Results for 'Joseph Squier'

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  1. Continuing to] mind the gap: Teaching image and text in new media spaces.Kathie Gossett, Carrie A. Lamanna, Joseph Squier & Joyce R. Walker - 2002 - Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy 7 (3).
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  2.  24
    Business ethics: a stakeholder and issues management approach.Joseph W. Weiss - 2014 - Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler.
    The seventh edition of this pragmatic guide to determining right and wrong in the workplace is updated with new case studies and ancillary materials to combine stakeholder perspectives with a deep dive on workplace ethics issues. Using a unique stakeholder-based approach, this book takes business ethics out of the theory realm and provides practical ways to analyze any business decision. Including dozens of cases, Joseph Weiss looks beyond the impacts of ethical lapses on share price and profit to focus (...)
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  3.  80
    Life, the Unhistorical, the Suprahistorical: Nietzsche on History.Joseph Ward - 2013 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 21 (1):64 - 91.
    (2013). Life, the Unhistorical, the Suprahistorical: Nietzsche on History. International Journal of Philosophical Studies: Vol. 21, No. 1, pp. 64-91. doi: 10.1080/09672559.2012.744532.
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  4.  38
    Fetishism and Hysteria: The Economies of Feminism Ex Uterod.Susan Squier - 2000 - Journal of Medical Humanities 21 (2):59-69.
    Laurie Foos's feminist novel Ex Utero is a comic exploration of the value of the uterus. Simultaneously recursive and resistant, Foos's novel reenacts, with a difference, two confining essentialisms: hysteria, a female disorder, and fetishism, whether understood as the psychosexual response to female lack, or as capitalism's motor, the displacement of desire onto commodities. The essay explores how, if we think of the womb neither as individual possession or commodified object, we can create a new space of possibility for women (...)
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  5.  12
    Nietzsche Cluster: Introduction.Joseph Ward - 2013 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 21 (1):1 - 2.
    Nietzsche was a philosopher who prided himself, in deliberate contradistinction with previous philosophers, on his ‘historical sense’. But this leaves many questions unanswered about the precise role of the historical in Nietzsche’s philosophy. Perhaps most importantly, can the conception of genealogy in Nietzsche’s later philosophy, as a revised historical method, be taken to represent his mature philosophical methodology in general? I argue, firstly, that there is considerable continuity between Nietzsche’s conceptions of history in the early essay ‘On the uses and (...)
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  6. Taoism.Joseph Wu - 1985 - In Donald H. Bishop & Jeffrey G. Barlow (eds.), Chinese thought: an introduction. Delhi: Motilal Banarasidass. pp. 54.
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  7.  73
    The idea of private law.Ernest Joseph Weinrib - 1995 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
    The book combines philosophical exposition and legal analysis, and pays special attention to issues of tort law.
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  8.  12
    Feminist Theory and/of Science: Feminist Theory Special Issue.Melissa M. Littlefield & Susan Squier - 2004 - Feminist Theory 5 (2):123-126.
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  9.  4
    Wittgenstein.Ludwig Wittgenstein & Joseph Kosuth (eds.) - 1989 - Wien: Wiener Secession.
    [1] Biographie, Philosophie, Praxis -- [2] Het spel van het naamloze / naar een concept van Joseph Kosuth.
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  10. Commentary: Moral growth in medical students.Howard Brody, Harriet A. Squier & John P. Foglio - 1995 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 16 (3).
    Knight has shown how the moral growth of medical students involves a spiritual journey. He may, however, present too sanguine a portrayal of the extent to which the medical education environment promotes this moral and spiritual growth. Medical school may indeed be more abusive than supportive. Admitting more women to medical school and teaching more humanities courses, while worthwhile, will not necessarily promote the goals that Knight appropriately advocates.
     
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  11.  17
    A Critical Response to Heidi M. Silcox’s “What’s Wrong with Alienation?”.Anthony Squiers - 2015 - Philosophy and Literature 39 (1):243-247.
  12.  9
    Book Review: Wayward Reproductions: Genealogies of Race and Nation in Transatlantic Modern Thought by Alys Even Weinbaum. [REVIEW]Susan Squier - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (2):194-196.
  13. Wayward Reproductions: Genealogies of Race and Nation in Transatlantic Modern Thought (review).Susan Squier - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (2):194-196.
  14.  3
    Aus der Sicht der Gewebekulturen: Neue Lebensspannen für den Menschen.Susan Squier - 2002 - In Sigrid Weigel (ed.), Genealogie Und Genetik: Schnittstellen Zwischen Biologie Und Kulturgeschichte. De Gruyter. pp. 99-140.
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  15.  23
    Contradiction and Coriolanus: A Philosophical Analysis of Mao Tse Tung's Influence on Bertolt Brecht.Anthony Squiers - 2013 - Philosophy and Literature 37 (1):239-246.
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  16.  15
    Corporate Restructuring of Tax-Exempt Hospitals: The Bastardization of the Tax-Exempt Concept.Mary P. Squiers - 1986 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 14 (2):66-76.
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  17.  9
    Corporate Restructuring of Tax-Exempt Hospitals: The Bastardization of the Tax-Exempt Concept.Mary P. Squiers - 1986 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 14 (2):66-76.
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  18.  6
    From Omega to Mr. Adam: The Importance of Literature for Feminist Science Studies.Susan Squier - 1999 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 24 (1):132-158.
    The simultaneous publication in 1992 of two texts dealing with a global decline in sperm potency, P. D. James’s The Children of Men and Elisabeth Carlsen’s “Evidence for Decreasing Quality of Semen during the Past 50 Years,” inaugurates the exploration of another kind of sterility: the failure of feminist literary criticism and feminist science studies to converge as a fertile zone of inquiry and analysis. This article considers the modern discipline of literary studies, as well as feminist literary criticism and (...)
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  19.  33
    Fetal Subjects and Maternal Objects: Reproductive Technology and the New Fetal/Maternal Relation.S. Squier - 1996 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 21 (5):515-535.
    This essay examines three tendencies nurtured in the practices of reproductive technology – tendencies with profoundly disturbing implications for us as individuals and as social beings. They are: 1) the increasing subjectification of the fetus (that is, the increasing tendency to posit a fetal subject), 2) the increasing objectification of the gestating woman, leading to her representation as interchangeable object rather than unique subject, and 3) the increasing tendency to conceive of the fetus and the mother as social, medical, and (...)
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  20.  4
    Graphic Medicine in the University.Susan M. Squier - 2015 - Hastings Center Report 45 (3):19-22.
    The spring I first offered a graphic medicine graduate seminar, I wasn't sure what to expect. Every class meeting included one hour in which the students, from fields that stress rigorous verbal and written achievement, were required to embrace the position of the amateur by learning to create comics. They experimented with putting images and words together in sequential drawn panels in order to tell a story of their own devising. Of course, they did more than draw; the other two (...)
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  21.  24
    Our Posthuman Future: Discussing the Consequences of Biotechnological Advances.Susan Squier & Catherine Waldby - 2005 - Hastings Center Report 35 (6):4.
  22.  20
    The teaching of literature and medicine in medical school education.Harriet A. Squier - 1995 - Journal of Medical Humanities 16 (3):175-187.
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  23.  28
    Women in nineteenth century homeopathic medicine.Harriet A. Squier - 1995 - Journal of Medical Humanities 16 (2):121-131.
    The novels,Dr. Breen's Practice andDr. Zay provide the twentieth century reader with some interesting and intimate insights into nineteenth century homeopathy as practiced by two women physicians. It becomes apparent after reading these two books that the existing knowledge about women in homeopathic medicine is inadequate to answer the questions that the novels raise. More investigation in this area would help illuminate the motivations women had to enter medicine, as well as their reasons for choosing homeopathy over regular medicine. It (...)
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  24.  83
    The Analogy of being: invention of the Antichrist or the wisdom of God?Thomas Joseph White (ed.) - 2011 - Cambridge, U.K.: W.B. Eerdmans Pub. Co..
    Proceedings of a conference held in Apr. 2008 in Washington, D.C.
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  25.  49
    So Long as They Grow Out of It: Comics, The Discourse of Developmental Normalcy, and Disability. [REVIEW]Susan M. Squier - 2008 - Journal of Medical Humanities 29 (2):71-88.
    This essay draws on two emerging fields—the study of comics or graphic fiction, and disability studies—to demonstrate how graphic fictions articulate the embodied, ethical, and sociopolitical experiences of impairment and disability. Examining David B’s Epileptic and Paul Karasik and Judy Karasik’s The Ride Together, I argue that these graphic novels unsettle conventional notions of normalcy and disability. In so doing, they also challenge our assumed dimensions and possibilities of the comics genre and medium, demonstrating the great potential comics hold for (...)
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  26.  40
    Into That Darkness: A Heideggerian Phenomenology of Pain and Suffering.Joseph M. Walsh - 2022 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 53 (1):82-102.
    When I say ‘pain’, it is clearly a singular phenomenon. Yet if I ask for an example, you can provide many varying instances that confound the idea of its singularity. How can a pinprick be of the same thing as depression or grief? This study maintains the singularity of pain by exploring the process and structure of its experience to account for its variance and its subjectivity. Heidegger’s Being and Time provides the pathway to achieving this, where we comprehend how (...)
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  27. Benardete paradoxes, patchwork principles, and the infinite past.Joseph C. Schmid - 2024 - Synthese 203 (2):51.
    Benardete paradoxes involve a beginningless set each member of which satisfies some predicate just in case no earlier member satisfies it. Such paradoxes have been wielded on behalf of arguments for the impossibility of an infinite past. These arguments often deploy patchwork principles in support of their key linking premise. Here I argue that patchwork principles fail to justify this key premise.
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  28.  23
    Galileo Heretic.Joseph C. Pitt - 1987
  29.  34
    Galileo and His Sources: The Heritage of the Collegio Romano in Galileo's Science.Joseph C. Pitt - 1987 - Philosophy of Science 54 (1):138-140.
  30.  23
    Revisiting Nietzsche et la Philosophie : gilles deleuze on force and eternal return.Joseph Ward - 2010 - Angelaki 15 (2):101-114.
  31.  23
    Revisiting Nietzsche et la Philosophie : gilles deleuze on force and eternal return.Joseph Ward - 2010 - Angelaki 15 (2):101-114.
  32.  16
    Back to the rough ground: practical judgment and the lure of technique.Joseph Dunne - 1993 - Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press.
    Back to the Rough Ground is a philosophical investigation of practical knowledge, with major import for professional practice and the ethical life in modern society. Its purpose is to clarify the kind of knowledge that informs good practice in a range of disciplines such as education, psychotherapy, medicine, management, and law. Through reflection on key modern thinkers who have revived cardinal insights of Aristotle, and a sustained engagement with the Philosopher himself, it presents a radical challenge to the scientistic assumptions (...)
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  33. Psychoanalytic Aesthetics: An Introduction to the British School: Book Reviews. [REVIEW]Roger Squier - 2010 - British Journal of Aesthetics 50 (2):212-215.
    (No abstract is available for this citation).
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  34.  71
    Mind, reason, and being-in-the-world: the McDowell-Dreyfus debate.Joseph K. Schear (ed.) - 2013 - New York: Routledge.
    John McDowell and Hubert L. Dreyfus are philosophers of world renown, whose work has decisively shaped the fields of analytic philosophy and phenomenology respectively. Mind, Reason, and Being-in-the-World: The McDowell-Dreyfus Debate opens with their debate over one of the most important and controversial subjects of philosophy: is human experience pervaded by conceptual rationality, or does experience mark the limits of reason? Is all intelligibility rational, or is there a form of intelligibility at work in our skilful bodily rapport with the (...)
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  35.  25
    Medical Humanities and Cultural Studies: Lessons Learned from an NEH Institute. [REVIEW]Susan M. Squier & Anne Hunsaker Hawkins - 2004 - Journal of Medical Humanities 25 (4):243-253.
    In this essay, the directors of an NEH Institute on “Medicine, Literature, and Culture” consider the lessons they learned by bringing humanities scholars to a teaching hospital for a month-long institute that mingled seminar discussions, outside speakers and clinical observations. In an exchange of letters, they discuss the productive tensions inherent in approaching medicine from multiple perspectives, and they argue the case for a broader conception of medical humanities that incorporates the methodologies of cultural studies.
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  36. Situation ethics: the new morality.Joseph F. Fletcher - 1966 - Louisville, Ky.: Westminster John Knox Press.
    This is a new edition of Joseph Fletcher's 1966 work that ignited a firestorm of controversy at the time of its publication.
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  37.  47
    Modal logic: the Lewis-modal systems.Joseph Jay Zeman - 1973 - London,: Clarendon Press.
  38. A Step-by-Step Argument for Causal Finitism.Joseph C. Schmid - 2023 - Erkenntnis 88 (5):2097-2122.
    I defend a new argument for causal finitism, the view that nothing can have an infinite causal history. I begin by defending a number of plausible metaphysical principles, after which I explore a host of novel variants of the Littlewood-Ross and Thomson’s Lamp paradoxes that violate such principles. I argue that causal finitism is the best solution to the paradoxes.
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  39.  26
    Testing the Swerdlow/Koob model of schizophrena pathophysiology using positron emission tomography.Joseph C. Wu, Benjamin V. Siegel, Richard J. Haier & Monte S. Buchsbaum - 1990 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 13 (1):168-170.
  40.  16
    The Piety of the English Deists: Their Personal Relationship with an Active God.Joseph Waligore - 2012 - Intellectual History Review 22 (2):181-197.
  41.  20
    Text analysis shows conceptual overlap as well as domain-specific differences in Christian and secular worldviews.Joseph Watts, Sam Passmore, Joshua Conrad Jackson, Christoph Rzymski & Robin I. M. Dunbar - 2020 - Cognition 201 (C):104290.
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  42.  2
    Book Review: Wayward Reproductions: Genealogies of Race and Nation in Transatlantic Modern Thought by Alys Even Weinbaum. [REVIEW]Susan Squier - 2007 - Hypatia 22 (2):194-196.
  43. Branching actualism and cosmological arguments.Joseph C. Schmid & Alex Malpass - 2023 - Philosophical Studies 180 (7):1951-1973.
    We draw out significant consequences of a relatively popular theory of metaphysical modality—branching actualism—for cosmological arguments for God’s existence. According to branching actualism, every possible world shares an initial history with the actual world and diverges only because causal powers (or dispositions, or some such) are differentially exercised. We argue that branching actualism undergirds successful responses to two recent cosmological arguments: the Grim Reaper Kalam argument and a modal argument from contingency. We also argue that branching actualism affords a response (...)
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  44.  20
    Towards a rational philosophical anthropology.Joseph Agassi - 1977 - The Hague: M. Nijhoff.
    The thesis of the present volume is critical and dual. (1) Present day philosophy of man and sciences of man suffer from the Greek mis taken polarization of everything human into nature and convention which is (allegedly) good and evil, which is (allegedly) truth and fal sity, which is (allegedly) rationality and irrationality, to wit, the polar ization of all fields of inquiry, the natural and social sciences, as well as ethics and all technology, whether natural or social, into the (...)
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  45. Benardete Paradoxes, Causal Finitism, and the Unsatisfiable Pair Diagnosis.Joseph C. Schmid & Alex Malpass - forthcoming - Mind.
    We examine two competing solutions to Benardete paradoxes: causal finitism, according to which nothing can have infinitely many causes, and the unsatisfiable pair diagnosis (UPD), according to which such paradoxes are logically impossible and no metaphysical thesis need be adopted to avoid them. We argue that the UPD enjoys notable theoretical advantages over causal finitism. Causal finitists, however, have levelled two main objections to the UPD. First, they urge that the UPD requires positing a ‘mysterious force’ that prevents paradoxes from (...)
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  46.  17
    On the formal arguments of the akutobhayā.Joseph Walser - 1998 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 26 (3):189-232.
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  47.  41
    Commitment and Partialism in the Ethics of Care.Joseph Walsh - 2017 - Hypatia 32 (4):817-832.
    It is plausible to think that practices of caring are partly constituted by a caregiver's commitment to a cared-for. However, discussions of caring often contain no explicit discussion of such commitments, and do not attempt to draw any philosophical conclusions from the nature of caring relations as committed. A discussion of caring practices that emphasizes the importance of commitment therefore has the potential to generate important new insights for our understanding of caring. This essay begins that project by arguing that (...)
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  48.  31
    The challenge of community engagement and informed consent in rural Zambia: an example from a pilot study.Joseph Mumba Zulu, Ingvild Fossgard Sandøy, Karen Marie Moland, Patrick Musonda, Ecloss Munsaka & Astrid Blystad - 2019 - BMC Medical Ethics 20 (1):45.
    There is a need for empirically based research on social and ethical challenges related to informed consent processes, particularly in studies focusing on adolescent sexual and reproductive health. In a pilot study of a school-based pregnancy prevention intervention in rural Zambia, the majority of the guardians who were asked to consent to their daughters’ participation, refused. In this paper we explore the reasons behind the low participation in the pilot with particular attention to challenges related to the community engagement and (...)
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  49. Experience and self-consciousness.Joseph Schear - 2009 - Philosophical Studies 144 (1):95 - 105.
    Does all conscious experience essentially involve self-consciousness? In his Subjectivity and Selfhood: Investigating the First-Person, Dan Zahavi answers “yes”. I criticize three core arguments offered in support of this answer—a well-known regress argument, what I call the “interview argument,” and a phenomenological argument. Drawing on Sartre, I introduce a phenomenological contrast between plain experience and self-conscious experience. The contrast challenges the thesis that conscious experience entails self-consciousness.
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  50. Existential Inertia and Classical Theistic Proofs.Joseph C. Schmid & Daniel J. Linford - 2022 - Cham, Switzerland: Springer.
    This book critically assesses arguments for the existence of the God of classical theism, develops an innovative account of objects’ persistence, and defends new arguments against classical theism. The authors engage the following classical theistic proofs: Aquinas’s First Way, Aquinas’s De Ente argument, and Feser’s Aristotelian, Neo-Platonic, Augustinian, Thomistic, and Rationalist proofs. The authors also provide the first systematic treatment of the ‘existential inertia thesis’. By connecting the thesis to relativity theory and recent developments in the philosophy of physics, and (...)
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