Results for 'Sir Joseph Banks'

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  1. An Historiographical Perspective.David Philip Miller & Sir Joseph Banks - forthcoming - History of Science.
     
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  2.  38
    A Letter of Sir Joseph Banks Describing the Life of Daniel Solander.Roy Rauschenberg & Joseph Banks - 1964 - Isis 55 (1):62-67.
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  3.  9
    Sir Joseph Banks. His Relations with Australia. George Mackaness.Charles A. Kofoid - 1938 - Isis 28 (1):116-116.
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  4.  41
    Sir Joseph Banks : A Guide to Biographical and Bibliographical Sources. Harold B. Carter.David Philip Miller - 1990 - Isis 81 (4):811-812.
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  5.  11
    Sir Joseph Banks : A Guide to Biographical and Bibliographical Sources by Harold B. Carter. [REVIEW]David Miller - 1990 - Isis 81:811-812.
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  6.  20
    Essay Review: Sir Joseph Banks: An Historiographical Perspective: The Sheep and Wool Correspondence of Sir Joseph Banks 1781–1820, Sir Joseph Banks: 18th Century Explorer, Botanist and EntrepreneurThe Sheep and Wool Correspondence of Sir Joseph Banks 1781–1820. Edited by CarterHarold B. , London, 1979). Pp. xxx + 641. £35.Sir Joseph Banks: 18th Century Explorer, Botanist and Entrepreneur. LyteCharles . Pp. 248. £10.50. [REVIEW]David Philip Miller - 1981 - History of Science 19 (4):284-292.
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  7.  12
    Biography Charles Lyte, Sir Joseph Banks: Eighteenth Century Explorer, Botanist and Entrepreneur, Newton Abbot: David and Charles. 1980. Pp. 248. £10.50. [REVIEW]Michael Neve - 1983 - British Journal for the History of Science 16 (1):105-106.
  8.  6
    The Letters of Sir Joseph Banks: A Selection, 1768–1820. [REVIEW]Paul Wood - 2005 - Isis 96:651-651.
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  9.  11
    The Letters of Sir Joseph Banks: A Selection, 1768–1820. [REVIEW]David Miller - 2002 - British Journal for the History of Science 35 (2):213-250.
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  10.  19
    Sir Hans Sloane and the British Museum by G. R. De Beer; Sir Joseph Banks, the Autocrat of the Philosophers by Hector Charles Cameron.I. Cohen - 1954 - Isis 45:215-218.
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  11.  13
    Neil Chambers . The Scientific Correspondence of Sir Joseph Banks, 1765–1820. Volumes 1–6. . London: Pickering & Chatto Publishers, 2007. £595, $995. [REVIEW]John Gascoigne - 2008 - Isis 99 (2):404-406.
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  12.  15
    Neil Chambers . The Letters of Sir Joseph Banks: A Selection, 1768–1820. Foreword by, David Mabberley. Introduction by, Harold Carter. xlvi + 420 pp., illus., maps, bibl., index. London: Imperial College Press, 2000. [REVIEW]Paul Wood - 2005 - Isis 96 (4):651-651.
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  13.  16
    Neil Chambers , the letters of sir Joseph Banks: A selection, 1768–1820. London: Imperial college press, 2001. Pp. xliii+420. Isbn 1-86094-204-0. £33.00. [REVIEW]David Philip Miller - 2002 - British Journal for the History of Science 35 (2):213-250.
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  14.  8
    Neil Chambers . The Indian and Pacific Correspondence of Sir Joseph Banks, 1768–1820. Volume 7. 608 pp. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2013. £100 .Neil Chambers . The Indian and Pacific Correspondence of Sir Joseph Banks, 1768–1820. Volume 8. 448 pp. London: Pickering & Chatto, 2014. £100. [REVIEW]David Philip Miller - 2015 - Isis 106 (4):924-925.
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  15.  21
    Sir Hans Sloane and the British MuseumG. R. De BeerSir Joseph Banks, the Autocrat of the PhilosophersHector Charles Cameron.I. Bernard Cohen - 1954 - Isis 45 (2):215-218.
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  16. Logisch-Philosophische Studienen.Joseph M. Bochenski, P. Banks, Albert Menne & I. Thomas - 1959 - Alber.
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  17. Arhem, Kaj 110 Arnold, Denise 113 Arvi Sena 149 Asad, T. 22 Atahoe 36–37.E. Balibar, M. Balzer, Joseph Banks, K. Barber, C. Barlow, F. Barth & L. Basch - 1995 - In Richard Fardon (ed.), Counterworks: Managing the Diversity of Knowledge. Routledge.
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  18. Common genetic variants in the CLDN2 and PRSS1-PRSS2 loci alter risk for alcohol-related and sporadic pancreatitis.David C. Whitcomb, Jessica LaRusch, Alyssa M. Krasinskas, Lambertus Klei, Jill P. Smith, Randall E. Brand, John P. Neoptolemos, Markus M. Lerch, Matt Tector, Bimaljit S. Sandhu, Nalini M. Guda, Lidiya Orlichenko, Samer Alkaade, Stephen T. Amann, Michelle A. Anderson, John Baillie, Peter A. Banks, Darwin Conwell, Gregory A. Coté, Peter B. Cotton, James DiSario, Lindsay A. Farrer, Chris E. Forsmark, Marianne Johnstone, Timothy B. Gardner, Andres Gelrud, William Greenhalf, Jonathan L. Haines, Douglas J. Hartman, Robert A. Hawes, Christopher Lawrence, Michele Lewis, Julia Mayerle, Richard Mayeux, Nadine M. Melhem, Mary E. Money, Thiruvengadam Muniraj, Georgios I. Papachristou, Margaret A. Pericak-Vance, Joseph Romagnuolo, Gerard D. Schellenberg, Stuart Sherman, Peter Simon, Vijay P. Singh, Adam Slivka, Donna Stolz, Robert Sutton, Frank Ulrich Weiss, C. Mel Wilcox, Narcis Octavian Zarnescu, Stephen R. Wisniewski, Michael R. O'Connell, Michelle L. Kienholz, Kathryn Roeder & M. Micha Barmada - unknown
    Pancreatitis is a complex, progressively destructive inflammatory disorder. Alcohol was long thought to be the primary causative agent, but genetic contributions have been of interest since the discovery that rare PRSS1, CFTR and SPINK1 variants were associated with pancreatitis risk. We now report two associations at genome-wide significance identified and replicated at PRSS1-PRSS2 and X-linked CLDN2 through a two-stage genome-wide study. The PRSS1 variant likely affects disease susceptibility by altering expression of the primary trypsinogen gene. The CLDN2 risk allele is (...)
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  19.  84
    Book reviews and notices. [REVIEW]Nitin Trasi, Francis X. Clooney, Maria Hibbets, George Cronk, Brian A. Hatcher, Robin Rinehart, Karen Pechilis Prentiss, Hal W. French, Francis X. Clooney, Lisa Bellantoni, Frank J. Korom, Robert Menzies, Constantina Rhodes Bailly, Gavin Flood, Rebecca J. Manring, Loriliai Biernacki, Brian K. Pennington, John Grimes, Richard D. MacPhail, Glenn Wallis, John J. Thatamanil, John Grimes, Thomas Forsthoefel, Denise Cush, Yasmin Saikia, Joseph A. Bracken, Lise F. Vail, Jacqueline Suthren Hirst, Judson B. Trapnell, Ellison Banks Findly, Paul Waldau, D. L. Johnson & John Grimes - 2000 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 4 (1):61-107.
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  20. Book reviews. [REVIEW]Werner Menski, Carl Olson, William Cenkner, Anne E. Monius, Sarah Hodges, Jeffrey J. Kripal, Carol Salomon, Deepak Sarma, William Cenkner, John E. Cort, Peter A. Huff, Joseph A. Bracken, Larry D. Shinn, Jonathan S. Walters, Ellison Banks Findly, John Grimes, Loriliai Biernacki, David L. Gosling, Thomas Forsthoefel, Michael H. Fisher, Ian Barrow, Srimati Basu, Natalie Gummer, Pradip Bhattacharya, John Grimes, Heather T. Frazer, Elaine Craddock, Andrea Pinkney, Joseph Schaller, Michael W. Myers, Lise F. Vail, Wayne Howard, Bradley B. Burroughs, Shalva Weil, Joseph A. Bracken, Christopher W. Gowans, Dan Cozort, Katherine Janiec Jones, Carl Olson, M. D. McLean, A. Whitney Sanford, Sarah Lamb, Eliza F. Kent, Ashley Dawson, Amir Hussain, John Powers, Jennifer B. Saunders & Ramdas Lamb - 2005 - International Journal of Hindu Studies 9 (1-3):153-228.
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  21.  21
    The Machinery of Government: Public Administration and the Liberal State.Joseph Heath - 2020 - Oup Usa.
    In most liberal democracies for example, the central bank is as independent as the supreme court, yet deals with a wide range of economic, social, and political issues. How do these public servants make these policy decisions? What normative principles inform their judgments? In The Machinery of Government, Joseph Heath attempts to answer these questions. He looks to the actual practice of public administration to see how normative questions are addressed. More broadly, he attempts to provide the outlines of (...)
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  22.  56
    A leg to stand on: Sir William Osler and Wilder penfield's "neuroethics".Joseph J. Fins - 2008 - American Journal of Bioethics 8 (1):37 – 46.
    If ever I summon before me my highest ideals of men and medicine, I find them sprung from the spirit of Osler. —Wilder Penfield, M.D. Neuroethics is a recently coined term that is shaping our cultu...
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  23.  11
    Rationality: the critical view.Joseph Agassi & I. C. Jarvie (eds.) - 1987 - Hingham, MA, USA: Distributors for the U.S. and Canada, Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    In our papers on the rationality of magic, we distinghuished, for purposes of analysis, three levels of rationality. First and lowest (rationalitYl) the goal directed action of an agent with given aims and circumstances, where among his circumstances we included his knowledge and opinions. On this level the magician's treatment of illness by incantation is as rational as any traditional doctor's blood-letting or any modern one's use of anti-biotics. At the second level (rationalitY2) we add the element of rational thinking (...)
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  24.  15
    A memorandum from the Russian Jews in Safed and Tiberias to Sir Moses Montefiore.Joseph Hoffman - 1985 - Nordisk judaistik/Scandinavian Jewish Studies 6 (2):75-83.
    In Albert M. Hyamson’s invaluable reference work “The British Consulate in Jerusalem in relation to the Jews in Palestine 1838–1914” a letter from Sir Moses Montefiore is quoted. Montefiore was at that time President of the London committee of Deputies of the British Jews. The letter is addressed to Earl Russell, the Foreign Secretary, and in this letter Montefiore mentions that he is enclosing a Memorial from the Jewish Communities in Safed and Tiberias, complaining about the deplorable condition in which (...)
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  25.  39
    The Anatomy of a Murder: Who Killed America's Economy?Joseph E. Stiglitz - 2009 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 21 (2-3):329-339.
    ABSTRACT The main cause of the crisis was the behavior of the banks—largely a result of misguided incentives unrestrained by good regulation. Conservative ideology, along with unrealistic economic models of perfect information, perfect competition, and perfect markets, fostered lax regulation, and campaign contributions helped the political process along. The banks misjudged risk, wildly overleveraged, and paid their executives handsomely for being short‐sighted; lax regulation let them get away with it—putting at risk the entire economy. The mortgage brokers neglected (...)
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  26.  4
    The Letters and Papers of Sir John Hill . G. S. Rousseau.Joseph H. Kiefer - 1983 - Isis 74 (1):134-135.
  27. To save verisimilitude.Joseph Agassi - 1981 - Mind 90 (360):576-579.
    JOSEPH AGASSI 1. Sir Karl Popper has offered two different theories of scientific progress, his theory of conjectures and refutations and corroboration, as well as his theory of verisimilitude increase. The former was attacked by some old-fashioned inductivists, yet is triumphant; the latter has been refuted by Tichy and by Miller to Popper’s own satisfaction. Oddly, however, the theory of verisimilitude was developed because of some deficiency in the theory of corroboration, and though in its present precise formulation it (...)
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  28.  20
    Setting the Record Straight: An Episode in the Life of Sir William Withey Gull.Joseph Herman - 1999 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 42 (4):507-511.
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  29.  9
    Once and Future Clinical Neuroethics: A History of What Was and What Might Be.Joseph J. Fins - 2019 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 30 (1):27-34.
    While neuroethics is generally thought to be a modern addition to the broader field of bioethics, this subdiscipline has existed in clinical practice throughout the course of the 20th century. In this essay, Fins describes an older tradition of clinical neuroethics that featured such physician-humanists as Sir William Osler, Wilder Penfield, and Fred Plum, whose work and legacy exploring disorders of consciousness is highlighted. Their normative work was clinically grounded and focused on the needs of patients, in contrast to modern (...)
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  30.  78
    Order and Life. By Joseph Needham, Fellow of Gonville and Caius College, and Sir William Dunn Reader in Biochemistry, Cambridge. (London: Cambridge University Press. 1936. Pp. x + 178. Price 8s. 6d. net.). [REVIEW]H. W. B. Joseph - 1938 - Philosophy 13 (49):93-.
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  31.  78
    The last refuge of the scoundrel.Joseph Agassi - 1974 - Philosophia 4 (2-3):315-317.
    Patriotism is a form of loyalty. The range of loyalty is from patriotism to friendship. Liberals were often accused of having no sense of loyalty. They usually tend to deny the charge — even while refusing to take a loyalty oath. Even the liberal philosopher Sir Karl Popper has claimed (Open Society, i, ch. 10), that liberals can be better patriots than others. 1 find this line of defense erroneous and morally wrong. I find it much nicer, much more honest, (...)
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  32.  13
    A Ratiocinative Assessment of A.J. Ayer’s Rejection of Metaphysics.Joseph T. Ekong - 2022 - European Journal of Philosophy Culture and Religion 6 (2):1-15.
    Purpose: This paper aims at exposing and appraising the arguments of A.J. Ayer against metaphysics, as reflected in the first chapter of his book, Language, Truth and Logic. It shall explore the basic assumptions, content and concerns of the metaphysical enterprise, and place them in careful juxtaposition with A.J. Ayer’s positivist assumptions in order to discover whether the claims he makes regarding metaphysics are really valid or not. The conclusion will emphasize the relevance and irrefutability of metaphysics. Methodology: The work (...)
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  33.  2
    Lectures on the method of science.Thomas Banks Strong - 1906 - Oxford,: Clarendon Press. Edited by Thomas Cass, Francis Gotch, Charles Scott Sherrington, Walter Frank Raphael Weldon, William McDougall, Alfred Henry Fison, Richard Carnac Temple & W. M. Flinders Petrie.
    I. Scientific method as a mental operation [by] T. Case.--II. On some aspects of the scientific method [by] F. Gotch.--III. Physiology; its scope and method [by] C. S. Sherrington.--IV. Inheritance in animals and plants [by] W. F. R. Weldon.--V. Psycho-physical method [by] W. McDougall.--VI. The evolution of double stars [by] A. H. Fison.--VII. Anthropology: the evolution of currency and coinage [by] Sir R. C. Temple.--VIII. Archaeological evidence [by] W. M. F. Petrie.--IX. Scientific method as applied to history [by] T. B. (...)
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  34.  55
    Theoretical Bias in Evidence: A Historical Sketch.Joseph Agassi - 1983 - Philosophica 31 (1):7-24.
    The studies of theoretical bias in evidence are these days developed by many clever psychologists, social psychologists, and philosophers. It therefore comes as a surprise to realize that most of the material one can find in the up-to -date literature repeats discoveries which are due to the heroes of the present sketch, namely Galileo Galilei, Sir Francis Bacon, and Robert Boyle; William Whewell, Pierre Duhem, and Karl Popper. We may try to raise scholarly standards by familiarizing ourselves with their ideas (...)
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  35.  50
    How We Got into Analysis, and How to Get out.Joseph Kerman - 1980 - Critical Inquiry 7 (2):311-331.
    It may be objected that musical analysts claim to be working with objective methodologies which leave no place for aesthetic criteria, for the consideration of value. If that were the case, the reluctance of so many writers to subsume analysis under criticism might be understandable. But are these claims true? Are they, indeed, even seriously entered?Certainly the original masters of analysis left no doubt that for them analysis was an essential adjunct to a fully articulated aesthetic value system. Heinrich Schenker (...)
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  36.  35
    Music Education that Resonates: An Epistemology and Pedagogy of Sound.Joseph Abramo - 2014 - Philosophy of Music Education Review 22 (1):78.
    Are there qualities of sound and the experience of listening that educators can extrapolate to inform the philosophy and practice of music education? In this essay, I imagine a music education where sound—how it behaves and how we experience it—serves not only as the subject of study, but generates the framework of the pedagogy. A sonic music education is not automatic because ocularcentrism privileges the vision and influences the listening and educational experiences, often in unrecognized ways. I explore two qualities (...)
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  37.  15
    The globalizers: The IMF, the world bank, and their borrowers - by Ngaire Woods.Joseph P. Joyce - 2007 - Ethics and International Affairs 21 (4):485–487.
    Woods is an insightful and thoughtful authority on the Bretton Woods institutions. In this book she examines their activities and focuses on their engagements with Mexico, Russia, and the sub-Saharan African nations.
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  38. Agassi, verisimilitude, P.Joseph Agassi - manuscript
    The idea of verisimilitude is implicit in the writings of Albert Einstein ever since 1905, when he declared the distribution of field energy according to Maxwell's theory an approximation to that according to quantum-radiation theory, and Newtonian kinetic energy an approximation to his relativistic mass-energy. All his life Einstein presented new ideas as yielding older established ones as special cases and first approximations. The news has reached the philosophical community via the writings of Sir Karl Popper half-a-century after Einstein's trailblazing (...)
     
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  39. Can Adults Become Genuinely Bilingual?Joseph Agassi - unknown
    The variety of languages in the world is considered a curse by some, who view the phenomenon as a Tower of Babel. Others consider it the most characteristic quality of human language as opposed to animal languages, which are supposedly species specific. The variety is viewed as a symptom of human caprice, arbitrariness, or dependence on mere historical accident by some; and as a symptom of human freedom and of the creative aspect of language by others. And, of course, the (...)
     
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  40.  37
    Knowledge personal or social.Joseph Agassi - 1998 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 28 (4):522-551.
    Karl Popper's methodology can be seen as the situational logic of research. Popper called his method "Epistemology without a Knowing Subject." It was dismissed as metaphysical by those who refuse to give up an ideal knowing subject (a perfect human inductive processor). This article surveys the failure of modem discussions of this ideal, from the earliest (the writings of Sir Francis Bacon) to the latest (Kripke). The knowing subject exits at last, but leaves behind interesting results. The ideal knowing subject (...)
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  41. Rights and reason.Joseph Agassi - manuscript
    is an unusual phenomenon. The concern with rights different citizens have in different societies is legal rather than philosophical. It is frequently somewhat a technical matter for jurisprudence to decide exactly what rights a citizen has in a given situation and how he might best exercise his rights. Often, to be sure, the legal technicalities involve matters of principle, and if so these should be made explicit. For this, too, there is a need less for philosophy and more for jurisprudence, (...)
     
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  42.  11
    St Petersburg Dialogues: Or Conversations on the Temporal Government of Providence.Joseph de Maistre - 1993 - Mcgill-Queen's University Press.
    Written and set on the banks of the Neva, St Petersburg Dialogues is a startlingly relevant analysis of the human prospect at the end of the twentieth century. As the literary critic George Steiner has remarked, "the age of the Gulag and of Auschwitz, of famine and ubiquitous torture,... nuclear threat, the ecological laying waste of our planet, the leap of endemic, possibly pandemic, illness out of the very matrix of libertarian progress" is exactly what Maistre foretold. In the (...)
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  43.  76
    His sense of an ending in memory of Frank Kermode.Joseph Frank - 2011 - Common Knowledge 17 (3):427-432.
    In this memorial essay on Sir Frank Kermode (1919–2010), the author focuses on his own exchange of views with Kermode during the 1970s. In Kermode's book The Sense of an Ending (1966), he had criticized Frank's essay “Spatial Form in Modern Literature” (1945) as part of a larger critique of what the Romantic-Symbolist tradition of English poetry had become in the twentieth century. Yeats, Pound, Eliot, and other late Symbolists had turned artists into advocates of an irrational wisdom superior to (...)
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  44.  91
    Is Formal Ethics Training Merely Cosmetic? A Study of Ethics Training and Ethical Organizational Culture.Danielle E. Warren, Joseph P. Gaspar & William S. Laufer - 2014 - Business Ethics Quarterly 24 (1):85-117.
    ABSTRACT:U.S. Organizational Sentencing Guidelines provide firms with incentives to develop formal ethics programs to promote ethical organizational cultures and thereby decrease corporate offenses. Yet critics argue such programs are cosmetic. Here we studied bank employees before and after the introduction of formal ethics training—an important component of formal ethics programs—to examine the effects of training on ethical organizational culture. Two years after a single training session, we find sustained, positive effects on indicators of an ethical organizational culture (observed unethical behavior, (...)
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  45.  16
    Banking on Signs.Jean-Joseph Goux & Thomas DiPiero - 1988 - Diacritics 18 (2):15.
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  46.  45
    Is Formal Ethics Training Merely Cosmetic? in advance.Danielle E. Warren, Joseph Gaspar & William S. Laufer - 2014 - Business Ethics Quarterly 24 (1):85-117.
    ABSTRACT:U.S. Organizational Sentencing Guidelines provide firms with incentives to develop formal ethics programs to promote ethical organizational cultures and thereby decrease corporate offenses. Yet critics argue such programs are cosmetic. Here we studied bank employees before and after the introduction of formal ethics training—an important component of formal ethics programs—to examine the effects of training on ethical organizational culture. Two years after a single training session, we find sustained, positive effects on indicators of an ethical organizational culture (observed unethical behavior, (...)
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  47.  28
    Clipped Coins, Abused Words and Civil Government. [REVIEW]Joseph Grange - 1991 - Review of Metaphysics 45 (2):396-397.
    Those accustomed to viewing John Locke as the benign forefather of American Liberalism will be shocked by this book, for Locke was neither benign nor liberal nor even tolerant when it came to serious things in life like money, economic policy, and the Bank of England. In this careful and exhaustive study of Locke's philosophy of money, Caffentzis details the ways in which Locke sought to replace the concept of God, State, Law, and other ultimates with a much more empirically (...)
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  48. Does Marketing Activity Contribute to a Society’s Well-Being? The Role of Economic Efficiency.M. Joseph Sirgy, Grace B. Yu, Dong-Jin Lee, Shuqin Wei & Ming-Wei Huang - 2012 - Journal of Business Ethics 107 (2):91-102.
    Does the level of marketing activity in a country contribute to societal well-being or quality of life? Does economic efficiency also play a positive role in societal well-being? Does economic efficiency also moderate or mediate the marketing activity effect on societal well-being? Marketing activity refers to the pervasiveness of promotion expenditures and number of retail outlets per capita in a country. Economic efficiency refers to the extent to which the economy is unhampered by corruption, burdensome government regulation, and a large (...)
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  49.  4
    The Globalizers: The IMF, the World Bank, and Their Borrowers, Ngaire Woods (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2006), 264 pp., $29.95 cloth, $18.95 paper. [REVIEW]Joseph P. Joyce - 2007 - Ethics and International Affairs 21 (4):485-487.
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  50.  11
    Not out of MY bank account! Science messaging when climate change policies carry personal financial costs.Janet K. Swim, Nathaniel Geiger & Joseph G. Guerriero - 2022 - Thinking and Reasoning 28 (3):346-374.
    We suggest that policies will be less popular when individuals personally have to pay for them rather than when others have to pay (i.e., a Not Out of My Bank Account or NOMBA effect). Dual process models of persuasion suggest that personally having to pay would motivate scrutiny of persuasive messages making it essential to use effective science communication tactics when using climate science to support climate change policies. A pilot experiment (N = 186) and main study (N = 758) (...)
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