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Results for 'Ulrike Ossowski'

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  1.  32
    The effects of emotional stimuli on target detection: Indirect and direct resource costs.UlrikeOssowski,Sanna Malinen &William S. Helton -2011 -Consciousness and Cognition 20 (4):1649-1658.
    The present study was designed to explore the performance costs of negative emotional stimuli in a vigilance task. Forty participants performed a vigilance task in two conditions: one with task-irrelevant negative-arousing pictures and one with task-irrelevant neutral pictures. In addition to performance, we measured subjective state and frontal cerebral activity with near infrared spectroscopy. Overall performance in the negative picture condition was lower than in the neutral picture condition and the negative picture condition had elevated levels of energetic arousal, tense (...) arousal and task-related thoughts. Moreover, there was a significant relationship between the impact of the negative pictures on tense arousal and task-related thoughts and the impact of the negative pictures on performance . These results provide support for indirect cost models of negative emotional stimuli on target detection performance. (shrink)
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  2.  78
    Developmental Plasticity and Language: A Comparative Perspective.Ulrike Griebel,Irene M. Pepperberg &D. Kimbrough Oller -2016 -Topics in Cognitive Science 8 (2):435-445.
    The growing field of evo-devo is increasingly demonstrating the complexity of steps involved in genetic, intracellular regulatory, and extracellular environmental control of the development of phenotypes. A key result of such work is an account for the remarkable plasticity of organismal form in many species based on relatively minor changes in regulation of highly conserved genes and genetic processes. Accounting for behavioral plasticity is of similar potential interest but has received far less attention. Of particular interest is plasticity in communication (...) systems, where human language represents an ultimate target for research. The present paper considers plasticity of language capabilities in a comparative framework, focusing attention on examples of a remarkable fact: Whereas there exist design features of mature human language that have never been observed to occur in non-humans in the wild, many of these features can be developed to notable extents when non-humans are enculturated through human training. These examples of enculturated developmental plasticity across extremely diverse taxa suggest, consistent with the evo-devo theme of highly conserved processes in evolution, that human language is founded in part on cognitive capabilities that are indeed ancient and that even modern humans show self-organized emergence of many language capabilities in the context of rich enculturation, built on the special social/ecological history of the hominin line. Human culture can thus be seen as a regulatory system encouraging language development in the context of a cognitive background with many highly conserved features. (shrink)
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  3.  65
    Ulrike Strate-Schneider: Einmischen - Mitmischen. Beiträge der Arbeitsstelle Sozial-, Kultur- und Erziehungswissenschaftliche Frauenforschung. TU Berlin 1980 bis 1992.Ulrike Ramming -1994 -Die Philosophin 5 (10):113-114.
  4. Introduction.Ulrike Heuer -2022 - In Joseph Raz & Ulrike Heuer,The Roots of Normativity. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 1-19.
  5.  17
    Some Byzantine Poems Preserved in a Manuscript of the Holy Mountain (Dionysiou 263).Ulrike Kenens &Peter Van Deun -2012 -Byzantion 82.
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  6.  7
    Sisyphos & Tantalos: Chancen und Gefahren der Freiheit.Ulrike Kurth (ed.) -2010 - Bielefeld: Medien-Verlag.
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  7. (2 other versions)U podstaw estetyki.StanisławOssowski -1933 - Warszawa,: Wydawn. Kasy im. Mianowskiego.
     
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  8. Zur hölle mit ihnen die konstruktion kultureller identitäten und alteritäten auf kreta am beispiel Von wandmalereien Des 14. jahrhunderts in kritsa.Ulrike Ritzerfeld -2013 -Byzantion 83:339-361.
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  9.  9
    "Weichenstellungen und Abstellgleise": eine Reise durch das Körper-Geist-Problem auf dem Weg von der Antike bis heute.Ulrike Santozki -2010 - Berlin: Duncker Und Humblot.
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  10.  36
    Social support as a mediator for musical achievement.RomanOssowski &Anna Antonina Nogaj -2015 -Polish Psychological Bulletin 46 (2):300-308.
    This article focuses on the issue of social support received by students of music schools in the context of their musical achievements. The theoretical part of this article contains the characteristics of factors related to the musical achievements of students; the support they receive from their environment is essential for their success in the process of musical education and their subsequent artistic career, in addition to their musical abilities and traits of personality. The research part is devoted to detailed analysis (...) of the support level received by music school students and its correlation to their level of musical achievement. Social support is analysed with a view to its structure, distinguishing the following kinds of support: emotional, evaluative, informative and instrumental received from people who are significant to the music school student and indicates the essential presence of support in the process of musical achievement. Moreover, as part of the presentation of the study, the authors introduce their original tool for measuring social support tailored to the realities of music schools - the Scale of Social Support of the Students of Music Schools. This tool may be applied in the work of educational psychologists and teachers in music schools. (shrink)
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  11.  18
    Hollywood Reproductions: Mothers, Clones, and Aliens.Ulrike Bergermann -2002 - In Insa Härtel & Sigrid Schade,Body and representation. Opladen: Leske + Budrich. pp. 179--186.
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  12. Eigentlichkeit: Zum Verhältnis von Sprache, Sprechern Und Weltdeutschsprachige Enzyklopädien des 18. Bis 21. Jahrhundertsgenealogische Eigentlichkeit Im Deutschen Sprachdenken des Barock Und der Aufklärungkorpuspragmatik Und Wirklichkeitgrammatische Eigen.Ulrike Haß -2015 - De Gruyter.
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  13.  11
    Postdramatisches Musiktheater.Ulrike Hartung -2019 - Würzburg: Königshausen & Neumann.
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  14.  12
    Die Wahrheit meiner Gewissheit suchen: Theologie vor dem Forum der Wirklichkeit.Ulrike Irrgang &Wolfgang Baum (eds.) -2012 - Würzburg: Echter.
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  15. On Patients' Difficulties in Understanding Medical Risks and the Aims of Clinical Risk Communication : "They don't really understand".Ulrik Kihlbom -2021 - In Ulrik Kihlbom, Mats G. Hansson & Silke Schicktanz,Ethical, social and psychological impacts of genomic risk communication. New York, NY: Routledge.
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  16. Medizinische Leitlinien: Eine ethische Analyse.Ulrike Kostka &Elke Mack -2000 -Jahrbuch für Wissenschaft Und Ethik 5:227-241.
     
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  17. Two Conceptions of Historical Generalizations.StanislawOssowski -2009 -Poznan Studies in the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities 97 (1):327-336.
  18. The absolutism of boredom.Ulrik Houlind Rasmussen -2013 - In Marius Timmann Mjaaland, Ulrik Houlind Rasmussen & Philipp Stoellger,Impossible time: past and future in the philosophy of religion. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck.
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  19. Rechtssoziologie gegen Rechtspositivismus.Ulrike Rein -1986 - In Stanley L. Paulson, Robert Walter & Stefan Hammer,Untersuchungen zur Reinen Rechtslehre: Ergebnisse eines Wiener Rechtstheoretischen Seminars 1985/86. Wien: Manz.
     
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  20.  33
    Stress “deafness” in a Language with Fixed Word Stress: An ERP Study on Polish.Ulrike Domahs,Johannes Knaus,Paula Orzechowska &Richard Wiese -2012 -Frontiers in Psychology 3.
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  21. Beyond wrong reasons : the buck-passing account of value.Ulrike Heuer -2010 - In Michael S. Brady,New Waves in Metaethics. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
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  22.  32
    Negotiating the reuse of health-data: Research, Big Data, and the European General Data Protection Regulation.Ulrike Felt &Johannes Starkbaum -2019 -Big Data and Society 6 (2).
    Before the EU General Data Protection Regulation entered into force in May 2018, we witnessed an intense struggle of actors associated with data-dependent fields of science, in particular health-related academia and biobanks striving for legal derogations for data reuse in research. These actors engaged in a similar line of argument and formed issue alliances to pool their collective power. Using descriptive coding followed by an interpretive analysis, this article investigates the argumentative repertoire of these actors and embeds the analysis in (...) ethical debates on data sharing and biobank-related data governance. We observe efforts to perform a paradigmatic shift of the discourse around the General Data Protection Regulation-implementation away from ‘protecting data’ as key concern to ‘protecting health’ of individuals and societies at large. Instead of data protection, the key risks stressed by health researchers became potential obstacles to research. In line, exchange of information with data subjects is not a key concern in the arguments of biobank-related actors and it is assumed that patients want ‘their’ data to be used. We interpret these narratives as a ‘reaction’ to potential restrictions for data reuse and in line with a broader trend towards Big Data science, as the very idea of biobanking is conceptualized around long-term use of readily prepared data. We conclude that a sustainable implementation of biobanks needs not only to comply with the General Data Protection Regulation, but must proactively re-imagine its relation to citizens and data subjects in order to account for the various ways that science gets entangled with society. (shrink)
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  23.  29
    Freud, Abraham und Ferenczi im Gespräch über »Trauer und Melancholie« (1915–1918).Ulrike May -2017 -Psyche 71 (1):1-27.
    Freuds Entwurf von »Trauer und Melancholie« vom Februar 1915, der 1996 publiziert wurde, steht im Zentrum der Untersuchung. Nach einer Zusammenfassung der Thesen des Entwurfs werden Ferenczis und Abrahams Reaktionen auf den Text sowie Freuds Kommentar zu ihren Stellungnahmen dargestellt. Freuds partielle Übernahme von Ferenczis Introjektion und seine Zurückhaltung gegenüber Abrahams »Munderotik und Sadismus« werden erörtert sowie die Frage, ob und inwiefern die Einwürfe der Schüler in die Endfassung von »Trauer und Melancholie« einflossen, insbesondere Abrahams theoretischer Ansatz. Abschließend wird der (...) Begriff der narzisstischen Identifizierung, der den Kern von Freuds Verständnis der Depression bildet, mit seinen aus der gleichen Zeit stammenden Ausführungen über die »Vorstufen der Liebe« zu einem Bild der narzisstischen Beziehung zwischen Subjekt und Objekt zusammengefügt, unter Betonung der klinischen Relevanz der von Freud entwickelten Differenz zwischen der narzisstischen und libidinösen Besetzung des Objekts. (shrink)
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  24.  76
    Attachment Style of Volunteer Counselors in Telephone Emergency Services Predicts Counseling Process.Ulrike Dinger,Simone Jennissen &Isabelle Rek -2019 -Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  25.  22
    Die Bedeutung antiker Theorien für die Genese und Systematik von Kants Philosophie: Eine Analyse der drei Kritiken.Ulrike Santozki -2006 - De Gruyter.
    Bei Kant tauchen viele antike Autoren und Theorien auf. In dieser ersten Gesamtbearbeitung zum Thema wird gegen eine langjährige Forschungsmeinung gezeigt, dass nicht so sehr Platon und Aristoteles als vielmehr der hellenistischen Philosophie die entscheidende Rolle für sein Denken zukommt. Anhand der drei Kritiken werden Konstanzen und Umbrüche seines Antikeverständnisses herausgearbeitet und in ihren Konsequenzen für die Kantdeutung beleuchtet.
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  26. "Meine Mission ist zu zweifeln": Emil Cioran zwischen Skepsis und Mystik.Ulrike Bardt -2017 - Berlin: Lit. Edited by Werner Moskopp.
     
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  27.  7
    ReVision: Perspektiven feministischer Theorie und Politik in den 90er Jahren.Ulrike Baureithel,Kerstin Herlt &Anne Sachs (eds.) -1996 - Kassel: Jenior & Pressler.
  28.  15
    Werte leben lernen: Gerechtigkeit - Frieden - Glück.Ulrike Graf (ed.) -2017 - Göttingen: V&R Unipress, Universitätsverlag Osnabrück im Verlag V&R Unipress.
    Was haben Gerechtigkeit, Frieden, Glück und Wertebildung miteinander zu tun? Der Band beantwortet diese Frage interdisziplinär. Die BeiträgerInnen untersuchen Lernprozesse hinter gerechtem Urteilen, setzen sich mit Projekten zur Friedensstiftung durch Konfliktberatung auseinander und analysieren schulische Programme zur Förderung von Zufriedenheit und Glück. Sie erläutern darüber hinaus die Relevanz von Wertebildung in einem fachspezifischen Curriculum und denken Gerechtigkeits-, Friedens- und Glücks-bildung historisch und systematisch weiter. Die AutorInnen kommen aus den Erziehungswissenschaften, der Philosophie und aus den Theologien oder sind FachpädagogInnen und -didaktikerInnen.
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  29. Interaktive Begegnungen auf der Bühne Mit Playback : Theater lehren und lernen.Ulrike Posch -2018 - In Verena Begemann, Christiane Burbach, Dieter Weber & Friedrich Heckmann,Ethik als Kunst der Lebensführung: festschrift fur Friedrich Heckmann. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer Verlag.
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  30.  32
    Music and the Ideological Body.Ulrik Voglsten -2000 -Nordic Journal of Aesthetics 12 (22).
  31.  19
    Reciprocal constructions in Indo-Pakistani Sign Language.Ulrike Zeshan &Sibaji Panda -2011 - In Nicholas Evans,Reciprocals and Semantic Typology. John Benjamins Pub. Company. pp. 98--91.
  32. Ton und Farbe, Auge und Ohr, wer kann sie commensurieren? Zur Stellung des Ohrs innerhalb der Sinneshierarchie bei Johann Gottfried Herder und zu ihrer Bedeutung für die Wertschätzung der Musik.Ulrike Zeuch -1996 -Zeitschrift für Ästhetik Und Allgemeine Kunstwissenschaft 41:233-57.
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  33.  72
    The rationality of informal argumentation: A Bayesian approach to reasoning fallacies.Ulrike Hahn &Mike Oaksford -2007 -Psychological Review 114 (3):704-732.
  34.  45
    Depression and rumination: Relation to components of inhibition.Ulrike Zetsche,Catherine D'Avanzato &Jutta Joormann -2012 -Cognition and Emotion 26 (4):758-767.
    Background: Recent research has demonstrated that depressed individuals show impairments in inhibiting irrelevant emotional material, and that these impairments are linked to rumination. Cognitive inhibition, however, is not a unitary construct but consists of several components which operate at different stages of information processing. The present study was designed to assess two components of inhibition and examine their relation to depression and rumination in a sample of clinically depressed and healthy control participants. Methods: Twenty-two individuals diagnosed with a current depressive (...) episode and 27 never-disordered control participants completed an Emotional Flanker Task to assess individual differences in interference control and a modification of the Working Memory Selection Task to assess individual differences in the ability to discard no longer relevant emotional material from working memory. Participants completed self-report measures to assess depressive symptoms and rumination. Results: Clinically depressed compared to control participants showed significantly reduced interference control of irrelevant negative information. The groups, however, did not differ in their ability to discard no longer relevant negative information from working memory. In contrast, rumination was associated with difficulty removing no longer relevant negative material from working memory but not with deficits in interference control. Conclusions: Results highlight the importance of differentiating among components of inhibition to gain a better understanding of cognitive mechanisms underlying depression and rumination. (shrink)
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  35.  81
    A Probabilistic Model of Semantic Plausibility in Sentence Processing.Ulrike Padó,Matthew W. Crocker &Frank Keller -2009 -Cognitive Science 33 (5):794-838.
    Experimental research shows that human sentence processing uses information from different levels of linguistic analysis, for example, lexical and syntactic preferences as well as semantic plausibility. Existing computational models of human sentence processing, however, have focused primarily on lexico‐syntactic factors. Those models that do account for semantic plausibility effects lack a general model of human plausibility intuitions at the sentence level. Within a probabilistic framework, we propose a wide‐coverage model that both assigns thematic roles to verb–argument pairs and determines a (...) preferred interpretation by evaluating the plausibility of the resulting (verb, role, argument) triples. The model is trained on a corpus of role‐annotated language data. We also present a transparent integration of the semantic model with an incremental probabilistic parser. We demonstrate that both the semantic plausibility model and the combined syntax/semantics model predict judgment and reading time data from the experimental literature. (shrink)
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  36.  26
    The Value of Doubt: Humanities-Based Literacy in Management Education.Ulrike Landfester &Jörg Metelmann -2020 -Humanistic Management Journal 5 (2):159-175.
    Our paper addresses the question of what exactly the contribution of the humanities to management education could or should be, suggesting the concept of Literacy as both this contribution’s goal and method. Though there seems to emerge a consensus in the debate about the future of management education that the humanities should be involved with shaping it, some misconceptions about the humanities obscure the understanding of the why and how of it, most notably as to the manner in which they (...) are to provide for ethical values. Our paper in a first step endeavours to clear those misconceptions up drawing on some historical aspects of their development. It then proceeds to introducing the concept of Literacy and, based on it, the teaching framework of Critical Management Literacy we designed to operationalize the concept towards management students` needs. Our leading hypothesis is that the contribution of the humanities should focus on the cultivation of the capacity for epistemological doubt in order to prepare students for the complexity and indeterminacy of reality, thus at the same time laying the groundwork for ethical reflectivity. (shrink)
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  37.  78
    A Difference in Kind? Jürgen Habermas and Charles Taylor on Post-secularism.Ulrike Spohn -2015 -The European Legacy 20 (2):120-135.
    In this essay I examine the debate between Jürgen Habermas and Charles Taylor on the post-secular state. I argue that, although their views on the relation of religion and politics converge in certain respects, a profound difference remains between their overall approaches. Their disagreement on the epistemic status of religious as opposed to secular moral reasons, and on the role religious arguments can play in the public sphere testify to a deeper schism. Thus what might at first seem like a (...) quarrel about details proves to be a fundamental philosophical divide on the issue of modernity. I conclude that Taylor’s model of post-secularism is more promising as an approach to the challenge posed by growing religious and cultural diversity, for, if understood as a version of “reiterative universalism,” it avoids both moral relativism and Eurocentrism. (shrink)
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  38. (ries, 22.) Amsterdam & Philadel-phia: John Benjamins, 1992. Pp. xiii, 402. Cloth $79.00.Ulrike Hartge &Michel de Fornel -1994 - In Stephen Everson,Language: Companions to Ancient Thought, Vol. 3. Cambridge University Press.
     
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  39.  8
    Thick concepts and internal reasons.Ulrike Heuer -2012 - In Ulrike Heuer & Gerald Lang,Luck, Value, and Commitment: Themes from the Ethics of Bernard Williams. Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press USA. pp. 219.
    It has become common to distinguish between two kinds of ethical concepts: thick and thin ones. Bernard Williams, who coined the terms, explains that thick concepts such as “coward, lie, brutality, gratitude and so forth” are marked by having greater empirical content than thin ones. They are both action-guiding and world-guided: -/- If a concept of this kind applies, this often provides someone with a reason for action… At the same time, their application is guided by the world. A concept (...) of this sort may be rightly or wrongly applied, and people who have acquired it can agree that it applies or fails to apply to some new situation. -/- Thin concepts are concepts such as good and bad, right and wrong, obligation and duty. Judgments applying thick concepts have been seen as lending support to the possibility of explaining moral knowledge, and objectivity in ethics. It appears that due to their empirical content – their world-guidedness – judgments employing thick concepts can be true or false, depending on whether they get the worldly facts right. In addition they provide reasons for action – they are action-guiding – and thus may provide the starting point of a realist account of practical reasons: the view that reasons are facts and whether or not a person has a reason to act does not (normally) depend on her attitudes. The cruelty of an action is a reason not to perform it or to prevent it; that an action is kind is a reason in its favour. Of course these remarks aren’t conclusive – far from it. But even so, some non-cognitivists may regard them as completely wrongheaded, and so does Bernard Williams even though he is not a non-cognitivist. However, he believes that having a practical reason does depend on a person’s attitudes and motives. A certain worry about thick concepts will make clear what the problem is. It has most expressly been raised by Simon Blackburn, who sees it as undermining even the most superficial plausibility of moral cognitivism, as well as the claim that the properties picked out by thick concepts provide reasons. While we may readily accept that the kindness of an action or the fact that it is required by justice is a reason to perform it, there are many thick concepts whose action-guiding role we would reject. Some derogatory – e.g., racist or sexist - words express thick concepts too, Blackburn notes. And surely there are no racist or sexist truths. Furthermore there are concepts that some people use evaluatively (like chaste or obscene), but many of us do not regard the propositions in which those concepts feature as even prima facie reason giving. In raising these points, Blackburn claims that it is morally objectionable to regard the facts asserted in propositions which employ thick concepts as action-guiding because it leads to “a conservative and ultimately self-serving complacency.” As he sees it, the problem is that if we believe that the correct application of thick concepts yields evaluative truths and that evaluative truths state reasons for actions, we seem to be committed to accepting that some people are, say, fat, derog., and therefore to be ridiculed, and that there is at least a pro tanto reason to lead a chaste life, or feel affection towards cute women. Therefore, the view that all evaluative properties provide reasons for action or for attitudes such as admiration, affection or (dis)approval must be rejected. I will call this worry henceforth Blackburn’s challenge. The challenge is that understanding judgments employing thick concepts as expressing evaluative truths and providing reasons for actions or for attitudes leads to a morally unacceptable view. Blackburn suggests instead that we should separate the conditions for applying thick concepts and the reasons that we have in virtue of the concept applying. She may be cute, yes, but that is not a reason for “admiration and arousal.” -/- …it is morally vital that we proceed by splitting the input from the output in such a case. By refusing to split we fail to open an essential specifically normative dimension of criticism. -/- According to Blackburn, the meaning of thick concepts is made up of two distinct and in principle separable components: a descriptive one and the expression of an attitude. The truth-aptness and cognitive appearance of judgments employing thick concepts is explained by the descriptive component alone. Blackburn writes “[w]e get nothing but detachable and flexible attitudes, coupled with delineations of traits of character or action”. I will call this reply to Blackburn’s challenge the separability thesis. I agree with Blackburn that any account of thick concepts has to face and answer the challenge that he poses. In this paper, I will focus on one reply to the challenge which denies separability, namely Bernard Williams’s. Williams answers Blackburn’s challenge, while holding on to a cognitivist understanding of thick concepts. But his particular brand of cognitivism is peculiar: Williams rejects the separability thesis, and claims that correct applications of thick concepts yield evaluative (and not just descriptive) knowledge. But this is a special kind of knowledge. It is confined to a local community. The members of a community which uses certain thick concepts may have reasons to act accordingly, but the non-members do not. And even the reasons of members remain a little fragile: they may not want to continue using their concepts upon thorough reflection. The local knowledge view allows Williams to answer Blackburn’s challenge, because even though thick concepts are evaluative concepts and their application can yield evaluative knowledge, no one who isn’t a member of the relevant community has reason to be guided by the concept. Complementing a cognitivist view of thick concepts with reasons internalism allows Williams to answer the challenge. My aim in this paper is to show that Williams’s position is, despite its initial attraction, untenable. In particular, I am going to show why the internal reasons view is incompatible with Williams’s own understanding of thick concepts. My modest result is that the internalist view of reasons does not help to answer Blackburn’s challenge. My aim in this paper is not to answer the challenge but, rather, to explore the possibility of developing Williams’s attenuated version of cognitivism, and the possibility of combining it with reasons internalism. (shrink)
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  40.  5
    Einführung in die analytische Philosophie und Wissenschaftsgeschichte.Ulrike Notarp -2006 - Wrocław: Wydawn Uniwersytetu Wrocławskiego.
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  41.  15
    Perception and cognition: the analysis of object recognition.Ulrike Pompe -2011 - Paderborn: Mentis.
  42.  18
    Transitions, Expansions, Engagements: Science, Technology, & Human Values between 2002 and 2007.Ulrike Felt -2022 -Science, Technology, and Human Values 47 (4):650-655.
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  43.  36
    “Making meaning”: Communication between sign language users without a shared language.Ulrike Zeshan -2015 -Cognitive Linguistics 26 (2):211-260.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Cognitive Linguistics Jahrgang: 26 Heft: 2 Seiten: 211-260.
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  44.  171
    Machineries for Making Publics: Inscribing and De-scribing Publics in Public Engagement.Ulrike Felt &Maximilian Fochler -2010 -Minerva 48 (3):219-238.
    This paper investigates the dynamic and performative construction of publics in public engagement exercises. In this investigation, we, on the one hand, analyse how public engagement settings as political machineries frame particular kinds of roles and identities for the participating publics in relation to ‘the public at large’. On the other hand, we study how the participating citizens appropriate, resist and transform these roles and identities, and how they construct themselves and the participating group in relation to wider publics. The (...) empirical basis of our argument is a discussion of four different kinds of participation events in Austria. Building on these observations we develop conclusions about the public up-take of public participation in technoscience and the role of public engagement in current techno-political cultures. (shrink)
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  45.  50
    Practical Knowledge and Fallibility – Some Pitfalls.Ulrike Mürbe -2014 -Kriterion - Journal of Philosophy 1 (28):13-29.
    The following considerations deal with a suggestion on how to conceive of knowledge of one’s own intentional doings as a kind of knowledge that is somehow infallible. The proposal discussed in this paper holds that there is no way to get the content of one’s own practical knowledge claim wrong but that we might err in ascribing practical knowledge to ourselves. The upshot of my argumentation will be the following: if we assert that conjunction, that is, if we adhere to (...) the subject-content-disanalogy, as I will name it, we are faced with a dilemma. Therefore, it seems, the subject-content-disanalogy needs to be rejected. But, as will show up, rejecting it comes at high costs, too: to reject the subjectcontent- disanalogy forces us to equally reject at least one basal action theoretical insight we aim at accounting for. (shrink)
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  46.  14
    Wir blicken tiefer als Freud ….Ulrike May -2021 -Psyche 75 (8):657-691.
    Zwischen 1920 und 1925 kam es nach Vorarbeiten von Jones, Abraham, Stärcke, van Ophuijsen und Alexander sowie in Abrahams Hauptwerk, dem Versuch einer Entwicklungsgeschichte der Libido, zu einer Veränderung der psychoanalytischen Theorie, die sich vor allem auf die Stellung der Aggression bezog. Die stärkere Gewichtung der präödipalen Aggression wurde in London in erster Linie von Abrahams Analysanden James und Edward Glover durchgeführt. Ihre Arbeiten bereiteten den Boden für die Rezeption von Melanie Klein, einer weiteren Abraham-Analysandin, die ihrerseits von Alix Strachey, (...) auch sie eine Analysandin Abrahams, sowie von Ernest Jones unterstützt wurde. Klein entwickelte in der Analyse mit Kindern eine Technik, die sich bevorzugt auf die Wahrnehmung und Deutung der Aggression in der Stunde bezog. All dies, ohne dass Freud die neue Linie begrüßt hätte, was aber seit dem Erstarken der lokalen Gruppen in Berlin und London nicht mehr so stark ins Gewicht fiel. Gleichwohl blieb die Frage nach der Stellung der Aggression in der Schwebe, während sich Freud bis zuletzt für das Primat des Sexuellen aussprach und sich von den Positionen der hier erwähnten Schüler zwischen 1920 und 1925 mehrere Male ausdrücklich distanzierte. (shrink)
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  47.  67
    First- and Second-Level Bias in Automated Decision-making.Ulrik Franke -2022 -Philosophy and Technology 35 (2):1-20.
    Recent advances in artificial intelligence offer many beneficial prospects. However, concerns have been raised about the opacity of decisions made by these systems, some of which have turned out to be biased in various ways. This article makes a contribution to a growing body of literature on how to make systems for automated decision-making more transparent, explainable, and fair by drawing attention to and further elaborating a distinction first made by Nozick between first-level bias in the application of standards and (...) second-level bias in the choice of standards, as well as a second distinction between discrimination and arbitrariness. Applying the typology developed, a number of illuminating observations are made. First, it is observed that some reported bias in automated decision-making is first-level arbitrariness, which can be alleviated by explainability techniques. However, such techniques have only a limited potential to alleviate first-level discrimination. Second, it is argued that second-level arbitrariness is probably quite common in automated decision-making. In contrast to first-level arbitrariness, however, second-level arbitrariness is not straightforward to detect automatically. Third, the prospects for alleviating arbitrariness are discussed. It is argued that detecting and alleviating second-level arbitrariness is a profound problem because there are many contrasting and sometimes conflicting standards from which to choose, and even when we make intentional efforts to choose standards for good reasons, some second-level arbitrariness remains. (shrink)
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  48.  18
    Decolonizing Public Space: A Challenge of Bonhoeffer’s and Spivak’s Concepts of Resistance, ‘Religion’ and ‘Gender’.Ulrike Auga -2015 -Feminist Theology 24 (1):49-68.
    This paper underlines the surprising ways in which subject formation, agency and human flourishing emerge in counter discourses. As examples I offer a post-colonial critique of Rosa Parks in the USA and Fayza in the film Cairo 678. Economic and epistemic violence of neo-liberalism, neo-colonialism, racism, fundamentalism, nationalism, classism, sexism, homophobia, speciesism, etc. call for a critique of religion with corresponding answers. For such a project, the analysis brings together the theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer and the post-colonial scholar Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, (...) and questions their notions of religion and gender as well as resistance and representation. Spivak’s critique of capitalism, the post-colonial condition and epistemic violence in terms of gender constructions is seminal. However, her understanding of ‘religion’ remains ambivalent, yet influences post-colonial theologies tremendously. Bonhoeffer is interesting for a de-essentialized understanding of religion in the post-secular context, because he keeps the tension between a secularized world, engagement with the world and the appreciation of religious knowledge. His final perspective on gender and representation might be more advanced than expected. (shrink)
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  49.  49
    Die Intellektuelle und die Mandarine. Die Unordnung der Denkenden.Ulrike Auga -2004 -Die Philosophin 15 (30):55-70.
  50.  22
    Religion und Geschlecht als diskursive, intersektionale, performative Kategorien der Wissensproduktion: Zum epistemischen Bruch von Religionskonzepten unter postsäkularen Bedingungen.Ulrike E. Auga -2022 -Paragrana: Internationale Zeitschrift für Historische Anthropologie 31 (1):117-131.
    Dieser Beitrag gibt einen Überblick der zentralen postsäkularen Debatten im Kontext der Schnittstelle von Religions- und Geschlechterforschung. Aus postkolonialer, postsäkularer und Geschlechter-/queerer Perspektive ist eine eigene Epistemologie für die Untersuchung von ‚Religion‘ und ‚Geschlecht‘ entwickelt worden. Die Methode der Intersektionalität wird für die Analyse von ‚Religion‘ überarbeitet. Die Kategorie ‚Religion‘, die in der Geschlechterforschung häufig vernachlässigt oder essentialisiert wird, wird in Abhängigkeit von ‚Geschlecht‘, ‚Sexualität‘, ‚Race‘, ‚Nation‘, ‚Klasse‘, ‚Spezies‘ etc. weiterdiskutiert und als diskursive, intersektionale, performative Kategorie elaboriert. ‚Geschlecht‘ und ‚Religion‘ (...) werden als diskursive, intersektionale, performative Kategorien der Wissensproduktion erarbeitet. Diese Kategorien werden nicht nur dekonstruiert und deessentialisiert, sondern konsequent denaturalisiert und desidentifiziert, um epistemische Gewalt zu überkommen. Weiterhin kann Religion – konzeptualisiert als Wissenskategorie – nicht nur zum individuellen, sondern auch zum kollektiven Handlungsmachtgewinn beisteuern. Zudem werden Weiterentwicklungen feministischer Theorie im postsäkularen Kontext und in der queer-feministisch-materialistischen Theoriebildung und Religion diskutiert. (shrink)
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