OAI Archive: University of Queensland eSpace

Address: http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/oai.php
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100 entries most recently downloaded from the archive "University of Queensland eSpace"

This set has the following status: partial.
  1. Queensland's Human Rights Act: a new frontier for Australian climate change litigation?Justine Bell-James & Briana Collins - 2020 - University of New South Wales Law Journal 43 (1):3-38.
    In 2019, the Queensland Parliament enacted a Human Rights Act, enshrining, inter alia, the human right to life. The Human Rights Act 2019 presents a timely opportunity to open the next chapter in Australia’s climate change litigation history – a human rights-based climate change case. This article will consider the possible characterisation of such a case, drawing on international experience. Ultimately, it will conclude that a rights-based climate change case is feasible in Queensland, and a successful case would have national (...)
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  2. V-Effekt: death, mortality, and the Melbourne International Arts Festival.Chris Hay - 2014 - Anthropology and Humanism 39 (2):174-183.
    Summary: On 16 October 2009, a friend died. He was the first person I knew of my generation to die. That night, I saw a play in the Melbourne International Arts Festival, one which dealt with the messy realities of sudden death. Almost a year to the day later, I saw another MIAF production about the dangers of holding onto ghosts. They were chaotic, transcendent, heart-stopping experiences. In this paper, I use them to explore my personal engagements with death, grief, (...)
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  3. Just and Unjust Wars: Thirty Years on.Alex J. Bellamy - 2007 - Journal of Military Ethics 6 (2):89-90.
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  4. The psychology of leadership destabilization: an analysis of the 2016 U.S. Presidential Debates.Mazlan Maskor, Niklas K. Steffens & S. Alexander Haslam - forthcoming - Political Psychology.
    When contesting for political office, leaders do not only seek to build their own following but also to engage in attacks to destabilize opponent leaders. However, research has yet to explore and explain the nature of attacks that seek to destabilize a leader's influence. Building on the identity leadership model which sees leadership as flowing from a leader's capacity to promote a sense of shared identity with followers, we argue that a leader can be destabilized if followers come to see (...)
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  5. Understanding climate change with statistical downscaling and machine learning.Julie Jebeile, Vincent Lam & Tim Räz - 2020 - Synthese (1-2):1-21.
    Machine learning methods have recently created high expectations in the climate modelling context in view of addressing climate change, but they are often considered as non-physics-based ‘black boxes’ that may not provide any understanding. However, in many ways, understanding seems indispensable to appropriately evaluate climate models and to build confidence in climate projections. Relying on two case studies, we compare how machine learning and standard statistical techniques affect our ability to understand the climate system. For that purpose, we put five (...)
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  6. Transdisciplinary Generalism: Naming the epistemology and philosophy of the generalist.Johanna M. Lynch, Christopher Dowrick, Pamela Meredith, Sue L. T. McGregor & Mieke van Driel - forthcoming - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice.
    Transdisciplinary research and generalist practice both face the task of integrating and discerning the value of knowledge across disciplinary and sectoral knowledge cultures. Transdisciplinarity and generalism also both offer philosophical and practical insights into the epistemology, ontology, axiology, and logic of seeing the 'whole'. Although generalism is a skill that can be used in many settings from industry to education, the focus of this paper is the literature of the primary care setting. Generalist philosophy and practice in the family medicine (...)
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  7. The other at the threshold: A Husserlian analysis of ethics and violence in the home/alien encounter.Hora Zabarjadisar - 2020 - Dissertation, University of Queensland
    In a world where, as Martin Heidegger puts it, ‘homelessness’ has become its destiny, the colonized/Oriental Other that once exclusively constituted and was neglected from the matrix of the Western imaginary has no longer maintained its distance as ‘out there’. Instead it is embodied as a ‘refugee’ appearing on the borders of the ‘home’ with its complex cultural, colonial history. The majority of refugee studies feature the refugee as the outcome of the interplay of the two concepts of the ‘rights (...)
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  8. Invasion of the cosmic and human machine, or can commonsense prevail? A study of Eric Voegelin.Claire Rawnsleym - 1993 - Proceedings of the University of Queensland History Research Group 3.
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  9. Targeted values: The relevance of classical Chinese philosophy for illegal wildlife demand reduction campaigns.Laura Thomas‐Walters, Hubert Cheung, Tien Ming Lee, Anita Kar Yan Wan & Yifu Wang - forthcoming - People and Nature.
    The illegal wildlife trade is a global conservation priority, prompting a rise in interventions aimed at reducing the demand for wildlife products. Research shows that designing campaigns to target the values held by a specific audience is an effective way to alter their behaviour. However, many demand reduction campaigns are grounded in the perspective of Western morality. This is problematic when the recipients of these campaigns frequently reside in East Asia, where they are exposed to the historical and cultural praxis (...)
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  10. The Morality of Security: A Theory of Just Securitization.Matt McDonald - 2020 - Ethics and International Affairs 34 (2).
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  11. Anarchism, critical theory and emancipation: towards the realisation of an ideal speech situation.Morgan Rodgers Gibson - 2020 - Dissertation, University of Queensland
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  12. A common model is essential for a cumulative science of wisdom.Igor Grossmann, Nic M. Weststrate, Michel Ferrari & Justin P. Brienza - 2020 - Psychological Inquiry 31 (2).
    We have introduced a common wisdom model to establish a shared language, clarify underlying theoretical assumptions, advance assessment tools, and foster evidence-based interventions for stimulating wisdom during challenging societal times. The common wisdom model synthesizes the views of numerous contemporary scientists working on wisdom and includes two components: perspectival meta-cognition and moral aspirations. Having received insightful commentaries on our model, here we consider the overall motivation for the model, address remaining jingle-jangle fallacies, clarify the meaning of morality for wisdom, and (...)
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  13. The volatility of collective action: theoretical analysis and empirical data.Winnifred Louis, Emma Thomas, Craig McGarty, Morgana Lizzio-Wilson, Catherine Amiot & Fathali Moghaddam - 2020 - Political Psychology 41 (S1).
    Collective action is volatile: characterized by swift, unexpected changes in intensity, target, and forms. We conduct a detailed exploration of four reasons that these changes occur. First, action is about identities which are fluid, contested, and multifaceted. As the content of groups' identities change, so do the specific norms for the identities. Second, social movements adopt new tactics, or forms of collective action. Tactical changes may arise from changes in identity, but also changes in the target or opponent groups, and (...)
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  14. A postmodern science description of the therapeutic domain.Paul Bernard Gibney - 1993 - Dissertation, University of Queensland
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  15. Reorienting human rights: young Pacific Island people's views and awareness of human rights.Kylie Jayne Anderson - 2006 - Australian Journal of Human Rights 12 (1):157-184.
    This article focuses on the results of a pilot study undertaken on human rights within the Pacific Island region. More than 100 young Pacific Island people were surveyed on their views and knowledge of key human rights instruments and areas. The article reveals the need to reorient perceptions and human rights education within the Pacific Island region.
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  16. The creativity of virtue: Nietzsche’s ethical and aesthetic reflections on the existential tension between singularity and multiplicity.Riccardo Carli - 2020 - Dissertation, University of Queensland
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  17. Women, difference, and ‘Politics’: reconceptualising women’s non-institutional and non-party political activity to identify women’s radical political subjectivities.Belinda Eslick - 2020 - Dissertation, University of Queensland
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  18. Becoming 'unemployed': Mapping and (re)constituting subjectivity within ​​​​​​​jobactive.Rose-Marie Stambe - unknown
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  19. “Duck and Green Peas! For Ever!” Finding Utopia in Tasmania.Bill Metcalf - 2019 - Utopian Studies 30 (2):358-360.
  20. Editors's Introduction.Alex J. Bellamy - 2007 - Journal of Military Ethics 6 (2):89-90.
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  21. Spiritual wisdom of Taoism in business: through the lens of interpretation realism in a Cisco end-to-end case study.Peter Sun San Wong, Philip Arthur Neck & Bernard McKenna - 2013 - Purushartha: A Journal of Management Ethics and Spirituality 6 (1):1-20.
    This paper explores how the amalgamated wisdom of East and West can instigate a wisdombased renaissance of humanistic epistemology to provide a platform of harmony in managing knowledge-worker productivity, one of the biggest management challenges of the 21st century. The paper invites further discussions from the social and business research communities on the significance of "interpretation realism" technique in comprehending philosophies of Lao Tzu Confucius and Sun Tzu in today's knowledgebased economy. Interpretation Realism will be applied to an analysis of (...)
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  22. Introduction: The Persona of the Philosopher in the Eighteenth Century.Conal Condren, Stephen Gaukroger & Ian Hunter - 2008 - Intellectual History Review 18 (3):315-317.
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  23. Metaphysical film and television: the aesthetic experience of abstract reality.Matthew Cipa - 2020 - Dissertation, University of Queensland
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  24. Mortalism and the making of heterodoxy in seventeenth-century England.Michelle Maree Pfeffer - 2020 - Dissertation, University of Queensland
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  25. Mumble, Abyss.Mark Cutler - unknown
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  26. Roger Clegg, principal investigator, and eric tatham, developer. Reconstructing the rose: 3D computer modelling Philip Henslowe’s playhouse. other.Joanne Tompkins - 2020 - Renaissance and Reformation 43 (1):177-180.
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  27. Building bodies, constructing selves: The architecture of the fitness gymnasium.Sandra Kaji-O’Grady & Sarah Manderson - 2019 - Footprint 13 (2):7-24.
    Fitness gymnasiums shape subjects and establish communities. The extraordinary rise in the number of high-end, architect-designed fitness gymnasiums responds to, and accelerates market demand as individuals adapt to societal expectations. Yet going to the gym is not experienced as an external directive. It is felt as a desire to be one’s best, to live fully, to succeed. The central role played by design is to produce the desire to voluntarily subject oneself to regimes of self-control and self-transformation. This article looks (...)
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  28. A manifesto for Reality-based Safety Science.Andrew Rae, David Provan, Hossam Aboelssaad & Rob Alexander - 2020 - Safety Science 126.
    In the field of safety science, we have stopped competing empirically. The theorists fight each other with keynotes and editorials, the empiricists tinker within the boundaries of existing theory, and the practitioners use neither theory nor evidence to determine their activities. As a result, safety science is advancing very slowly, despite a high and increasing volume of research activity and publication. The journal Safety Science alone has published over a thousand articles in the past five years and has rejected over (...)
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  29. Approaching the Roman ‘imperial cult’ - (g.) McIntyre imperial cult. Pp. VI + 88. leiden and boston: Brill, 2019. Paper, €70, us$84. Isbn: 978-90-04-39836-8.Ryan W. Strickler - 2020 - The Classical Review 70 (1):185-187.
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  30. Epistemological siblings: seven reasons to teach ethnography in social work education.Philip Gillingham & Yvonne Smith - forthcoming - British Journal of Social Work.
    Ethnographic studies of people at the margins of society, struggling with complex and intertwined personal and social problems, have provided useful insights to social work students and practitioners. Similarly, ethnographic studies of social work practice have provided deeper understandings of how professionals work with individuals, groups and organizations. It has been argued that, given the similarities in the skills required to be an ethnographer and a professional social worker, ethnography should be included in social work curricula, both as an approach (...)
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  31. Characteristics of Budhism in Australia.Michelle Spuler - 2000 - Journal of Contemporary Religion 15 (1):29-44.
    Research on Buddhism in Australia has tended to focus on demographics, ethnic identity and the migrant experience, and history. This paper uses the literature and material from Internet sites on Australian Buddhist groups to identify characteristics of Buddhism in Australia; it aims to both contribute to the understanding of the growth of Buddhism in Australia and to facilitate comparison with similar studies of American and European forms of Buddhism. New information is presented on the number of Buddhist groups in Australia, (...)
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  32. Dialogue logic as dynamic logic.Roderic Girle - 2016 - Logique Et Analyse 236:427-443.
    There are several formal systems for persuasive dialogue. Dialogue systems are multi-Agent systems, and this contrasts with the general lack of any agency in standard logics other than in the case of epistemic and deontic logics. Dialogue systems have been called logics. A logic usually has a semantics and a proof system, and questions of soundness and completeness arise. Any dialogue conducted according to the rules of a dialogue logic is a complex process. Dynamic Logic is a logic of processes, (...)
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  33. The precarious protection of free speech in Australia: the Banerji case.Katharine Gelber - forthcoming - Australian Journal of Human Rights.
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  34. From Madonna to Medusa : a revision of community work in the light of a revision of self.Maria Tennant - unknown
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  35. The increments of justice: exploring the outer reach of Akiba's edge towards Native Title 'ownership'.Simon Young - 2019 - University of New South Wales Law Journal 42 (3):825-868.
    The Torres Strait regional sea claim, culminating in the High Court decision of Akiba v Commonwealth, signalled a new respect for the holistic relationships and dominion that underlay First Peoples' custodianship of land and waters. The Akiba correction' centred upon a distinction between 'underlying rights' and specific exercises of them - and produced in that case a surviving right to take resources for any purpose. The correction emerged from extinguishment disputes, but the significance of this edge towards 'ownership' was soon (...)
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  36. Learning critical feminist research: a brief introduction to feminist epistemologies and methodologies.Britta Wigginton & Michelle N. Lafrance - forthcoming - Feminism and Psychology.
    This article serves as a welcoming introduction to feminist epistemologies and methodologies, written to accompany the Virtual Special Issue on 'Doing Critical Feminist Research'. In recalling our own respective journeys into the exciting field of feminist research, we invite new readers in appreciating the steep learning curve out of conventional science. This article begins by sketching out the emergence of feminist scholarship - focusing particularly on the discipline of psychology - to show readers how and why feminist scholars sought to (...)
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  37. The sublime in popular science.Jamie Milton Ewan Freestone - 2019 - Dissertation, The University of Queensland
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  38. Collaborative philosophical inquiry as peace pedagogy.Somayeh Khatibi Moghadam - 2019 - Dissertation, The University of Queensland
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  39. Modulating troubles affiliating in initial interactions the role of remedial accounts.Natalie Flint, Michael Haugh & Andrew John Merrison - 2019 - Pragmatics 29 (3):384-409.
    Much of the research on affiliation to date has focused on how people do affiliation. This paper explores the remedial work that follows instances of disaffiliation between interactants who are getting acquainted. Building on an interactional pragmatics analytical approach informed by methods and research in conversation analysis, findings indicate that extended remedial accounts recurrently follow moments of disaffiliation in initial interactions. These remedial accounts enable participants to reposition a prior disaffiliative stance as affiliative. It appears in initial interactions, then, that (...)
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  40. Primary EFL teachers’ self-directed learning in China: readiness, process and context.Jing Liu - 2019 - Dissertation, The University of Queensland
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  41. English as a medium of instruction and the discursive construction of elite identity.Iffat Jahan & M. Obaidul Hamid - 2019 - Journal of Sociolinguistics 23 (4):386-406.
    Debates over medium of instruction, as ideological skirmishes, showcase discursive identity construction, reproduction, and contestation by different social groups. Drawing on such debates in letters to the editor and internet-based newsgroup posts written by Bangladeshi English-medium and Bangla-medium educated writers, this article examines the construction of elite identity by the EM educated group. It illustrates how this group drew on changing discourses of elitism, language ideologies, and other identity resources to construct self-identity that emphasized the achievement of qualifications and attributes (...)
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  42. Relationship between spiritual intelligence and ethical decision making in Iranian nurses.Shahram Arsang-Jang, Ashraf Khoramirad, Davoud Pourmarzi & Marziyeh Raisi - 2017 - .
    Background: Nurses, on a daily basis, face ethical dilemmas that arise from situations involving conflicting values or beliefs. Overall, ethical decision making of nurses seems to be a challenging aspect of their duties. This study has examined the relationship between spiritual intelligence and ethical decision making in nurses working in hospitals in Iran. Proportional stratified sampling was used in this study. Data were collected from 376 nurses who completed the Spiritual Intelligence Self-Report Inventory and Nursing Dilemma Test. Statistical analyses were (...)
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  43. Ethics and aesthetics of non-duality: responses to Nihilism from Nietzsche to Camus.Adrian Moore - 2019 - Dissertation, The University of Queensland
  44. A Camusian ethic for reconciliation: Forgiveness and grief in Australia, New Zealand and Rwanda.Elese Bree Dowden - 2019 - Dissertation, The University of Queensland
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  45. Disruptive philosophies: Eco-rational education and the epistemology of place ​​​​​​​.Simone Gralton Thornton - 2019 - Dissertation, The University of Queensland
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  46. “Against method” and “Anything goes”? A critical discussion based on the “strange ideas from Paul Feyerabend on whether epistemological anarchy can benefit is research.Horst Treiblmaier, Andrew Burton-Jones, Shirley Gregor, Rudy Hirschheim, Michael Myers & Tom Stafford - unknown
    In this panel six IS researchers from varying backgrounds will discuss whether epistemological anarchy, as proposed by the controversial philosopher Paul Feyerabend, has the potential to foster research progress and can help to create new insights in the IS field. Feyerabend is well known for his notion that "anything goes" in terms of methodology, and many scholars are concerned that this seemingly anarchistic sentiment can undermine efforts to systematically build and structure an epistemological and methodological foundation for an academic discipline. (...)
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  47. The ‘turns’ of feminist time: evolutionary logic, life and renewal in ‘new materialist’ feminist philosophy.Karin Sellberg - 2019 - Australian Feminist Studies 34 (99):93-106.
    Contemporary feminist philosophy classically tends to reject ideas of historical and biological progress as patriarchal and/or capitalist constructs of temporality. Lately, however, the new materialism in feminism attempts to ‘recover’ the writings of Charles Darwin and evolutionary science, constructing a non-teleological and anti-essentialist feminist theory of mutability, transversality and trans-species connection. Referring to the work of Elizabeth Grosz, Rick Dolphijn, Iris van der Tuin and Jane Bennett, this article critically analyses the new materialists’ reading of some key elements in evolutionary (...)
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  48. Making a Difference.Ann Webster-Wright - 2010 - In Authentic Professional Learning. Professional and Practice-based Learning, vol 2. Springer.
    To meet the global challenges of an uncertain future, continuing learning by all professionals, from academics and teachers, to engineers and social workers, is vital. The ability of skilled and innovative professionals to solve increasingly complex and diverse problems underpins productivity, sustainability and well-being in society. Through their practice and continued learning, professionals have a responsibility – and a privilege – to make a difference by contributing to priority areas of global concern: the development of innovative technology and infrastructure, environmental (...)
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  49. Context-indexed counterfactuals and non-vacuous counterpossibles.Mariusz Popieluch - 2019 - Dissertation, The University of Queensland
    The two main features of this thesis are (i) an account of contextualized (context indexed) counterfactuals, and (ii) a non-vacuist account of counterpossibles. Experience tells us that the truth of the counterfactual is contingent on what is meant by the antecedent, which in turn rests on what context is assumed to underlie its reading (intended meaning). On most conditional analyses, only the world of evaluation and the antecedent determine which worlds are relevant to determining the truth of a conditional, and (...)
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  50. Australia and asylum seekers: is a policy of protection in the ‘national interest’?Jacqueliene Bailey - 2002 - Australian Journal of Human Rights 8 (1):57-68.
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  51. Militarized masculinities beyond methodological nationalism: charting the multiple masculinities of an Indonesian jihadi.David Duriesmith & Noor Huda Ismail - 2019 - International Theory 11 (2):139-159.
    Studies of masculinity and armed conflict have struggled to capture the complex interaction between globalized militarized masculinities and local gender formations. Particularly in conflicts characterized by a high degree of combatant mobility locating the relevant gender dynamics can prove to be a difficult step in understanding the character of armed groups. Based on fieldwork with Indonesian former foreign fighters, we make the case that feminist international relations have tended to unreflectively default to the nation when locating gender hierarchies. Exploring the (...)
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  52. Nothing comes into the universe/ and nothing leaves it: maternal subjectivity in the poetry of Sharon Olds and the art of Janine Antoni.Jacqueline Lesley Herta Chlanda - 2019 - Dissertation, The University of Queensland
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  53. Ethnographic notes on visualization practices in tissue engineering research.Dhaval Vyas - 2013 - Cognition, Technology and Work 15 (4):373-388.
    Visual information is central to several of the scientific disciplines. This paper studies how scientists working in a multidisciplinary field produce scientific evidence through building and manipulating scientific visualizations. Using ethnographic methods, we studied visualization practices of eight scientists working in the domain of tissue engineering research. Tissue engineering is an upcoming field of research that deals with replacing or regenerating human cells, tissues, or organs to restore or establish normal function. We spent 3 months in the field, where we (...)
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  54. Creative practices in the design studio culture: collaboration and communication.Dhaval Vyas, Gerrit van der Veer & Anton Nijholt - 2013 - Cognition, Technology and Work 15 (4):415-443.
    For the purpose of developing collaborative support in design studio environments, we have carried out ethnographic fieldwork in professional and academic product design studios. Our intention was to understand design practices beyond the productivity point of view and take into account the experiential, inspirational and aesthetical aspects of design practices. Using examples from our fieldwork, we develop our results around three broad themes by which design professionals support communication and collaboration: use of artefacts, use of space and designerly practices. We (...)
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  55. Empathic and compassionate healthcare as a Christian spiritual practice.Neil Pembroke - 2019 - Practical Theology 12 (2):133-146.
    It is argued that a Christian spirituality of healthcare provision is founded on agape. In the medical context, agape is expressed primarily through empathy and compassion. The love that a healthcare professional gives is manifested in two major modalities–namely, receptivity and extension. Empathy is an extension through the imagination into a patient's inner world of experience. It requires being receptive to the pain and distress that the patient displays and speaks about. The theological connection between empathic attunement and the Incarnation (...)
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  56. Four essays on liberty.Isaiah Berlin - 1969 - Oxford University Press.
    "Political Ideas in the Twentieth Century", Historical Inevitability", "Two Concepts of Liberty", "John Stuart Mill and the Ends of Life". These four essays deal with the various aspects of individual liberty, including the distinction between positive and negative liberty and the necessity of rejecting determinism if we wish to keep hold of the notions of human responsibility and freedom.
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  57. Genetic Determinism and Place.Matthew Gildersleeve & Andrew Crowden - 2019 - Nova Prisutnost 17 (1):139-162.
    In this article, we review genetic determinism and highlight how our earlier research on the philosophy of place can contribute to a better understanding of genomics and ongoing debates about genetic modification. We show how place can undermine any philosophy of genetic determinism. By using our philosophy of place, our investigation contributes to a call for a turn for humanity toward a “collective being-at-home-in-the-world”, instead of being estranged from place which genetic determinism actively promotes. We also utilise cinema studies research (...)
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  58. Paradigmatic approaches to studying environment and human health: (forgotten) implications for interdisciplinary research.Cassandra Phoenix, Nicholas J. Osborne, Clare Redshaw, Rebecca Moran, Will Stahl-Timmins, Michael H. Depledge, Lora E. Fleming & Benedict W. Wheeler - 2013 - Environmental Science and Policy 25:218-228.
    Interdisciplinary research is increasingly promoted in a wide range of fields, especially so in the study of relationships between the environment and human health. However, many projects and research teams struggle to address exactly how researchers from a multitude of disciplinary and methodological backgrounds can best work together to maximize the value of this approach to research. In this paper, we briefly review the role of interdisciplinary research, and emphasise that it is not only our discipline and methods, but our (...)
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  59. Teaching for thinking: Explaining pedagogical expertise in the development of the skills, values and virtues of inquiry.Peter Ellerton - 2019 - Dissertation, The University of Queensland
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  60. Biosociality, reimagined: A global distributive justice framework for ownership of human genetic material.David J. Jefferson - 2015 - Journal of Intellectual Property 14 (2): 357-378.
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  61. A Foucauldian-inspired ethnographic investigation: The emergence of the everyday social practice of ADHD.Charles Marley - 2019 - Dissertation, The University of Queensland
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  62. Validation of a reflective thinking instrument for third-year undergraduate nursing students participating in high-fidelity simulation.Naomi Tutticci, Fiona Coyer, Peter A. Lewis & Mary Ryan - 2017 - Reflective Practice 18 (2):219-231.
    Background: nursing students are required to think reflectively in both real and simulated clinical practice. Although the Reflective Thinking instrument is reliable in its measurement of reflective thinking, its validity is unknown. Method: confirmatory factor analysis was undertaken in an iterative manner within a non-equivalent control-group study to measure nursing students’ reflective thinking and satisfaction with high-fidelity simulation. The validity and reliability of the Reflective Thinking instrument was tested. Results: the resulting instrument consisted of 15 items across four factors. The (...)
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  63. Beyond the independent woman: a reading of Simone de Beauvoir’s When Things of the Spirit Come First with The Second Sex.Kelly Anne Beck - unknown
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  64. Darwin.John S. Wilkins - unknown
    This chapter contains sections titled: Progress and the Tree of History Discovering the Past Teleological Thinking References and Further Reading.
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  65. Ethics In Modern Economic Thought And Their Consequences For Environmental Conservation, Land And Resource-Use.A. E. Hohl & C. A. Tisdell - 1997 - Humanomics 13 (2):1-37.
    During the very short period of cultural evolution of mankind, the world has changed dramatically. Modern humans have modified the environment not only to satisfy their needs, but also to please their greed. The forces that are united to destroy the last wildlands for short-term economic benefits seem to be overwhelming. However, at least in some developed countries, values, preferences and political majorities have been changing over the last two decades in favour of alternative approaches. A new multiplicity of goals (...)
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  66. Deep reflective thinking through collaborative philosophical inquiry.Elizabeth Jean Fynes-Clinton - 2018 - Dissertation, The University of Queensland
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  67. School-based first aid training programs: a systematic review.Bianca Reveruzzi, Lisa Buckley & Mary Sheehan - 2016 - Journal of School Health 86 (4):266-272.
    BACKGROUND: This review examines the breadth of first aid training delivered to school students and the components that are age appropriate to adolescents. METHOD: Eligible studies included school-based first aid interventions targeting students aged between 10 and 18 years. Online databases were searched, for peer-reviewed publications available as at August 2014. RESULTS: A total of 20 journal articles were relevant to the review. Research supported programs with longer durations. Most programs taught resuscitation alone and few included content that was context-specific (...)
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  68. Symposium on Globalization: Globalization and Economic Sovereignty.John Quiggin - 2001 - Journal of Political Philosophy 9 (1):56-80.
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  69. Words and things: the uncertain place of philology in intellectual history.Peter Cryle - 2018 - Journal of Language, Literature and Culture 65 (2):65-80.
    This paper considers the ease and the difficulty of adapting the habits of philology to the exigencies of intellectual history. The title chosen by Michel Foucault for one of his major historical studies referred to ‘words and things’, but the relation between those two is not given once and for all. Foucault developed the notion of discourse, which involved articulated sets of words. Discourses he understood to be sayable propositions corresponding to thinkable things. Since the 1970s and 1980s, Foucault’s influence (...)
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  70. Semantic scaffolding: the co-construction of visualization meaning through reader experience.Lydia Byrne - 2018 - Dissertation, University of Queensland
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  71. Microfinance: economics and ethics.Clement Tisdell & Shabbir Ahmad - 2018 - International Journal of Ethics and Systems 34 (3):372-392.
    Purpose The aim of this study is to examine arguments about the economic and ethical worth of microfinance.Design/methodology/approach This study draws on the available literature to provide a balanced discussion of different views about the economic and ethical desirability of microfinancing. The discussion is reinforced by the use of secondary data on the attributes of microfinancing and by reference to a case study in rural Pakistan.Findings Microfinancing is less virtuous than commonly portrayed. Its economic inefficiency consequences are identified, and it (...)
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  72. Science and religion perspectives at St. John’s University of Tanzania.Thomas Aechtner & Malcolm S. Buchanan - 2018 - Journal of Contemporary Religion 33 (2):337-345.
    In an effort to shed much needed light on to religion and science perspectives in Africa, a preliminary survey was conducted to examine the views of undergraduate science students at St. John's University of Tanzania. This research note presents initial survey findings, which explore perceptions of religion-and-science interactions and evolutionary theory as well as an attempt to ascertain what sources influence undergraduate sentiments about science and religion. Results point to prevalent negative beliefs about evolution and religion-science relationships. Additionally, exploratory factor (...)
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  73. Too hot to handle: reflections on professional boundaries in practice.Patricia Fronek, Melissa Kendall, Greg Ungerer, Julianne Malt, Ellen Eugarde & Timothy Geraghty - 2009 - Reflective Practice 10 (2):161-171.
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  74. Landcare, stewardship and sustainable agriculture in Australia.A. Curtis - 1998 - Environmental Values 7 (1):59-78.
    There are over 2,500 Landcare groups with 65,000 members operating across Australia. With considerable evidence of program impact, Landcare is an important example of state sponsored community participation in natural resource management. However, the authors suggest excessive emphasis has been placed upon attitudinal change - the development of landholder stewardship, as the lever for effecting major changes in land management. Analysis of data from a landholder survey failed to establish predicted stewardship differences between Landcare and nonLandcare respondents or between those (...)
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  75. The impact of smart technology on users and society.Tomayess Issa, Pedro Isaías & Piet Kommers - 2016 - Journal of Information, Communication and Ethics in Society 14 (4):310-312.
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  76. A long time coming: delays in collective apologies and their effects on sincerity and forgiveness.Michael Wenzel, Ellie Lawrence-Wood, Tyler G. Okimoto & Matthew J. Hornsey - 2017 - Political Psychology 39 (3):649-666.
    Political apologies by one group to another often occur a significant period of time after the original transgression. What effect does such a delay have on perceptions of sincerity and forgiveness? A delayed apology could reflect the offender group's reluctance to apologize, or, alternatively, it could represent time and consideration spent on developing an appropriate response. In the latter case, the delayed apology would represent a sincere acknowledgment of the harm done, whereas in the former case it would not. In (...)
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  77. The strange career of William Ellis.Anna Johnston - 2007 - Victorian Studies 49 (3):491-501.
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  78. Theory, history, and great transformations.Christian Reus-Smit - 2016 - International Theory 8 (3):422-435.
    In International Relations arguments about historical origins provoke theoretical debates, as origins assume an emergent theoretical unit of inquiry - an international order, system, society, etc. - while at the same time defining its core properties and dynamics. By boldly casting the long 19th century as the origin of global modernity and, in turn, the modern international order, Buzan and Lawson's The Global Transformation challenges the romance with Westphalia that undergirds so much of our theorizing. Yet, the contributions to this (...)
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  79. The global transformation, multiple early modernities, and international systems change.Andrew Phillips - 2016 - International Theory 8 (3):481-491.
    This article critically engages the Global Transformation thesis through the lens of multiple early modernities. The 19th century undeniably saw a profound shift in the global mode of power, driven by industrialization, rational state-building, and the rise of ideologies of progress. But this triad impacted on regions that had already been reconfigured by an early modern Eurasian Transformation, centered on an 'industrious revolution', absolutist state-building, and the spread of 'civilizing processes'. This Eurasian Transformation yielded distinct early modernities and regional orders, (...)
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  80. About love: reinventing romance for our times.Deborah Brown - 1997 - .
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  81. Transformative continuations, (dis)affiliation, and accountability in Japanese interaction.Michael Haugh & Yasuko Obana - 2015 - Text and Talk 35 (5):597-619.
    Studies of joint productions have often focused on instances where a recipient anticipates through completions what a speaker might be about to say, or through expansion what that speaker could plausibly go on to say. However, recent work suggests that grammatically fitted continuations may also alter or redirect the projected trajectory of a prior speaker's turn or utterance. In this paper, building on this prior work, we focus on cases in Japanese interaction where grammatically fitted continuations of one speaker's turn (...)
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  82. Reflections on the upākhyānas in the Āpaddharmaparvan of the Mahābhārata.Adam Bowles - 2016 - In Vishwa Adluri & Joydeep Bagchee (eds.), Argument and Design: The Unity of the Mahabharata. Brill. pp. 320-358.
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  83. The profession of arms in the ancient Greek world. Archaic and classical age.Luca Asmonti - 2015 - The Classical Review 65 (2):499-500.
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  84. Minds, Brains and Programs: An Information-theoretic Approach.Reza Maleeh - 2015 - Mind and Matter 13 (1):71-103.
    Adopting the notion of “pragmatic information” as interpreted by Roederer and granted that understanding arises from genuine information processing, I show that Searle’s “Chinese Room Argument” in rejecting the thesis of Strong Artificial Intelligence and his responses to critics are sound and acceptable. The paper is a safe and secure translation of Searle’s argument into a language of information. According to the notion of information that I adopt, information and information processing are exclusive attributes of biological and artificial systems. However, (...)
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