Results for 'Lesley Head'

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  1.  17
    Exploring migrants’ knowledge and skill in seasonal farm work: more than labouring bodies.Natascha Klocker, Olivia Dun, Lesley Head & Ananth Gopal - 2020 - Agriculture and Human Values 37 (2):463-478.
    Migrant farmworkers dominate the horticultural workforce in many parts of the Minority (developed) World. The ‘manual’ work that they do—picking and packing fruits and vegetables, and pruning vines and trees—is widely designated unskilled. In policy, media, academic, activist and everyday discourses, hired farm work is framed as something anybody can do. We interrogate this notion with empirical evidence from the Sunraysia horticultural region of Australia. The region’s grape and almond farms depend heavily on migrant workers. By-and-large, the farmers and farmworkers (...)
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  2.  16
    Lesley Head, Jennifer Atchison and Alison Gates: Ingrained: a human bio-geography of wheat: Ashgate, Burlington, Vermont, 2012, 232pp, ISBN 978-1-4094-3787-1.Hannah Pitt - 2014 - Agriculture and Human Values 31 (2):327-328.
  3. The Nicomachean Ethics.Lesley Brown (ed.) - 2009 - Oxford University Press.
    In the Nicomachean Ethics Aristotle examines the nature of happiness, which he defines as a specially good kind of life. He considers the nature of practical reasoning, friendship, and the role and importance of the moral virtues in the best life. This new edition features a revised translation and valuable new introduction and notes.
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  4.  9
    Nietzsche in Turin: the end of the future.Lesley Chamberlain - 1997 - London: Pushkin Press.
    Beautifully packaged reissue of the vividly lyrical biography of Nietzsche that John Banville called 'a major intellectual event' In 1888, philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche moved to Turin. This would be the year in which he wrote three of his greatest works: Twilight of the Idols, The Antichrist, and Ecce Homo; it would also be his last year of writing. He suffered a debilitating nervous breakdown in the first days of the following year. In this probing, elegant biography of that pivotal year, (...)
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  5. Cultural evolution and the shaping of cultural diversity.Lesley Newson, Peter Richerson & Robert Boyd - 2007 - Handbook of Cultural Psychology.
    This chapter focuses on the way that cultures change and how cultural diversity is created, maintained and lost. Human culture is the inevitable result of the way our species acquires its behavior. We are extremely social animals and an overwhelming proportion of our behavior is socially learned. The behavior of other animals is largely a product of innate evolved determinants of behavior combined with individual learning. They make quite modest use of social learning while we acquire a massive cultural repertoire (...)
     
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  6.  6
    Reading Winnicott.Lesley Caldwell & Angela Joyce (eds.) - 2011 - Routledge.
    _Reading Winnicott_ brings together a selection of papers by the psychoanalyst and paediatrician Donald Winnicott, providing an insight into his work and charting its impact on the well-being of mothers, babies, children and families. With individual introductions summarising the key features of each of Winnicott’s papers this book not only offers an overview of Winnicott’s work, but also links it with Freud and later theorists. Areas of discussion include: the relational environment and the place of infantile sexuality aggression and destructiveness (...)
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  7.  43
    Aesthetic Implicitness in Sport and the Role of Aesthetic Concepts.Lesley Wright - 2003 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 30 (1):83-92.
  8.  24
    Environmental enrichment may protect against hippocampal atrophy in the chronic stages of traumatic brain injury.Lesley S. Miller, Brenda Colella, David Mikulis, Jerome Maller & Robin E. A. Green - 2013 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 7.
  9.  32
    Paths That Wind through the Thicket of Things.Lesley Stern - 2001 - Critical Inquiry 28 (1):317-354.
  10.  13
    Complementary Specializations of the Left and Right Sides of the Honeybee Brain.Lesley J. Rogers & Giorgio Vallortigara - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    Honeybees show lateral asymmetry in both learning about odours associated with reward and recalling memory of these associations. We have extended this research to show that bees exhibit lateral biases in their initial response to odours: viz., turning towards the source of an odour presented on their right side and turning away from it when presented on their left side. The odours we presented were the main component of the alarm pheromone, iso-amyl acetate (IAA), and four floral scents. The significant (...)
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  11. Reviews of Bibliographies.Lesley Gordon, Ernst Lehner & Johanna Lehner - 2003 - ANQ: A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes and Reviews 16 (1):43.
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  12.  8
    Bioinformational philosophy and postdigital knowledge ecologies.Lesley Gourlay - forthcoming - Educational Philosophy and Theory.
    I volunteered to review this book as an act of self-discipline in order to ensure I read it with the sort of close attention that a review requires. This was not because I regarded myself as famili...
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  13.  7
    ‘No more than three, please!’: restrictions on race and romance.Lesley Lokko - 2019 - Feminist Theory 20 (2):133-140.
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  14.  38
    The Case of M and D in Context: Iris Murdoch, Stanley Cavell and Moral Teaching and Learning.Lesley Jamieson - 2020 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 54 (2):425-448.
    Iris Murdoch's famous case of M and D illustrates the moral importance of learning to see others in a more favourable light through renewed attention. Yet if we do not read this case in the wider context of Murdoch's work, we are liable to overlook the attitudes and transformations involved in coming to change one's mind as M does. Stanley Cavell offers one such reading and denies that the case represents a change in M's sense of herself or the possibilities (...)
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  15.  31
    Ethical foundations: A new framework for reliable financial reporting.Lesley Greer & Alyson Tonge - 2006 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 15 (3):259–270.
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  16. What is “the mean relative to us” in Aristotle's Ethics?”.Lesley Brown - 1997 - Phronesis 42 (1):77-93.
  17.  93
    The Sophist on statements, predication, and falsehood.Lesley Brown - 2008 - In Gail Fine (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Plato. Oxford University Press. pp. 437--62.
    Of the later dialogues of Plato, the Sophists stand out. This article highlights the concept of sophist as propounded by Plato. A didactic approach runs through the text. Socrates harps on the relation between sophist, philosopher and a statesman. Are they three different or they are the same. The basic idea that Plato wants to convey is, both features highlight some of the key enigmas of the dialogue: What is the relation between the outer and middle parts? How seriously are (...)
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  18.  89
    Ubuntu, ukama, environment and moral education.Lesley Le Grange - 2012 - Journal of Moral Education 41 (3):329-340.
    This article outlines a moral education guided by African traditional values such as ubuntu and ukama. It argues that ubuntu is not by definition speciesist, as some have claimed, but that it has strong ecocentric leanings, that is, if ubuntu is understood as a concrete expression of ukama. In fact, ubuntu deconstructs the anthropocentric?ecocentric distinction which has characterised and continues to characterise debates in environmental theory/philosophy. To become more fully human does not mean caring only for the self and other (...)
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  19.  37
    Recollection and Experience.Lesley Brown & Dominic Scott - 1995 - Philosophical Review 106 (2):270.
    Who were the true forerunners of the seventeenth-century theorists of innate ideas? Credit should go, not to Plato, despite the common label Platonist, but to the Stoics—or so this challenging new study claims. Plato’s celebrated doctrine of knowledge as recollection differed from these others’ theories not merely in its extravagant postulate of a prenatal knowing state but in many hitherto unrecognized ways, Scott argues. Among those who shared the belief that all men are endowed at birth with considerable epistemological resources, (...)
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  20.  27
    Transcendent and Immanent Eternity in Anselm’s Monologion.Lesley-Anne Dyer - 2010 - Filosofia Unisinos 11 (3):261-286.
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  21.  10
    Using QALYs to allocate resources: A critique of some objections.Lesley McTurk - 1994 - Monash Bioethics Review 13 (1):22-33.
  22.  45
    Doubt & Inquiry: Peirce and Descartes Revisited.Lesley Friedman - 1999 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 35 (4):724 - 746.
  23.  26
    Dying on the front page: Kent state and the pulitzer prize.Lesley Wischmann - 1987 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 2 (2):67 – 74.
    A non?journalist, non?academic examines problems of privacy for innocent victims of news events through the example of John Filo's 1971 Pulitzer Prize photograph of Jeff Miller's body after the killing of four students at Kent State University. The author suggests that photojournalists have responsibility for the publication uses of their photographs, both at the time of first publication and through the years, and argues that photographs which intrude on victims? privacy should never be used for advertising purposes.
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  24.  90
    Pragmatism: The Unformulated Method of Bishop Berkeley.Lesley Friedman - 2003 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 41 (1):81-96.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 41.1 (2003) 81-96 [Access article in PDF] Pragmatism:The Unformulated Method of Bishop Berkeley Lesley Friedman 1. Introduction THOUGH WELL KNOWN AS A SCIENTIST, logician, and metaphysician, Charles Sanders Peirce is perhaps best remembered as the founder of Pragmatism. Surprisingly, Peirce attributes this way of thinking—often taken as a uniquely American contribution—to Bishop George Berkeley. According to Pierce, Berkeley should be regarded as (...)
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  25. Being in the Sophist: a syntactical enquiry.Lesley Brown - 1986 - Oxford Studies in Ancient Philosophy 4:49-70.
     
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  26. Editorial—Client Care.Lesley Austen, Bryony Gilbert & Robert Mitchell - 2000 - Legal Ethics 3 (1):10-13.
     
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  27. Ethics in Practice–Instilling Ethics.Lesley Austen, Bryony Gilbert & Robert Mitchell - 1999 - Legal Ethics 2 (2):109-112.
     
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  28. Ethics in practice & Modernising Duties.Lesley Austen, Bryony Gilbert, Jackie Heath & Robert Mitchell - 1999 - Legal Ethics 2 (1):5-10.
     
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  29.  6
    Professional values in nursing.Lesley Baillie - 2015 - Boca Raton: CRC Press, Taylor & Francis Group. Edited by Sharon Black.
    This practical guide explores professional values in nursing, helping you to develop safe, compassionate, person-centred and evidence-based practice. The fundamental values of equality, anti-discriminatory practice and caring are discussed throughout. Chapters explore person-centred and holistic nursing care. They discuss working in partnership with people and families and working in partnership within the interprofessional team. The book explores vulnerability and safeguarding, challenging poor practice and promoting best practice. Chapters are mapped to NMC Standards for Pre-registration Nursing Education. Strong evidence base to (...)
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  30.  5
    Nietzsche in Turin: an intimate biography.Lesley Chamberlain - 1996 - New York: Picador USA.
    A personal glimpse into the life of one of the most influential twentieth-century philosophers covers his involvement with the existentialist movement and false accusations associating him with Hitler and Nazism.
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  31. Learner developed case studies on ethics collaborative reflection between school librarians and education technology learners : learner developed case studies on ethics.Lesley Farmer - 2019 - In Ashley Blackburn, Irene Linlin Chen & Rebecca Pfeffer (eds.), Emerging trends in cyber ethics and education. Hershey, PA: Information Science Reference.
     
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  32.  16
    Cut and paste.Lesley Lokko - 2014 - Technoetic Arts 12 (2):219-236.
    mim•ic•ry (n.pl.mim•ic•ries) 1. (a) the art, practice, or art of mimicking; (b) an instance of mimicking. 2. Biology: The resemblance of one organism to another, or to an object in its surroundings for concealment and protection from predators. In evolutionary biology, mimicry is a similarity of one species to another, which protects one or both. This similarity can be in appearance, behaviour, sound, scent or location. Mimics are typically found in the same areas as their models. The pervasive condition of (...)
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  33.  6
    A Spirituality for Justice: The Enemy of Apathy.Lesley Orr Macdonald - 2000 - Feminist Theology 8 (23):13-21.
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  34.  20
    Transforming university curriculum policies in a global knowledge era: mapping a “global case study” research agenda.Lesley Vidovich, Thomas O’Donoghue & Malcolm Tight - 2012 - Educational Studies 38 (3):283-295.
    Radical curriculum policy transformations are emerging as a key strategy of universities across different countries as they move to strengthen their competitive position in a global knowledge era. This paper puts forward a ?global case study? research agenda in the under-researched area of university curriculum policy. The particular curriculum policies to be investigated point to potentially new forms of liberal education, and they resonate in varying degrees with contemporary patterns in Europe as well as longer standing patterns in the United (...)
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  35. The verb "to be" in greek philosophy.Lesley Brown - 1994 - In Stephen Everson (ed.), Language. Cambridge University Press.
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  36.  14
    Bodies, Commodities, and Biotechnologies: Death, Mourning, and Scientific Desire in the Realm of Human Organ Transfer.Lesley Alexandra Sharp - 2006 - Cambridge University Press.
    In the United States today, the human body defines a lucrative site of reusable parts, ranging from whole organs to minuscule and even microscopic tissues. Although the medical practices that enable the transfer of parts from one body to another most certainly relieve suffering and extend lives, they have also irrevocably altered perceptions of the cultural values assigned to the body. Organ transfer is rich terrain to investigate—especially in the American context, where sophisticated technological interventions have significantly shaped understandings of (...)
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  37.  37
    "Good Fences Make Good Neighbors": Geography as Self-Definition in Early Modern England.Lesley Cormack - 1991 - Isis 82 (4):639-661.
  38.  7
    Can Microfinance Work?: How to Improve its Ethical Balance and Effectiveness.Lesley Sherratt - 2016 - Oxford University Press USA.
    Microfinance began with the noble aim of alleviating poverty through the extension of small loans to poor borrowers, and has grown to now serve approximately 200,000,000 people-the majority of whom are female. Yet despite claims to the contrary, the practice has not been proven to have succeeded in either enriching or empowering its borrowers. In a thorough-going ethical assessment of the industry, Can Microfinance Work? examines the central microfinance model and whether or not it is effective, the extent to which (...)
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  39. Being in the Sophist: A Syntactical Enquiry.Lesley Brown - 1999 - In Gail Fine (ed.), Plato, Volume 1: Metaphysics and Epistemology. Oxford University Press.
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  40.  17
    The relationship between theory and measurement in evaluations of palliative care services.Lesley F. Degner, Paul D. Henteleff & Carol Ringer - forthcoming - Journal of Palliative Care.
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  41.  28
    C. S. Peirce's Transcendental and Immanent Realism.Lesley Friedman - 1995 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 31 (2):374 - 392.
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  42. C. S. Peirce's Final Realism: An Analysis of the Post-1895 Writings on Universals.Lesley A. Friedman - 1993 - Dissertation, State University of New York at Buffalo
    My focus in this work is on giving an analysis of Peirce's post-1895 remarks about realism and the realism/nominalism debate. I argue that there is a consistent position to be found in these writings, yet in order to understand his position we must look not only at Peirce's remarks on realism, but also to the various themes connected with his realism, viz. to his discussion of the categories, pragmatism, and opposing views. ;From Peirce's direct remarks on realism we learn that (...)
     
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  43. Minutes of the Business Meeting Charles Sanders Peirce Society 29 December 1997.Lesley Friedman - 1998 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 34 (3):803-806.
     
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  44.  11
    Genetic solutions to cultural problems?Lesley Newson & Peter J. Richerson - 2022 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 45:e172.
    In theory, observed correlations between genetic information and behaviour might be useful to members of the WEIRD (western, educated, industrialized, rich, and democratic) populations. Guiding young people to choose educational opportunities that best match their abilities would benefit both the individual and society. In practice, however, such choices are far more profoundly limited by the culture people have inherited than their genes.
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  45.  24
    Less restricted mating, low contact with Kin, and the role of culture.Lesley Newson & Tom Postmes - 2005 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (2):291-292.
    On the basis of a reinterpretation of the International Sexuality Description Project (ISDP) data, we suggest that findings are consistent with the view that human reproductive behaviour is largely under social control. Behaviours associated with a high Sociosexual Orientation Index (SOI) may be part of a progressive change in reproductive behaviour initiated by the dispersal of kin that occurs as societies modernize.
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  46.  6
    Bitten from Behind: Babies, Big Institutions, and Backlash.Lesley Northup - 1998 - Feminist Theology 6 (17):103-120.
    Although the backlash is not an organized movement, that doesn't make it any less destructive. In fact, the lack of orchestration, the absence of a single string-puller, only makes it harder to see—and perhaps more effective... In the last decade, the backlash has moved through the culture's secret chambers, traveling through passageways of flattery and fear. Along the way, it has adopted disguises: a mask of mild derision or the painted face of deep 'concern'.1.
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  47. Memories that don't seem mine.Lesley Stern - 2011 - In Alex Clayton & Andrew Klevan (eds.), The Language and Style of Film Criticism. Routledge.
     
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  48.  52
    Complexity and educational research: A critical reflection.Lesley Kuhn - 2008 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 40 (1):177–189.
    Judgements concerning proper or appropriate educational endeavour, methods of investigation and philosophising about education necessarily implicate perspectives, values, assumptions and beliefs. In recent years ideas from the complexity sciences have been utilised in many domains including psychology, economics, architecture, social science and education. This paper addresses questions concerning the appropriateness of utilising complexity science in educational research as well as issues relating to the ways in which complexity might be engaged. I suggest that, just like all human endeavour, approaches to (...)
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  49.  12
    Complexity and Educational Research: A critical reflection.Lesley Kuhn - 2008 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 40 (1):177-189.
    Judgements concerning proper or appropriate educational endeavour, methods of investigation and philosophising about education necessarily implicate perspectives, values, assumptions and beliefs. In recent years ideas from the complexity sciences have been utilised in many domains including psychology, economics, architecture, social science and education. This paper addresses questions concerning the appropriateness of utilising complexity science in educational research as well as issues relating to the ways in which complexity might be engaged. I suggest that, just like all human endeavour, approaches to (...)
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  50.  11
    Authority... of popes and saints.Lesley Potter - 1995 - The Australasian Catholic Record 72 (2):157.
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