Works by Lee, Wendy (exact spelling)

8 found
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  1. The Foundation Walls that are Carried by the House: A Critique of the Poverty of Stimulus Thesis and a Wittgensteinian—Dennettian Alternative.Wendy Lee - 1998 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 19 (2):177-194.
    A bedrock assumption made by cognitivist philosophers such as Noam Chomsky, and, more recently, Jerry Fodor and Steven Pinker is that the contexts within which children acquire a language inevitably exhibit a irremediable poverty of whatever stimuli are necessary to condition such acquisition and development. They argue that given this poverty, the basic rudiments of language must be innate; the task of the cognitivist is to theorize universal grammars, languages of thought, or language instincts to account for it. My argument, (...)
     
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  2.  2
    Defiant daughters: 21 women on art, activism, animals, and the sexual politics of meat.Kara Davis & Wendy Lee (eds.) - 2013 - New York: Lantern Books.
    When The Sexual Politics of Meat: A Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory by Carol J. Adams was published more than twenty years ago, it caused a immediate stir among writers and thinkers, feminists and animal rights activists alike. Never before had the relationship between patriarchy and meat eating been drawn so clearly, the idea that there lies a strong connection between the consumption of women and animals so plainly asserted. But, as the 21 personal stories in this anthology show, the impact of (...)
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  3. On Discerning the Value in Domesticated Nature.Wendy Lee - 1992 - Dissertation, Lancaster University
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  4.  9
    On the (im)materiality of violence: Subjects, bodies, and the experience of pain.Wendy Lee - 2005 - Feminist Theory 6 (3):277-295.
    Appealing to theorists such as Judith Butler, Walter Benjamin, Michel Foucault, Donna Haraway, and Bibi Bakare-Yusef, the aim of the following is to show that, despite ongoing critique, Cartesian dualism continues to haunt our analyses of the relationship of the subject to embodiment, particularly with respect to the experience of pain. Taking Bakare-Yusef's critique of Elaine Scarry's account of institutionalized violence (slavery) as an example, I will argue, first, that the dualistic impulse which Bakare-Yusef identifies in Scarry's view has deep (...)
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  5. Bertram F. Malle, How the Mind Explains Behavior: Folk Explanations, Meaning, and Social Interaction. [REVIEW]Wendy Lee - 2005 - Philosophy in Review 25 (4):276-278.
  6. Cheryl Brown Travis, ed., Evolution, Gender, and Rape. [REVIEW]Wendy Lee - 2004 - Philosophy in Review 24:227-229.
  7. Doreen Kimura, Sex and Cognition. [REVIEW]Wendy Lee - 2003 - Philosophy in Review 23 (1):39-41.
  8. Naomi Zack, ed., Women of Color and Philosophy. [REVIEW]Wendy Lee - 2001 - Philosophy in Review 21 (6):452-454.
     
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