the tyranny of slavery as the hypocritical mockery of democracy which threatened the very survival of the American republic. Instead of teaching an illusory and despairing resignation to the tyrannies that plague human (...) history, however, both Shakespeare and Lincoln defend a biblical standard of hope and justice (for all human beings) that is the very opposite of tyrannical illusions. (shrink)
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  46.  82
    Political Philosophy and the Love of Wisdom: Leo Strauss and the “New” Conservatism.Grant Havers -2005 -Dialogue and Universalism 15 (1-2):121-131.
    The “new” conservatism which dominates American politics is fundamentally different from both liberalism and traditional conservatism. For the neoconservatives, who are influenced by the political philosopher Leo Strauss, fault liberalism for undermining the authority of absolute morality and natural inequality in favor of relativism and openness. Yet they also repudiate the old European conservatism for failing to defy the currents of modernity with anything more than an appeal to tradition. In fine, neoconservatism rejects, despite its own modern origins, modernity itself.
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  47. Romanticism and Universalism: The Case of Leo Strauss.Grant Havers -2002 -Dialogue and Universalism 12 (6-7):155-168.
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  48. Vom "Alchemisten-Kunststück, aus Koth Gold zu machen" (1995).Pia Daniela Volz -2014 - In Christian Niemeyer,Friedrich Nietzsche. Darmstadt: WBG, Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft.
     
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  49.  86
    Illness, Disease, and Sin: the Connection between Genetics and Spirituality—A Response.Pia Matthews -2007 -Christian Bioethics 13 (1):91-104.
    In responding to Mathias Beck's thought-provoking article, it seems helpful to begin with an outline and comments on Beck's case as I understand it. For me, this overview throws up three problematic areas that I explore further under the headings of 1. examining the New Testament evidence, 2. sin as disobedience, and 3. obedience, grace, and freedom. Clearly, the author's thoughts in all their nuances are not always adequately accessible in translation. Nevertheless, I hope that I have grasped the main (...) thread of his argument. If I am right in my interpretation then Beck still has work to do to clarify and make explicit what is not only barely implicit but what is obscured by his central theme: that obedience to God's will is the mainstay of our relationship to God. (shrink)
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  50.  68
    Habitus.Pia C. Kontos -2006 -American Journal of Semiotics 22 (1-4):69-85.
    Bourdieu, in his theory of practice, assumes the pragmatic and epistemological primacy of objective structure/culture. This leads Bourdieu to conceptualize the body as a cultural product formed solely by structural conditions, thus denying the physical body any origination. In making this assumption Bourdieu is unable to explain how dispositions are incorporated and sustained within one’s bodily schema. It is my argument that Merleau-Ponty’s philosophy of the primordial source of agency is crucial to Bourdieu’s theory of practice. I suggest that Merleau-Ponty’s (...) notion of the primordial body makes possible the embodiment of the dispositions of habitus,and sustains this open system of dispositions. (shrink)
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