Results for 'Carolyn Dianne Roper'

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  1. Ethics for students means knowing and experiencing : multiple theories, multiple frameworks, multiple methods in multiple courses.Carolyn Dianne Roper, United States & Cynthia Roberts - 2015 - In Daniel E. Palmer (ed.), Handbook of research on business ethics and corporate responsibilities. Hershey: Business Science Reference, An Imprint of IGI Global.
     
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  2.  57
    Reinventing Eden: the fate of nature in Western culture.Carolyn Merchant - 2003 - New York: Routledge.
    Visionary quests to return to the Garden of Eden have shaped Western culture from Columbus' voyages to today's tropical island retreats. Few narratives are so powerful - and, as Carolyn Merchant shows, so misguided and destructive - as the dream of recapturing a lost paradise. A sweeping account of these quixotic endeavors by one of America's leading environmentalists, Reinventing Eden traces the idea of rebuilding the primeval garden from its origins to its latest incarnations in shopping malls, theme parks (...)
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  3.  46
    Climbing like a Girl: An Exemplary Adventure in Feminist Phenomenology.Dianne Chisholm - 2008 - Hypatia 23 (1):9-40.
    This essay uses the phenomenal advent of women's climbing as a paradigm case for integrating feminism and phenomenology, and for analyzing how women experience and evolve free movement and existence. In contrast to the paradigm set by Iris Marion Young's “Throwing like a Girl,” it stresses the category of the lived body over the category of gender, and it reveals how women, by employing and cultivating the body's motility and spatiality, engage and transcend the limits of crux situations.
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  4.  78
    Regret, shame, and denials of women's voluntary sterilization.Dianne Lalonde - 2018 - Bioethics 32 (5):281-288.
    Women face extraordinary difficulty in seeking sterilization as physicians routinely deny them the procedure. Physicians defend such denials by citing the possibility of future regret, a well‐studied phenomenon in women’s sterilization literature. Regret is, however, a problematic emotion upon which to deny reproductive freedom as regret is neither satisfactorily defined and measured, nor is it centered in analogous cases regarding men’s decision to undergo sterilization or the decision of women to undergo fertility treatment. Why then is regret such a concern (...)
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  5.  46
    Would a Basic Income Guarantee Reduce the Motivation to Work? An Analysis of Labor Responses in 16 Trial Programs.Dianne Worku, Mark Barrett, Allison Stepka, Nora A. Murphy & Richard Gilbert - 2018 - Basic Income Studies 13 (2).
    Many opponents of BIG programs believe that receiving guaranteed subsistence income would act as a strong disincentive to work. In contrast, various areas of empirical research in psychology suggest that a BIG would not lead to meaningful reductions in work. To test these competing predictions, a comprehensive review of BIG outcome studies reporting data on adult labor responses was conducted. The results indicate that 93 % of reported outcomes support the prediction of no meaningful work reductions when the criterion for (...)
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  6. Climbing like a girl: An exemplary adventure in feminist phenomenology.Dianne Chisholm - 2008 - Hypatia 23 (1):9-40.
    : This essay uses the phenomenal advent of women's climbing as a paradigm case for integrating feminism and phenomenology, and for analyzing how women experience and evolve free movement and existence. In contrast to the paradigm set by Iris Marion Young's "Throwing like a Girl," it stresses the category of the lived body over the category of gender, and it reveals how women, by employing and cultivating the body's motility and spatiality, engage and transcend the (gender) limits of crux situations.
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  7.  85
    Implicit Learning: Theoretical and Empirical Issues.Dianne C. Berry & Zoltan Dienes (eds.) - 1993 - Lawerence Erlbaum.
    This book presents an overview of these studies and attempts to clarify apparently disparate results by placing them in a coherent theoretical framework.
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  8.  11
    A reader's view of listening.Dianne C. Bradley & Kenneth I. Forster - 1987 - Cognition 25 (1-2):103-134.
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  9.  31
    The Fiduciary Duty of Corporate Directors to Protect the Environment for Future Generations.Dianne Saxe - 1992 - Environmental Values 1 (3):243-252.
    The 'business judgement rule ' requires corporate directors only to act with honesty and reasonable care in the interest of shareholders. A stronger ' fiduciary ' duty is required where one party requires protection from another. This paper argues that where corporations take risks with the environment, directors are fiduciaries. Stakeholders are in that case the general public, future generations and other species, which have not voluntarily accepted risk and cannot limit liability. Recognition of fiduciary duty in such cases is (...)
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  10.  23
    Feminist Technological Futures: Deleuze and Body/technology Assemblages.Dianne Currier - 2003 - Feminist Theory 4 (3):321-338.
    The figure of Donna Haraway’s cyborg continues to loom large over contemporary feminist engagements with questions of technology. Across a range of analytical projects ranging from cosmetic surgery to employment practices it has come to be one of the defining figurations through which the social and discursive construction of bodies in a technological age are theorized. Indeed, it has become a widely accepted and largely unquestioned orthodoxy of postmodern feminist thinking. Not only has the cyborg offered a theoretical framework for (...)
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  11.  6
    Commentary on Revisions to the Ethical and Religious Directives, Part Four.DiAnn Ecret, Tracy Winsor & Jozef D. Zalot - 2023 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 23 (2):285-302.
    We suggest edits to Part Four of the Ethical and Religious Directives (ERDs) to help the US bishops address and clarify essential Church teachings on specific beginning-of-life issues facing Catholic health care today. As a teaching tool, Part Four must be updated so that Catholic health care professionals and the lay faithful can understand and apply Church teachings to new ethical challenges. Further, more direction and clarity from the ERDs is needed in applying general principles to assisted procreative technologies, pre- (...)
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  12.  15
    How and When Retailers’ Sustainability Efforts Translate into Positive Consumer Responses: The Interplay Between Personal and Social Factors.Dianne Hofenk, Marcel van Birgelen, Josée Bloemer & Janjaap Semeijn - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 156 (2):473-492.
    This study aims to address how and when retailers’ sustainability efforts translate into positive consumer responses. Hypotheses are developed and tested through a scenario-based experiment among 672 consumers. Retailers’ assortment sustainability and distribution sustainability are manipulated. Retailers’ sustainability efforts lead to positive consumer responses via two underlying mechanisms: consumers’ identification with the store and store legitimacy. The effects of sustainability efforts are strengthened if consumers have personal norms favoring shopping at environmentally friendly stores. Remarkably, when controlling for moderation by personal (...)
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  13.  53
    International Law, Social Change and Resistance: A Conversation Between Professor Anna Grear (Cardiff) and Professorial Fellow Dianne Otto.Dianne Otto & Anna Grear - 2018 - Feminist Legal Studies 26 (3):351-363.
    This conversation between two scholars of international law focuses on the contemporary realities of feminist analysis of international law and on current and future spaces of resistance. It notes that feminism has moved from the margin towards the centre, but that this has also come at a cost. As the language of women’s rights and gender equality has travelled into the international policy worlds of crisis management and peace and security, feminist scholars need to become more careful in their analysis (...)
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  14. Is Morality Unified? Evidence that Distinct Neural Systems Underlie Moral Judgments of Harm, Dishonesty, and Disgust.Carolyn Parkinson, Walter Sinnott-Armstrong, Philipp E. Koralus, Angela Mendelovici, Victoria McGeer & Thalia Wheatley - 2011 - Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience 23 (10):3162-3180.
    Much recent research has sought to uncover the neural basis of moral judgment. However, it has remained unclear whether "moral judgments" are sufficiently homogenous to be studied scientifically as a unified category. We tested this assumption by using fMRI to examine the neural correlates of moral judgments within three moral areas: (physical) harm, dishonesty, and (sexual) disgust. We found that the judgment ofmoral wrongness was subserved by distinct neural systems for each of the different moral areas and that these differences (...)
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  15.  16
    Turn to Stone.Dianne Daniels - 2015 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 58 (1):25-25.
    The diagnosis was Turn-to-Stone disease. None of us had heard of it and rushed to Google. Her body calcified itself, painfully turning tissue to bone. She planned her funeral; turning stone to ashes.Meanwhile Viagra four times a day took blood to her hands and feet. “Viagra!” she’d joke, “you’d think I was hard..
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  16. What happened afterwards?: The Chinese cultural revolution from 1969 to 1976.Dianne C. McDonald - 2011 - Agora (History Teachers' Association of Victoria) 46 (4):18.
     
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  17. Addressing Homelessness: Does Australia's Indirect Implementation of Human Rights Comply with its International Obligations?Dianne Otto - 2003 - In Tom Campbell, Jeffrey Goldsworthy & Adrienne Stone (eds.), Protecting Human Rights: Instruments and Institutions. Oxford University Press.
     
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  18.  7
    Slipping into Paradise—Why I live in New Zealand.Dianne Yates - 2005 - Utopian Studies 16 (2):329-332.
  19. The Death of Nature: Women, Ecology, and the Scientific Revolution.Carolyn Merchant - 1983 - Harpercollins.
    An examination of the Scientific Revolution that shows how the mechanistic world view of modern science has sanctioned the exploitation of nature, unrestrained commercial expansion, and a new socioeconomic order that subordinates women.
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  20.  34
    The bioregion as a communitarian micro-region (and its limitations).Dianne Meredith - 2005 - Ethics, Place and Environment 8 (1):83 – 94.
    The micro-regional focus of bioregionalism is a small unit of physical space, typically a watershed region. In bioregional discourse, natural systems become metaphors for cultural coherence. However, when we look for laws embedded in the natural world, those that are found do not then reveal themselves as principles which apply to systems of culture. Further, within most individuals, the sense of regional identity spans several scales because our past narratives and present affiliations span several localities. Humans are not immersed in (...)
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  21.  9
    Virtue Ethics and Person-Place Relationships.Carolyn Mason - forthcoming - Ethics, Policy and Environment.
    Indigenous knowledge and work in social science demonstrates the importance for well-being of people’s relationships with places, but western moral theorists have said little on this topic. This paper argues that there is a neo-Aristotelian virtue associated with forming a relationship with a place or places; that is, human beings can form relationships with places that affect their perceptions, emotions, desires and actions, and such dispositions, when properly developed, increase the chance that people will flourish. As well as discussing the (...)
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  22. The death of nature.Carolyn Merchant - forthcoming - Environmental Philosophy: From Animal Rights to Radical Ecology.
     
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  23.  75
    Music—Drastic or Gnostic?Carolyn Abbate - 2004 - Critical Inquiry 30 (3):505-536.
  24.  28
    How Implicit is Implicit Learning?Dianne Berry (ed.) - 1997 - Oxford University Press.
    Implicit learning is said to occur when a person learns about a complex stimulus without necessarily intending to do so, and in such a way that the resulting knowledge is difficult to express. Over the last 30 years, a number of studies have claimed to show evidence of implicit learning. In more recent years, however, considerable debate has arisen over the extent to which cognitive tasks can in fact be learned implicitly. Much of the debate has centred on the questions (...)
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  25. Trust.Carolyn McLeod - 2020 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    A summary of the philosophical literature on trust.
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  26.  29
    Explaining human movements and actions: Children's understanding of the limits of psychological explanation.Carolyn A. Schult & Henry M. Wellman - 1997 - Cognition 62 (3):291-324.
  27.  18
    Health care providers’ ethical perspectives on waiver of final consent for Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD): a qualitative study.Dianne Godkin, Lisa Cranley, Elizabeth Peter & Caroline Variath - 2022 - BMC Medical Ethics 23 (1):1-14.
    BackgroundWith the enactment of Bill C-7 in Canada in March 2021, people who are eligible for medical assistance in dying (MAiD), whose death is reasonably foreseeable and are at risk of losing decision-making capacity, may enter into a written agreement with their healthcare provider to waive the final consent requirement at the time of provision. This study explored healthcare providers’ perspectives on honouring eligible patients’ request for MAiD in the absence of a contemporaneous consent following their loss of decision-making capacity. (...)
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  28. Spacetime and Holes.Carolyn Brighouse - 1994 - PSA: Proceedings of the Biennial Meeting of the Philosophy of Science Association 1994:117 - 125.
    John Earman and John Norton have argued that substantivalism leads to a radical form of indeterminism within local spacetime theories. I compare their argument to more traditional arguments typical in the Relationist/Substantivalist dispute and show that they all fail for the same reason. All these arguments ascribe to the substantivalist a particular way of talking about possibility. I argue that the substantivalist is not committed to the modal claims required for the arguments to have any force, and show that this (...)
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  29.  40
    Professional codes of conduct and computer ethics education.Dianne C. Martin & David H. Martin - 1990 - Acm Sigcas Computers and Society 20 (2):18-29.
  30. Framing new research in science literacy and language use: Authenticity, multiple discourses, and the “Third Space”.Carolyn S. Wallace - 2004 - Science Education 88 (6):901-914.
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  31.  63
    Assembling the 'Accomplished' Teacher: The performativity and politics of professional teaching standards.Dianne Mulcahy - 2011 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 43 (S1):94-113.
    Set within the socio-political context of standards-based education reform, this article explores the constitutive role of teaching standards in the production of the practice and identity of the ‘accomplished’ teacher. It contrasts two idioms for thinking about and studying these standards, the representational and the performative. Utilising the material-semiotic approach of actor-network theory, it addresses the issue of how the representational idiom of teaching standards has become so authoritative that it readily eclipses other ways to think and ‘do’ them. In (...)
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  32. Frazzled desire: out of time.Ph D. Dianne Elise - 2019 - In Stephanie Brody & Frances Arnold (eds.), Psychoanalytic perspectives on women and their experience of desire, ambition and leadership. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
  33.  20
    Private and public patronage in Victorian newcastle.Dianne Sachko Macleod - 1989 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 52 (1):188-208.
  34.  68
    The dialectics of modernism and English art.Dianne Sachko Macleod - 1995 - British Journal of Aesthetics 35 (1):1-14.
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  35.  8
    Gandhi Meets Bollywood.Dianne Mansour - 2008 - Ethos: Social Education Victoria 16 (3):50.
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  36.  21
    The model citizen.Dianne Mansour - 2011 - Ethos: Social Education Victoria 19 (3):39.
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  37.  14
    Feminist Reflections on Humans and Other Domestic Animals.Dianne Romain - 1990 - Between the Species 6 (4):15.
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  38. Events and the Ontology of Modern Physics.Andrew Westwell-Roper - 1985
     
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  39.  16
    Enacting affirmative ethics in education: A materialist/posthumanist framing.Dianne Mulcahy - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (7):1003-1013.
    The aim of this article is to explore the worth of a materialist/posthumanist approach to ethics, specifically affirmative ethics, within the field of education. I work empirical material that ‘does’ this ethics in classrooms and draw on Deleuze’s ethically guided materialism as taken up by Braidotti, to gain purchase on it. Defined as a relational matter of human and non-human powers of acting in pursuit of affirmative values, affirmative ethics focuses up relations, forces and affects. It poses considerable challenges to (...)
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  40. Not For the Faint of Heart: Assessing the Status Quo on Adoption and Parental Licensing.Carolyn McLeod & Andrew Botterell - 2014 - In Francoise Baylis & Carolyn McLeod (eds.), Family Making: Contemporary Ethical Challenges. Oxford University Press. pp. 151-167.
    The process of adopting a child is “not for the faint of heart.” This is what we were told the first time we, as a couple, began this process. Part of the challenge lies in fulfilling the licensing requirements for adoption, which, beyond the usual home study, can include mandatory participation in parenting classes. The question naturally arises for many people who are subjected to these requirements whether they are morally justified. We tackle this question in this paper. In our (...)
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  41.  15
    The Democratic Imperative to Address Sexual Equality Rights in Schools.Dianne Gereluk - 2013 - Educational Theory 63 (5):511-523.
    Issues of sexual orientation elicit ethical debates in schools and society. In jurisdictions where a legal right has not yet been established, one argument commonly rests on whether schools ought to address issues of same-sex relationships and marriage on the basis of civil equality, or whether such controversial issues ought to remain in the private sphere. Drawing upon an antiperfectionist liberal framework, Dianne Gereluk argues that schools have an obligation to educate students in two important ways. First, students must (...)
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  42.  13
    Engaging with Irigaray: Feminist Philosophy and Modern European Thought.Carolyn Burke, Naomi Schor & Margaret Whitford - 1994 - Columbia University Press.
    The authors of these essays--including Judith Butler, Elizabeth Weed, and Rosi Braidotti--shed new light on the relationship of Irigaray to many of the philosophers she has "romanced," from Aristotle to Deleuze.
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  43. The Death of Nature: Women, Ecology, and Scientific Revolution.Carolyn Merchant - 1981 - Journal of the History of Biology 14 (2):356-357.
  44.  43
    Making Sense of Taste: Food and Philosophy.Carolyn Korsmeyer - 1999 - Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
    Taste, perhaps the most intimate of the five senses, has traditionally been considered beneath the concern of philosophy, too bound to the body, too personal and idiosyncratic. Yet, in addition to providing physical pleasure, eating and drinking bear symbolic and aesthetic value in human experience, and they continually inspire writers and artists. In Making Sense of Taste, Carolyn Korsmeyer explains how taste came to occupy so low a place in the hierarchy of senses and why it is deserving of (...)
  45.  39
    Survey on Using Ethical Principles in Environmental Field Research with Place-Based Communities.Dianne Quigley, Alana Levine, David A. Sonnenfeld, Phil Brown, Qing Tian & Xiaofan Wei - 2019 - Science and Engineering Ethics 25 (2):477-517.
    Researchers of the Northeast Ethics Education Partnership at Brown University sought to improve an understanding of the ethical challenges of field researchers with place-based communities in environmental studies/sciences and environmental health by disseminating a questionnaire which requested information about their ethical approaches to these researched communities. NEEP faculty sought to gain actual field guidance to improve research ethics and cultural competence training for graduate students and faculty in environmental sciences/studies. Some aspects of the ethical challenges in field studies are not (...)
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  46.  56
    Normative Considerations in the Aftermath of Gun Violence in Schools.Dianne T. Gereluk, Kent Donlevy & Merlin B. Thompson - 2015 - Educational Theory 65 (4):459-474.
    Gun violence in American and Canadian schools is an ongoing tragedy that goes substantially beyond its roots in the interlocking emotional and behavioral issues of mental health and bullying. In light of the need for effective policy development, Dianne T. Gereluk, J. Kent Donlevy, and Merlin B. Thompson examine gun violence in schools from several relevant perspectives in this article. The authors consider the principle of standard of care as it relates to parents, teachers, and community members in a (...)
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  47.  26
    Lessons from Chess.Dianne Horgan - 1992 - Inquiry: Critical Thinking Across the Disciplines 10 (2):5-8.
  48.  20
    Methodologies used in twin studies.Dianne F. Newbury, Dorothy V. M. Bishop & Anthony P. Monaco - 2005 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 9 (11):528-534.
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  49.  20
    Balancing access to pharmaceuticals with patent rights.Dianne Nicol - 2003 - Monash Bioethics Review 22 (2):S50-S62.
    It is generally recognised that public health problems in the developing world are dire and that the rest of the world has a moral commitment to provide assistance. Yet many of the world’s poor are unable to access essential pharmaceuticals simply because products that are under patent are too expensive and cheaper generics are not available. One of the proposed solutions to this problem is to allow domestic manufacture of generic products in response to public health crises. However, this solution (...)
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  50. The regulatory role of patents in innovative health research and its translation from the laboratory to the clinic.Dianne Nicole & Jane Nielsen - 2021 - In Graeme T. Laurie (ed.), The Cambridge handbook of health research regulation. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
     
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