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Results for 'Shih-Jen Tsai'

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  1.  65
    The Influence of the Amplitude of Low-Frequency Fluctuations on Resting-State Functional Connectivity.Xin Di,Eun H. Kim,Chu-Chung Huang,Shih-JenTsai,Ching-Po Lin &Bharat B. Biswal -2013 -Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  2. Meng-tzu hsin hsüeh chih yen chiu.Jen-Tsai Cheng -1977 - [S.N.].
     
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  3.  61
    Monitoring Costs, Managerial Ethics and Corporate Governance: A Modeling Approach. [REVIEW]Lerong He &Shih-Jen Kathy Ho -2011 -Journal of Business Ethics 99 (4):623 - 635.
    This article evaluates effectiveness and costs of external regulation, in particular the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (SOX) in restricting managerial malfeasance and safeguarding shareholder interests. It discusses the role of managerial ethics as an alternative corporate governance mechanism to protect shareholder value. This article builds a mathematical model to illustrate shareholders' choices of best corporate governance mechanisms, taking into account the influence of managerial ethics, effectiveness and costs of monitoring. We suggest that the best corporate governance design and the optimal (...) monitoring expenses are influenced by managerial types, monitoring efficiency, and effectiveness of ethics education. We conclude that stringent regulation and monitoring may not always enhance shareholder value. When managerial ethics could be improved by ethics education or social norms, ethics education may be a better alternative than stringent regulation. (shrink)
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  4.  29
    Exploring Computational Thinking Skills Training Through Augmented Reality and AIoT Learning.Yu-Shan Lin,Shih-Yeh Chen,Chia-WeiTsai &Ying-Hsun Lai -2021 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Given the widespread acceptance of computational thinking in educational systems around the world, primary and higher education has begun thinking about how to cultivate students' CT competences. The artificial intelligence of things combines artificial intelligence and the Internet of things and involves integrating sensing technologies at the lowest level with relevant algorithms in order to solve real-world problems. Thus, it has now become a popular technological application for CT training. In this study, a novel AIoT learning with Augmented Reality technology (...) was proposed and explored the effect of CT skills. The students used AR applications to understand AIoT applications in practice, attempted the placement of different AR sensors in actual scenarios, and further generalized and designed algorithms. Based on the results of the experimental course, we explored the influence of prior knowledge and usage intention on students' CT competence training. The results show that proposed AIoT learning can increase students' learning intention and that they had a positive impact on problem solving and comprehension with AR technology, as well as application planning and design. (shrink)
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  5.  33
    Advancing the Study of Positive Psychology: The Use of a Multifaceted Structure of Mindfulness for Development.Huy P. Phan,Bing H. Ngu,Si Chi Chen,Lijuing Wu,Sheng-Ying Shi,Ruey-Yih Lin,Jen-HwaShih &Hui-Wen Wang -2020 -Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  6.  68
    Using paper chart based clinical reminders to improve guideline adherence to lipid management.Chi-Sheng Hung,Jou-Wei Lin,Juey-Jen Hwang,Ru-YiTsai &Ai-Tzu Li -2008 -Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 14 (5):861-866.
  7.  49
    The Role of Entrepreneur Cognition on Core Rigidity.Yan Guo,Pei-Wen Huang,Meihui Chou,Shih-Chieh Fang &Fu-ShengTsai -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Against the backdrop of economic internationalization and market globalization, the world has witnessed faster competitive contents with a more dynamic market environment, a more rapid technological innovation, and more diverse customer needs. Thus, for every enterprise especially led by entrepreneurs, the focus is to maintain the sustainability of competitive advantages and dynamically transform core capacity to avoid rigidity. This paper introduces the process of the deepened rigidity in WS Co. Company, which occurs due to the wrong cognition of Dr. S (...) and his teams who managed or failed to respond to the rigidity encountered by the company during different periods. The rigidity of its capacity is believed to be caused by the cognitive errors of the entrepreneur and his team facing every period of potential rigidity, which makes them fail to deal with it, thus leading to complete rigidity. This paper intends to explain how rigidity takes shape from the cognitive aspect of senior managers, which may serve as illuminations for the similar enterprises led by entrepreneurs. (shrink)
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  8.  16
    Entrepreneur Hubris, Organizational Ambidexterity, and Dynamic Capability Construction.Yan Guo,Pei-Wen Huang,Chu Ciu,Shih-Chieh Fang &Fu-ShengTsai -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    This paper demonstrated the influences of initiation, development, turn-down, and reinitiation of the dynamic capability of an entrepreneurial firm in the solar energy industry. The focus is on the impact of entrepreneurial hubris, which may affect the decision of ambidexterity that can vitalize dynamic capability. The findings indicate that, when the major decision maker has the trait of hubris, the decision-making process may be overly arbitrary, and a decision of being exploratory or exploitative alone is likely to be made. On (...) the contrary, when the founder entrepreneur is aware of the hubris and shares decisive power, the decision of being ambidextrous as a dynamic capability is more freely achieved. This paper contributes by discovery of the cognitive-based microfoundation of entrepreneurial ventures and linkage of such microfoundation to organizational ambidexterity. (shrink)
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  9.  31
    Thinking through Engineering.Bono Po-JenShih &Matthew James -2024 -Teaching Ethics 24 (1):145-163.
    This article advances the thesis that our values and beliefs about engineering critically impact the teaching of engineering ethics, and our representations and assumptions about engineering are, accordingly, ethical questions we must consider. To illustrate how in broader sociohistorical contexts, different understandings of engineering have shaped expectations of ethics, we provide a historical and contemporary review of the literature. Examining the significance of our thesis for teaching practice, we discuss three case studies of our teaching and critically reflect on how (...) our representation of engineering limited the breadth and depth of ethics. Considering that instruction seemingly unrelated to ethics, in fact, influences how engineering ethics is understood and taught, our conclusion calls for critical examination of our beliefs about engineering. This entails, among others, up-to-date knowledge about the changing values of our rapidly-developing engineering fields and how they raise social, ethical questions of engineering relevant specifically to our teaching situation. (shrink)
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  10.  57
    Game-based education for disaster prevention.Meng-HanTsai,Ming-Chang Wen,Yu-Lien Chang &Shih-Chung Kang -2015 -AI and Society 30 (4):463-475.
  11.  22
    A further application of composite-stimulus control in additive summation.Shih-YuanTsai &Stanley J. Weiss -1977 -Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 9 (3):169-172.
  12.  26
    Calling nurses to care for burn victims after color-dust explosion.Yu-LunTsai,Tin Yi,Hsien-Hsien Chiang,Hsiang-Yun Lan,Hui-Hsun Chiang &Jen-Jiuan Liaw -2021 -Nursing Ethics 28 (7-8):1389-1401.
    Background: Healthcare professionals follow codes of ethics, making them responsible for providing holistic care to all disaster victims. However, this often results in ethical dilemmas due to the need to provide rapid critical care while simultaneously attending to a complex spectrum of patient needs. These dilemmas can cause negative emotions to accumulate over time and impact physiological and psychological health, which can also threaten nurse–patient relationships. Aim: This study aimed to understand the experience of nurses who cared for burn victims (...) of the color-dust explosion and the meaning of ethical relationships between nurse and patient. Research design: A qualitative descriptive study using a phenomenological approach. Participants and research context: Clinical nurses who provided care to the patients of the Formosa color-dust explosion of 2015 were selected by purposive sampling (N = 12) from a medical center in Taiwan. Data were collected using individual in-depth semi-structured interviews. Audiotaped interviews were transcribed and analyzed using Colaizzi’s method. Ethical considerations: This study was approved by the institutional review board of the study hospital. All participants provided written informed consent. Findings Three main themes described the essence of the ethical dilemmas experienced by nurses who cared for the burn-injured patients: (1) the calling must be answered, (2) the calling provoked my feelings, and (3) the calling called out my strengths. Conclusions: Healthcare providers should recognize that nurses believed they had an ethical responsibility to care for color-dust explosion burn victims. Understanding the feelings of nurses during the care of patients and encouraging them to differentiate between the self and the other by fostering patient–nurse relationships based on intersubjectivity could help nurses increase self-care and improve patient caregiving. (shrink)
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  13.  27
    Engineering as “Technology of Technology” and the Subjugated Technical Practice.Bono Po-JenShih -2023 -Techné Research in Philosophy and Technology 27 (1):86-114.
    This article calls into question the simplistic identification of modern technology with quantitative efficiency in order to develop three main themes. First, I establish that technology, broadly construed, is the use of knowledge and resources to meet specific human needs. Accordingly, dominant technical practice that favors efficiency and numerical criteria and discriminates against other technologies should more appropriately be called “technology of technology.” Second, I delineate how dominant practice in engineering is an exemplar of technology of technology, when it becomes (...) socially ambitious while remaining technically provincial and bears upon our personal and institutional life. Third, I illustrate what I call the “subjugated technical practice,” which exists under the rule of the dominant technical practice. Recognizing the importance of subjugated technical practices to engineering, I propose the concept of “critical technology of technology,” which is intended to advance technological alternatives and make critique an essential part of our technological world. (shrink)
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  14.  1
    (1 other version)Ou-chou che hsüehshih chien pien.Tzu-Sung Wang,Shih-Ying Chang,Hua Jen &Chien Hung -1972 - Jen Min Ch U Pan She Hsin Hua Shu Tien Fa Hsing. Edited by Chang, Shih-Ying, [From Old Catalog], Jen, Hua & Chʻien Hung.
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  15.  124
    Extending Theory of Planned Behavior to Understand Service-Oriented Organizational Citizen Behavior.Kuang-ChungTsai,Tung-Hsiang Chou,Santhaya Kittikowit,Tanaporn Hongsuchon,Yu-Chun Lin &Shih-Chih Chen -2022 -Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    The financial crisis of 2007–2008 and the COVID-19 pandemic have caused many enterprises to suffer great losses. Thus, companies have to take measures such as pays cut, furloughs, or layoffs, which caused dissatisfaction among employees and triggered labor disputes. Therefore, this study explores the service-oriented organizational citizenship behavior based on the decomposed theory of planned behavior in order to understand the behavioral intentions of employees through their mental states, job attitudes, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control. This study conducted questionnaire (...) surveys for employees in different industries, collected 281 valid questionnaires, and applied Structural Equation Model for the analysis. The results show: employees believe organizational justice in the organization is important, and when they feel treated fairly, their job attitudes and beliefs are enhanced. Employees’ job attitudes and beliefs support service-oriented organizational citizenship behavior, in other words, they have positive job attitudes and beliefs and will actively provide better service to customers. When employees are treated reasonably and fairly by the organization and have positive job attitudes and perceived behavior control, their spontaneous service-oriented organizational citizenship behavior is stimulated, thus increasing organizational development. (shrink)
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  16.  38
    Urban people’s preferences for life-sustaining treatment or artificial nutrition and hydration in advance decisions.Yi-Ling Wu,Tsai-Wen Lin,Chun-Yi Yang,SamuelShih-Chih Wang &Sheng-Jean Huang -2024 -BMC Medical Ethics 25 (1):1-13.
    Background The Patient Right to Autonomy Act (PRAA), implemented in Taiwan in 2019, enables the creation of advance decisions (AD) through advance care planning (ACP). This legal framework allows for the withholding and withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment (LST) or artificial nutrition and hydration (ANH) in situations like irreversible coma, vegetative state, severe dementia, or unbearable pain. This study aims to investigate preferences for LST or ANH across various clinical conditions, variations in participant preferences, and factors influencing these preferences among urban (...) residents. Methods Employing a survey of legally structured AD documents and convenience sampling for data collection, individuals were enlisted from Taipei City Hospital, serving as the primary trial and demonstration facility for ACP in Taiwan since the commencement of the PRAA in its inaugural year. The study examined ADs and ACP consultation records, documenting gender, age, welfare entitlement, disease conditions, family caregiving experience, location of ACP consultation, participation of second-degree relatives, and the intention to participate in ACP. Results Data from 2337 participants were extracted from electronic records. There was high consistency in the willingness to refuse LST and ANH, with significant differences noted between terminal diseases and extremely severe dementia. Additionally, ANH was widely accepted as a time-limited treatment, and there was a prevalent trend of authorizing a health care agent (HCA) to make decisions on behalf of participants. Gender differences were observed, with females more inclined to decline LST and ANH, while males tended towards accepting full or time-limited treatment. Age also played a role, with younger participants more open to treatment and authorizing HCA, and older participants more prone to refusal. Conclusion Diverse preferences in LST and ANH were shaped by the public’s current understanding of different clinical states, gender, age, and cultural factors. Our study reveals nuanced end-of-life preferences, evolving ADs, and socio-demographic influences. Further research could explore evolving preferences over time and healthcare professionals’ perspectives on LST and ANH decisions for neurological patients.. (shrink)
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  17.  8
    Meaning of critical traumatic injury for a patient’s body and self.Yu-LunTsai,Hsien-Hsien Chiang,Yu-Ju Chen,Hui-Hsun Chiang,Yuan-Hao Chen &Jen-Jiuan Liaw -2021 -Nursing Ethics 28 (7-8):1282-1293.
    Background: Patients with a traumatic injury often require intensive care for life-saving treatments. Physical suffering and emotional stress during critical care can be alleviated by ethical caring provided by nurses. The relationship between body and self are fundamentally inseparable. Nurses need to understand the impacts of traumatic injury on a patient’s body and self. Aim: To understand the meaning of traumatic injury for body and self for patients receiving intensive care. Research design: A qualitative descriptive study using Giorgi’s phenomenological approach. (...) Participants and research context: Patients receiving intensive care for physical trauma were selected by purposive sampling (N = 15) from a medical center in Taiwan. Individual in-depth, face-to-face audiotaped interviews, guided by semi-structured questions, were used to collect data. Each interview lasted 30–60 min. Audiotaped interviews were transcribed and analyzed. Ethical considerations: This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of the medical center. Findings: The impact of the experience of traumatic injury on participants’ body and self was described by three main themes: (1) Searching for the meaning of the injured body, (2) Feeling trapped in the bed, and (3) The carer and the cared-for. Discussion and conclusion: The implications of the three themes described in the findings are as follows: Trauma as a source of meaning; Body and self are mutually limiting or mutually enabling; and Ethical relationships. The experience of needing intensive care following a traumatic injury on the body and self was dynamic and mutual. The experience of the injury changed the relationship between body and self, and gave new meaning to life. Nurses play a crucial role in continuity of care by understanding the meaning of a traumatic injury for patient’s body and self that facilitates ethical care and recovery from injury. (shrink)
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  18.  24
    Perpetual Happiness: The Ming Emperor Yongle.Pi-Ching Hsu &Shih-Shan HenryTsai -2002 -Journal of the American Oriental Society 122 (4):849.
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  19.  32
    The Impact of a Flipped Classroom on the Creativity of Students in a Cake Decorating Art Club.Li-Chu Tien,Shih-Yen Lin,Hsiang Yin &Jen-Chia Chang -2020 -Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    This study explored the effect of learning strategies in a student organization on cake art creativity. The participants were 27 student members of a cake decorating art club from one central university in Taiwan. A quasi-experimental pretest-posttest design was adopted, with 90 h of experimental teaching over 16 weeks. The results, which included the use of a questionnaire, classroom observation, and in-depth interviews, suggest that in terms of creativity, the group participating in flipped classroom learning significantly outperformed the group using (...) traditional learning strategies. Furthermore, flipped classroom learning promoted learner motivation and satisfaction. (shrink)
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  20.  110
    The Multifaceted Effects of Serotonin Transporter Polymorphism (5-HTTLPR) on Anxiety, Implicit Moral Attitudes, and Harmful Behaviors.Róger Marcelo Martínez,Chin-Yau Chen,Tsai-Tsen Liao,Yawei Cheng,Yang-Teng Fan,Shih-Han Chou &Chenyi Chen -2020 -Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  21. Chʻao jen che hsüeh chʻien shuo.Shih-tsʻen Li -1974
     
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  22. Jen sheng tsʻung tʻan.Tsai-fu Liu (ed.) -1976
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  23.  175
    Long-Term Therapy With Wu-Ling-San, a Popular Antilithic Chinese Herbal Formula, Did Not Prevent Subsequent Stone Surgery.San-Yuan Wu,Huey-Yi Chen,Kao-SungTsai,Jen-Huai Chiang,Chih-Hsin Muo,Fung-Chang Sung,Yung-Hsiang Chen &Wen-Chi Chen -2016 -Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 53:004695801668114.
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  24. Shih chientsai jênshih kuo chʻêng chung ti tso yung.Li Ko -1956
     
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  25. Yin-tu che hsüeh chʻüanshih.Jen-wu Wu -1977 - Tʻai-pei: Yu shih wen hua shih yeh kung ssu.
     
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  26.  73
    Human embryonic stem cell research debates: a Confucian argument.D. F.-C.Tsai -2005 -Journal of Medical Ethics 31 (11):635-640.
    Human embryonic stem cell research can bring about major biomedical breakthroughs and thus contribute enormously to human welfare, yet it raises serious moral problems because it involves using human embryos for experiment. The “moral status of the human embryo” remains the core of such debates. Three different positions regarding the moral status of the human embryo can be categorised: the “all” position, the “none” position, and the “gradualist” position.The author proposes that the “gradualist” position is more plausible than the other (...) two positions. Confucius’s moral principle of jen, which proposes a unique theory of “love of gradation”, and the principle of yi, which advocates “due treatment for persons”, are then explored. The author then argues that our moral obligations to do good to other living organisms, persons, and our families are different.Putting together the “gradualist” position on the human embryo, and Confucius’s theories of “love of gradation” and “due treatment for persons”, the author concludes that the early embryo has less ethical significance than the later fetus and adult human. The moral obligation we have toward persons is clearer and stronger than that which we have toward human embryos. Embryo research is justifiable if it brings enormous welfare to human persons that cannot be otherwise achieved. The “love of gradation” requires us, however, to extend love and respect towards other entities according to their different status. We should therefore be very cautious in using human embryos for research, acknowledging the gradualist nature of their moral status. (shrink)
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  27. Jenshih yü chen li.En-tzʻu Chang -1972
     
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  28. Wo kuo lishih shang lao tung jen min ti fan kʻung tou cheng.Tientsin Nan kʻai ta hsüeh -1975
     
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  29. Tsʻuntsai chu i tʻoushih.Kʻun-ju Wu -1975
     
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  30. "T Ien" Yü "Jen" Chung-Kuo LiShih Shang Ti T Ien Jen Kuan Hsi.Yü Feng -1990
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  31. Tsʻuntsai chu i tashih Hai-te-ko che hsüeh.Mei-li Tsʻai -1970 - Edited by Martin Heidegger.
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  32. Jên min chʻün chung ho ko jêntsai lishih shang ti tso yung.Hsiang-Shan Chang -1954
     
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  33. What is beauty and wherein does beauty lie+ aesthetics ofTsai, I, Chu, kuang-Chien, li, Che-Hou and Wang, ta-Jen.Ij Hung -1975 -Chinese Studies in Philosophy 6 (2):69-84.
     
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  34. Chung-kuo ku tai liang chung jenshih lun ti tou cheng.Fu-en P'an &Ch'ün Ou -1973 - Shang-Hai Jên Min Ch'u Pan Shê. Edited by Ou, Chʻün & [From Old Catalog].
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  35. Lun kuo chia: i chiu i chiu nien chʻi yüehshih i jihtsai Ssu-wei-erh-te-lo-fu ta hsüeh ti chiang yen.Vladimir Ilʹich Lenin -1949 - Mo-ssu-kʻo : Wai kuo wen shu chi chʻu pan chü,:
     
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  36. Pien cheng wei wu chu i ti jenshih lun.Ming Li -1957
     
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  37. Ou-chou che hsüehshih shang ti jen tao chu i.Pen-ssu Hsing -1979
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  38. Ou-chou che hsüehshih shang ti hsien yen lun ho jen hsin lun pʻi pʻan.Hsin Ju (ed.) -1974
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  39.  883
    Normative Inference Tickets.Jen Foster &Jonathan Ichikawa -2023 -Episteme:1-27.
    We argue that stereotypes associated with concepts like he-said–she-said, conspiracy theory, sexual harassment, and those expressed by paradigmatic slurs provide “normative inference tickets”: conceptual permissions to automatic, largely unreflective normative conclusions. These “mental shortcuts” are underwritten by associated stereotypes. Because stereotypes admit of exceptions, normative inference tickets are highly flexible and productive, but also liable to create serious epistemic and moral harms. Epistemically, many are unreliable, yielding false beliefs which resist counterexample; morally, many perpetuate bigotry and oppression. Still, some normative (...) inference tickets, like some activated by sexual harassment, constitute genuine moral and hermeneutical advances. For example, our framework helps explain Miranda Fricker’s notion of “hermeneutical lacunae”: what early victims of “sexual harassment” — as well as their harassers — lacked before the term was coined was a communal normative inference ticket — one that could take us, collectively, from “this is happening” to “this is wrong.”. (shrink)
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  40.  142
    Liberating Anger, Embodying Knowledge: A Comparative Study of María Lugones and Zen Master Hakuin.Jen McWeeny -2010 -Hypatia 25 (2):295 - 315.
    This paper strengthens the theoretical ground of feminist analyses of anger by explaining how the angers of the oppressed are ways of knowing. Relying on insights created through the juxtaposition of Latina feminism and Zen Buddhism, I argue that these angers are special kinds of embodied perceptions that surface when there is a profound lack of fit between a particular bodily orientation and its framing world of sense. As openings to alternative sensibilities, these angers are transformative, liberatory, and deeply epistemohgical.
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  41.  54
    A True Friend Stabs You in the Front: Astell’s Admonisher Conception of a Friend.Jen Nguyen -2022 -Journal of Modern Philosophy 4 (1):16.
    My goal in what follows is to argue that Astell endorses what I call the admonisher conception of a friend. For I will argue that, according to Astell, a sufficient condition for whether someone is our friend is that they admonish us in her technical sense. So anyone who admonishes us in this sense—be they Mother Teresa, the sinner sitting in confession, or our professional rival—is a friend to us. Put simply, an Astellian friend is an admonisher. The paper is (...) divided into four sections. Having motivated my reading in section one, section two develops and defends my thesis that admonishment is a sufficient condition for someone to be our Astellian friend. With Astell’s admonisher conception on the table, the balance of the paper shows how Astell might have persuaded us to accept her severe-sounding view by sketching the goods that she thinks flow from having an admonisher as a friend. Section three thus contends that, on Astell’s view, there is a class of deep truths about who we are that only our admonishing friends can reliably access; section four sketches how admonishment enhances our moral reasoning skills on Astell’s picture. Published on 2022-12-12 11:42:32. (shrink)
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  42.  49
    Stable or robust? What's the difference?Erica Jen -2003 -Complexity 8 (3):12-18.
  43.  33
    Some Views on the Histoorical Play The Dismissal of Hai Jui.Yen Jen -1968 -Chinese Studies in History 2 (1):56-67.
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  44.  44
    Understanding representation.Jen Webb -2009 - London: SAGE.
    Drawing together the ideas, practices, and techniques associated with the subject, this book puts them in historical context and demonstrates their relevance to ...
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  45.  35
    Contextualizing Newton and Clarke’s “Argument from Quantity”.Jen Nguyen -2023 -Hopos: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science 13 (1):1-23.
    According to Newton and Clarke, Leibniz’s relationalism cannot make sense of distance quantities. Although the core of Newton and Clarke’s “argument from quantity” is clear enough, its details remain unclear because we do not know what its key term “quantity” means. This key term is still unsettled because, unlike Leibniz, who loudly voices his view of quantity in both his correspondence with Clarke and in his philosophical essays on quantity, Newton and Clarke are frustratingly terse when it comes to defining (...) quantity. Nevertheless, I think that it would be hasty to conclude that there is no way to expand our understanding of the term “quantity” as it appears in their argument. Although Newton and Clarke do not pursue a theory of quantity, their colleagues do, and the theory of quantity developed by their peers promises to deliver a historically rich perspective on Newton and Clarke’s argument from quantity. In this article, I aim to provide some historical context for Newton and Clarke’s argument from quantity by examining two criteria for quantity that were popular among their peers—what I call the “divisibility” and “precise increase and diminution” conditions. (shrink)
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  46.  226
    Rational Persuasion as Paternalism.GeorgeTsai -2014 -Philosophy and Public Affairs 42 (1):78-112.
    I argue that rationally persuading another to do something for their own good is sometimes (objectionably) paternalistic. Rational persuasion may express, and be guided by, the motive of distrust in the other’s capacity to gather or weigh evidence, and may intrude on the other’s deliberative activities in ways that conflict with respecting their agency and autonomy. I also examine factors that make a difference to whether (and when) the provision of reasons is respectful.
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  47.  17
    The Politics of the Anthropocene, John S. Dryzek and Jonathan Pickering , 224 pp., $78 cloth, $26 paper, $25.99 eBook.Jen Iris Allan -2019 -Ethics and International Affairs 33 (4):518-519.
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  48. Virtual Teaming: Faculty Collaboration in Online Spaces.Jen Almjeld,Natalia Rybas &Sergey Rybas -2013 -Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy 17 (2).
     
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  49. Deconstruction, collectivity, and world literature.Jen Hui Bon Hoa -2018 - In Jean-Michel Rabaté,After Derrida: literature, theory and criticism in the 21st century. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
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  50. Practical Wisdom, Well‐Being, and Success.Cheng-HungTsai -2022 -Wiley: Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 104 (3):606-622.
    Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Volume 104, Issue 3, Page 606-622, May 2022.
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