Results for 'Tone Roald'

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  1.  56
    Passivity in Aesthetic Experience: Husserlian and Enactive Perspectives.Tone Roald & Simon Høffding - 2019 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 6 (1):1-20.
    This paper argues that the Husserlian notion of “passive synthesis” can make a substantial contribution to the understanding of aesthetic experience. The argument is based on two empirical cases of qualitative interview material obtained from museum visitors and a world-renowned string quartet, which show that aesthetic experience contains an irreducible dimension of passive undergoing and surprise. Analyzing this material through the lens of passive syntheses helps explain these experiences, as well as the sense of subject–object fusion that occurs in some (...)
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  2.  19
    Affective incarnations: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s challenge to bodily theories of emotion.Tone Roald, Kasper Levin & Simo Køppe - 2018 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 38 (4):205-218.
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  3. Movement and meaning.Roald Tone Boldsen Sofie Køppe Simo - 2024 - Metodo. International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy 11 (2):315-354.
    In this article, we analyze how movement takes part in creating intersubjective meaning. We discuss what Daniel Stern termed ‘affect attunement,’ a primary way of constituting intersubjectivity. Based on an analysis of how movement, meaning-making, vitality affects, and primordial feelings interrelate in affect attunement, we show that primordial feelings and thereby movement play a much greater role in affect attunement than Stern proposed. This makes movement a primary meaning-making modality, indispensable to the development of intersubjectivity. To illustrate the relation between (...)
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  4.  11
    The Subject of Aesthetics: A Psychology of Art and Experience.Tone Roald - 2015 - Leiden: Brill | Rodopi. Edited by Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht.
    In _The Subject of Aesthetics_ Tone Roald develops a psychology of art based on people’s descriptions of their own engagement with visual art.
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  5.  56
    Toward a Phenomenological Psychology of Art Appreciation.Tone Roald - 2008 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 39 (2):189-212.
    Experiences with art have been of longstanding concern for phenomenologists, yet the psychological question of the appearing of art appreciation has not been addressed. This article attends to this lack, exemplifying the merits of a phenomenological psychological investigation based on three semi-structured interviews conducted with museum visitors. The interviews were subjected to meaning condensation as well as to descriptions of the first aesthetic reception, the retrospective interpretation, and the “horizons of expectations” included in the meeting with art. The findings show (...)
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  6.  14
    Cognition in Emotion: An Investigation Through Experiences with Art.Tone Roald - 2007 - Rodopi.
    Emotions are essential for human existence, both lighting the way toward the brightest of achievements and setting the course into the darkness of suffering. Not surprisingly, then, emotion research is currently one of the hottest topics in the field of psychology. Yet to divine the nature of emotion is a complex and extensive task. In this book emotions are approached thought an exploration of the nature of cognition in emotion; the nature of thoughts in feelings. Different approaches to emotions are (...)
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  7.  16
    Sense and subjectivity. Hidden potentials in psychological aesthetics.Tone Roald & Simo Køppe - 2015 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 35 (1):20-34.
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  8.  2
    Art and Identity: Essays on the Aesthetic Creation of Mind.Tone Roald & Johannes Lang - 2013 - Rodopi.
    Art has the capacity to shape and alter our identities. It can influence who and what we are. Those who have had aesthetic experiences know this intimately, and yet the study of art’s impact on the mind struggles to be recognized as a centrally important field within the discipline of psychology. The main thesis of Art and Identity is that aesthetic experience represents a prototype for meaningful experience, warranting intense philosophical and psychological investigation. Currently psychology remains too closed-off from the (...)
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  9.  33
    Visual Art and the Rhythm of Experience.Kasper Levin, Tone Roald & Bjarne Sode Funch - 2019 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 77 (3):281-293.
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  10.  16
    Imagination and the Imaginary.Anders Essom-Stenz & Tone Roald - 2019 - The European Legacy 24 (7-8):866-868.
    Volume 24, Issue 7-8, November - December 2019, Page 866-868.
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  11.  64
    Aesthetic Empathy: An Investigation in Phenomenological Psychology of Visual Art Experiences.Jannik M. Hansen & Tone Roald - 2022 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 53 (1):25-50.
    Empathy is a psychologically significant phenomenon. It plays a key role in the development of the self, sociality, and prosocial behaviour. The term empathy originated in 19th-century aesthetics, where the concept was seen as an explanation for aesthetic experience. Despite renewed interest in the relation between empathy and aesthetic experiences, investigations into how empathy shapes experiences of art are still scarce. Given this situation, we ask the following three questions: What does one experience when experiencing a work of art empathetically? (...)
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  12. Touched by beauty: a qualitative inquiry into phenomenology of beauty.Benedikte Kudahl & Tone Roald - forthcoming - Continental Philosophy Review:1-17.
    Philosophy of aesthetics and beauty has traditionally prioritized the sense of vision while deprioritizing the more basic-bodily and thus less “noble” sense of touch. This paper examines bodily aspects of how beauty appears in the experience of visual art and motivates the view that touch is fundamental to such experiences. We appeal to Merleau-Ponty to show the relevance given to touch in his phenomenology of aesthetics, to unfold the meaning of touch as “reversible,” and to understand how vision can be (...)
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  13.  78
    Bodily and Therapeutic Movement.Anna Louise Langager & Tone Roald - 2018 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 49 (1):43-63.
    In this article we present a phenomenological single-case study of a client’s experience of her therapist’s bodily movement in the context of narrative therapy. A client was interviewed regarding her experience of selected bodily movements of the therapist based on a video recording of one of her therapeutic sessions. The movements were analyzed through Maxine Sheets-Johnstone’s cardinal structures of movement while the interview was analyzed through a modification of Giorgi’s method for phenomenological psychology. We focused on the relationship between the (...)
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  14.  55
    Long-term Effect of Aesthetic Education on Visual Awareness.Bjarne Sode Funch, Louise Lidang Krøyer, Tone Roald & Elisabeth Wildt - 2012 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 46 (4):96-108.
    The psychological effects of aesthetic education have often been discussed, and major studies such as Michael Parsons’s inquiry into art understanding show that the development of understanding works of visual art is influenced by education.1 His findings show that the way people talk about art can be structured in five stages of development according to the model of Jean Piaget’s theory of cognitive development. He believes that the understanding of art, just like general cognition, is based on mental maturation but (...)
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  15.  9
    Merleau-Ponty and the face of the world: silence, ethics, imagination, and poetic ontology, written by Glen A. Mazis. [REVIEW]Anders Essom-Stenz & Tone Roald - 2018 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 49 (1):113-117.
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  16. Being Moved by Art: A Phenomenological and Pragmatist Dialogue.Simon Høffding, Carlos Vara Sánchez & Tone Roald - forthcoming - Estetika: The European Journal of Aesthetics 59 (2):85-102.
    This article integrates John Dewey’s _Art as Experience_, Mikel Dufrenne’s _Phenomenology of Aesthetic Experience_, and phenomenological interviews with museum visitors to answer what it means to be ‘moved by art’. The interviews point to intense affective and existential experiences, in which encounters with art can be genuinely transformative. We focus on Dufrenne’s notion of ‘adherent reflection’ and Dewey’s notions of ‘doing and undergoing’ to understand the intentional structure and dynamics of such experiences, concluding that being moved contains two merged forms (...)
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  17.  11
    The Subject of Aesthetics: A Psychology of Art and Experience, written by Tone Roald.Aleksandar Kordis - 2017 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 48 (2):272-274.
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  18.  7
    Developing an Intervention and Evaluation Model of Outdoor Therapy for Employee Burnout: Unraveling the Interplay Between Context, Processes, and Outcomes.Roald Pijpker, Esther J. Veen, Lenneke Vaandrager, Maria Koelen & Georg F. Bauer - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    BackgroundBurnout is a major societal issue adversely affecting employees’ health and performance, which over time results in high sick leave costs for organizations. Traditional rehabilitation therapies show suboptimal effects on reducing burnout and the return-to-work process. Based on the health-promoting effects of nature, taking clients outdoors into nature is increasingly being used as a complementary approach to traditional therapies, and evidence of their effectiveness is growing. Theories explaining how the combination of general psychological support and outdoor-specific elements can trigger the (...)
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  19.  14
    Depictions of Laestadianism 1850–1950.Roald E. Kristiansen - 2020 - Approaching Religion 10 (1).
    The issue to be discussed here is how society’s views of the Laestadian revival has changed over the course of the revival movement’s first 100 years. The article claims that society’s emerging view of the revival is characterized by two different positions. The first period is typical of the last part of the nineteenth century and is characterized by the fact that the evaluation of the revival took as its point of departure the instigator of the revival, Lars Levi Laestadius. (...)
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  20.  8
    Worldviews and ultimate values in ecology: a further contribution to ecological anthropology (URAM 8: 105-122).Roald E. Kristiansen - 1995 - Ultimate Reality and Meaning 18 (3):176-191.
  21. One-trial aversive conditioning to contextual crues: effects of time of shock presentation on freezing during conditioning and testing.Jh Roald Maes & Jmh Vossen - 1992 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 30 (5):403-406.
  22.  20
    Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry.Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - New York: Oxford University Press. Edited by Jeffrey Kovac & Michael Weisberg.
    Roald Hoffmann's contributions to chemistry are well known; this Nobel laureate has published more than 500 articles and two books. As an "applied theoretical chemist," he has made significant contributions to our understanding of chemical bonding and reactivity, and taught two generations of chemists how to use molecular orbitals for real chemistry. Less well known, however, are Hoffmann's important and insightful contributions to the areas of scholarship surrounding chemistry. Over a career that spans nearly fifty years, Roald Hoffmann (...)
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  23. What might philosophy of science look like if chemists built it?Roald Hoffmann - 2007 - Synthese 155 (3):321 - 336.
    Had more philosophers of science come from chemistry, their thinking would have been different. I begin by looking at a typical chemical paper, in which making something is the leitmotif, and conjecture/refutation is pretty much irrelevant. What in fact might have been, might be, different? The realism of chemists is reinforced by their remarkable ability to transform matter; they buy into reductionism where it serves them, but make no real use of it. Incommensurability is taken without a blink, and actually (...)
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  24.  40
    Ockham's Razor and Chemistry.Roald Hoffmann, Vladimir I. Minkin & Barry K. Carpenter - 1997 - Hyle 3 (1):3 - 28.
    We begin by presenting William of Ockham's various formulations of his principle of parsimony, Ockham's Razor. We then define a reaction mechanism and tell a personal story of how Ockham's Razor entered the study of one such mechanism. A small history of methodologies related to Ockham's Razor, least action and least motion, follows. This is all done in the context of the chemical (and scientific) community's almost unthinking acceptance of the principle as heuristically valuable. Which is not matched, to put (...)
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  25. Molecular beauty.Roald Hoffmann - 1990 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 48 (3):191-204.
  26.  28
    Organizational Justice: A Behavioral Science Concept with Critical Implications for Business Ethics and Stakeholder Theory.LaRue Tone Hosmer & Christian Kiewitz - 2005 - Business Ethics Quarterly 15 (1):67-91.
    Abstract:Organizational justice is a behavioral science concept that refers to the perception of fairness of the past treatment of the employees within an organization held by the employees of that organization. These subjective perceptions of fairness have been empirically shown to be related to 1) attitudinal changes in job satisfaction, organizational commitment and managerial trust beliefs; 2) behavioral changes in task performance activities and ancillary extra-task efforts to assist group members and improve group methods; 3) numerical changes in the quantity, (...)
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  27.  30
    How Symbolic and Iconic Languages Bridge the Two Worlds of the Chemist.Emily Grosholz & Roald Hoffmann - 2000 - In Nalini Bhushan & Stuart Rosenfeld (eds.), Of Minds and Molecules: New Philosophical Perspectives on Chemistry. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 230.
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  28.  16
    Building Transnational Bodies: Norway and the International Development of Laboratory Animal Science, ca. 1956–1980.Tone Druglitrø & Robert G. W. Kirk - 2014 - Science in Context 27 (2):333-357.
    ArgumentThis article adopts a historical perspective to examine the development of Laboratory Animal Science and Medicine, an auxiliary field which formed to facilitate the work of the biomedical sciences by systematically improving laboratory animal production, provision, and maintenance in the post Second World War period. We investigate how Laboratory Animal Science and Medicine co-developed at the local level (responding to national needs and concerns) yet was simultaneously transnational in orientation (responding to the scientific need that knowledge, practices, objects and animals (...)
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  29.  8
    Discovering dignity through experience: How nursing students discover the expression of dignity.Tone Stikholmen, Dagfinn Nåden & Herdis Alvsvåg - 2022 - Nursing Ethics 29 (1):194-207.
    Introduction: Dignity is a core value in nursing. Nursing education shall prepare students for ethical professional practice and facilitate insight into the phenomenon of dignity and its significance. There is limited knowledge about how nursing students discover dignity in their education. Research aim: The aim of the study is to develop an understanding of how nursing students discover and acquire dignity. Research design: The study has a hermeneutic approach where qualitative interviews of nursing students were employed. The process of interpretation (...)
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  30.  83
    How Perceived Pain Influence Sleep and Mood More Than The Reverse: A Novel, Exploratory Study with Patients Awaiting Total Hip Arthroplasty.Tone Blågestad, Ståle Pallesen, Janne Grønli, Nicole K. Y. Tang & Inger H. Nordhus - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  31. Why think up new molecules?Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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  32.  28
    One-trial aversive conditioning to contextual cues: Effects of time of shock presentation on freezing during conditioning and testing.J. H. Roald Maes & Jo M. H. Vossen - 1992 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 30 (5):403-406.
  33. The ethics of management.LaRue Tone Hosmer - 1987 - Homewood, Ill.: Irwin.
    Hosmer's fourth edition of The Ethics of Management provides business students (future managers) with a very specific analytical process for understanding and resolving moral problems in management. A manager needs insight and understanding in a global economy to convince everyone involved, given his or her varied religious, cultural, economic and social backgrounds, to accept a proposed moral solution. Acceptance of managerial moral solutions, over time, brings trust, commitment and effort, and those three, also over time, are essential for organizational success.
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  34.  48
    Nietzsche's Actuality: Boscovich and the Extremities of Becoming.Matthew Tones & John Mandalios - 2015 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 46 (3):308-327.
    ABSTRACT The problem of persistence and emergence endowed with the limits of “actuality” is examined in the context of Nietzsche's appropriation of both Heraclitus and Boscovich to forge a natural philosophy of becoming. The physics of Boscovich allowed a systematic refurbishment of Heraclitean notions of becoming over being while Heraclitus's tensive dynamic of generation surpassed and overcame the limits of Anaximander's indeterminate. Nietzsche's early investigations bear overt signs of a formative philosophical outlook that seeks to marry the infinite and the (...)
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  35. How symbolic and iconic languages bridge the two worlds of the chemist: a case study from contemporary bioorganic chemistry.Emily R. Grosholz & Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann (ed.), Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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  36. Qualitative thinking in the age of modern computational chemistry, or What Lionel Salem knows.Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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  37.  4
    Commentary.Roald Hoffmann - 1983 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 8 (4):10-11.
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  38.  8
    essay: Thoughts on Aesthetics and Visualization.Roald Hoffmann - 2003 - Hyle 9 (1):7 - 10.
  39. How nice to be an outsider.Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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  40. How should chemists think?Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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  41. Honesty to the singular object.Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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  42. Learning from molecules in distress.Roald Hoffmann & Henning Hopf - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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  43. Molecular beauty.Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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  44. Nearly circular reasoning.Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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  45. Narrative.Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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  46. Ockham's razor and chemistry.Roald Hoffmann, Vladimir I. Minkin & Barry K. Carpenter - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
     
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  47. Preface.Roald Hoffmann - 2013 - In Jean-Pierre Llored (ed.), The Philosophy of Chemistry: Practices, Methodologies, and Concepts. Cambridge Scholars Press.
     
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  48. Part 3: Art and science. 19. Art in science?Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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  49. Part 1: Chemical Reasoning and Explanation. 2. Why buy that theory?Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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  50. Part 4: Chemical education. 22. Teach to search.Roald Hoffmann - 2012 - In Roald Hoffmann on the philosophy, art, and science of chemistry. Oxford University Press.
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