Results for 'Dwane Hal Dean'

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  1.  27
    Perceptions of the ethicality of consumer insurance claim fraud.Dwane Hal Dean - 2004 - Journal of Business Ethics 54 (1):67-79.
    It was proposed that ethical evaluation of insurance claim padding behavior would be affected by characteristics of the policyholder, insurance agent, and company. These three factors were manipulated in written scenarios and the premise was tested in a factorial experimental design. No significant support was found for an effect of any of the three factors on ethical perceptions of claim padding. However, females found claims padding to be significantly less ethical than males. Given a claim scenario where the actual loss (...)
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  2.  14
    After the Unethical Ad: A Comparison of Advertiser Response Strategies.Dwane Hal Dean - 2005 - Business and Society Review 110 (4):433-458.
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  3.  16
    The Role of Negative Information in Distributional Semantic Learning.Brendan T. Johns, Douglas J. K. Mewhort & Michael N. Jones - 2019 - Cognitive Science 43 (5):e12730.
    Distributional models of semantics learn word meanings from contextual co‐occurrence patterns across a large sample of natural language. Early models, such as LSA and HAL (Landauer & Dumais, 1997; Lund & Burgess, 1996), counted co‐occurrence events; later models, such as BEAGLE (Jones & Mewhort, 2007), replaced counting co‐occurrences with vector accumulation. All of these models learned from positive information only: Words that occur together within a context become related to each other. A recent class of distributional models, referred to as (...)
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  4.  59
    The linguistic description of opaque contexts.Janet Dean Fodor - 1970 - New York: Garland.
  5.  26
    What we say and what we do: The relationship between real and hypothetical moral choices.Oriel FeldmanHall, Dean Mobbs, Davy Evans, Lucy Hiscox, Lauren Navrady & Tim Dalgleish - 2012 - Cognition 123 (3):434-441.
  6.  11
    The computational complexity of abduction.Tom Bylander, Dean Allemang, Michael C. Tanner & John R. Josephson - 1991 - Artificial Intelligence 49 (1-3):25-60.
  7.  12
    (2) censorship and the law.Barry Dean - 1976 - Philosophical Papers 5 (1):34-52.
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  8. Understanding permutation symmetry.Steven French & Dean Rickles - 2002 - In Katherine Brading & Elena Castellani (eds.), Symmetries in Physics: Philosophical Reflections. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 212--38.
     
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  9.  9
    Temporal data base management.Thomas L. Dean & Drew V. McDermott - 1987 - Artificial Intelligence 32 (1):1-55.
  10.  22
    The Global Fight against Corruption: A Foucaultian, Virtues-Ethics Framing.Jeff Everett, Dean Neu & Abu Shiraz Rahaman - 2006 - Journal of Business Ethics 65 (1):1-12.
    This paper extends the discussion of business ethics by examining the issue of corruption, its definition, the solutions being proposed for dealing with it, and the ethical perspectives underpinning these proposals. The paper’s findings are based on a review of association, think-tank, and academic reports, books, and papers dealing with the topic of corruption, as well as the pronouncements, websites, and position papers of a number of important global organizations active in the fight. These organizations include the World Bank, the (...)
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  11.  29
    Making Quantitative Research Work: From Positivist Dogma to Actual Social Scientific Inquiry.Michael J. Zyphur & Dean C. Pierides - 2020 - Journal of Business Ethics 167 (1):49-62.
    Researchers misunderstand their role in creating ethical problems when they allow dogmas to purportedly divorce scientists and scientific practices from the values that they embody. Cortina, Edwards, and Powell help us clarify and further develop our position by responding to our critique of, and alternatives to, this misleading separation. In this rebuttal, we explore how the desire to achieve the separation of facts and values is unscientific on the very terms endorsed by its advocates—this separation is refuted by empirical observation. (...)
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  12.  17
    Quantifying Animal Well-being and Overcoming the Challenges of Interspecies Comparisons.Mark Budolfson & Dean Spears - 2019 - In Bob Fischer (ed.), Routledge Handbook of Animal Ethics. New York: Routledge.
    Animals, like humans, experience different levels of well-being depending on decisions made by others. As a result, the well-being of animals must be included in any full accounting of the well-being consequences of decisions. However, this is almost never done in large-scale policy and investment analyses, even though it is common to quantify the consequences for human welfare in these decision analyses. This is partly due to prejudice, but increasingly also because we do not currently have good methods for quantifying (...)
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  13.  13
    What Should We Treat as an End in Itself?Richard Dean - 2017 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 77 (4):268-288.
    One formulation of the Categorical Imperative tells us to treat humanity as an end in itself. It has become common to think that ‘humanity’ (die Menschheit) here refers to some minimal power of rationality that is necessarily possessed by any rational agent, but I argue that this common reading is misguided. Instead, ‘humanity’ refers to a good will, the will of a being who is committed to moral principles. This good will reading of ‘humanity’ is not only suggested by passages (...)
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  14. Semantics: Theories of Meaning in Generative Grammar.Janet Dean Fodor - 1980 - Synthese 43 (3):461-464.
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  15.  6
    Bounded-parameter Markov decision processes.Robert Givan, Sonia Leach & Thomas Dean - 2000 - Artificial Intelligence 122 (1-2):71-109.
  16.  17
    Legislated Ethics or Ethics Education?: Faculty Views in the Post-Enron Era.Jeri Mullins Beggs & Kathy Lund Dean - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 71 (1):15-37.
    The tension between external forces for better ethics in organizations, represented by legislation such as the Sarbanes–Oxley Act (SOX), and the call for internal forces represented by increased educational coverage, has never been as apparent. This study examines business school faculty attitudes about recent corporate ethics lapses, including opinions about root causes, potential solutions, and ethics coverage in their courses. In assessing root causes, faculty point to a failure of systems such as legal/professional and management (external) and declining personal values (...)
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  17.  17
    Mid-level Managers, Organizational Context, and ethical Encounters.Kathy Lund Dean, Jeri Mullins Beggs & Timothy P. Keane - 2010 - Journal of Business Ethics 97 (1):51-69.
    This article details day-to-day ethics issues facing MBAs who occupy entry-level and mid-level management positions and offers defined examples of the stressors these managers face. The study includes lower-level managers, essentially excluded from extant literature, and focuses on workplace behaviors both undertaken and observed. Results indicate that pressures from internal organization sources, and ambiguity in letter versus spirit of rules, account for over a third of the most frequent unethical situations encountered, and that most managers did not expect to face (...)
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  18.  4
    Reasoning about partially ordered events.Thomas Dean & Mark Boddy - 1988 - Artificial Intelligence 36 (3):375-399.
  19. Why the Net is not a Public Sphere.Jodi Dean - 2003 - Constellations 10 (1):95-112.
  20.  18
    Multi-Stakeholder Labour Monitoring Organizations: Egoists, Instrumentalists, or Moralists?Jeff S. Everett, Dean Neu & Daniel Martinez - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 81 (1):117-142.
    This article examines four leading multi-stakeholder labour monitoring organizations. All operating in the maquiladora industry, these organizations are viewed in light of the growing global trend toward industry self-regulation, or what has been referred to as the 'global out-sourcing of regulation'. Their Board compositions, codes of conduct and monitoring and enforcement strategies are all examined as a means of tentatively positioning these organizations along an 'egoist-instrumentalist-moralist' ethical culture continuum. Such a framing provides insights into the perceived salience of these organizations' (...)
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  21.  60
    Public Policy, Consequentialism, the Environment, and Non-Human Animals.Mark Budolfson & Dean Spears - 2020 - In Douglas W. Portmore (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Consequentialism. New York, USA: Oup Usa. pp. 592-615.
    The focus of this chapter is public policy and consequentialism, especially issues that arise in connection with the environment – i.e. the natural world, including non-human animals. We integrate some of the existing literature on environmental economics, welfare economics, and policy with the literature on environmental values and philosophy. The emphasis on environmental policy is motivated by the fact that it is arguably the most philosophically interesting and challenging application of consequentialism to policy, as it includes all the challenges of (...)
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  22.  45
    Covert administration of medication in food: a worthwhile moral gamble?Laura Guidry-Grimes, Megan Dean & Elizabeth Kaye Victor - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (6):389-393.
    The covert administration of medication occurs with incapacitated patients without their knowledge, involving some form of deliberate deception in disguising or hiding the medication. Covert medication in food is a relatively common practice globally, including in institutional and homecare contexts. Until recently, it has received little attention in the bioethics literature, and there are few laws or rules governing the practice. In this paper, we discuss significant, but often overlooked, ethical issues related to covert medication in food. We emphasise the (...)
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  23.  20
    Is obsessive-compulsive disorder a disturbance of security motivation? Comment on Szechtman and Woody (2004).Steven Taylor, Dean McKay & Jonathan S. Abramowitz - 2005 - Psychological Review 112 (3):650-656.
  24.  5
    Deliberation scheduling for problem solving in time-constrained environments.Mark Boddy & Thomas L. Dean - 1994 - Artificial Intelligence 67 (2):245-285.
  25.  56
    The Truth of the Barnacles.Kathleen Dean Moore - 2005 - Environmental Ethics 27 (3):265-277.
    Beginning with Rachel Carson’s small book, The Sense of Wonder, I explore the moral significance of a sense of wonder—the propensity to respond with delight, awe, or yearning to what is beautiful and mysterious in the natural world when it unexpectedly reveals itself. An antidote to the view that the elements of the natural world are commodities to be disdained or destroyed, a sense of wonder leads us to celebrate and honor the more-than-human world, to care for it, to protect (...)
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  26.  16
    Problems in Primary Education.Joan Dean & R. F. Dearden - 1978 - British Journal of Educational Studies 26 (1):97.
  27.  13
    A living critique of domination: Exemplars of radical democracy from Black Lives Matter to #MeToo.Martin Breaugh & Dean Caivano - 2024 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 50 (3):447-472.
    Building on recent developments in radical democratic theory, in this article we articulate and explore a fresh perspective for theorists and activists of radical democracy: a ‘living critique of domination’. Characterized by a two-fold analytical effort, a ‘living critique of domination’ calls for a radical critique of contemporary forms of power and control coupled with a reappraisal of emancipatory political experiences created by the political action of the Many. We demonstrate that this project responds to the theoretical and practical challenges (...)
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  28.  27
    Does Richard Rorty have ‘anything to say to blacks’? Greater cruelties, lesser cruelties and the permanence of racism.Nathan W. Dean - forthcoming - Philosophy and Social Criticism.
    Richard Rorty does have something ‘to say to [Black Americans]’ and to their racially conscious nonblack allies in the sense that his understanding of liberalism, his prophecies about the future and his urgent appeals to the American Left all paint a picture of a white middle class fully prepared to make life increasingly miserable for Black Americans unless it is ‘protected from catastrophe’. Rorty hopes that this group will undergo a moral transformation that enables it to see past its narrow (...)
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  29.  26
    Probing “pop-out”: Another look at the face-in-the-crowd effect.Carol Hampton, Dean G. Purcell, Louis Bersine, Christine H. Hansen & Ranald D. Hansen - 1989 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 27 (6):563-566.
  30.  45
    A Plausible Kantian Argument Against Moralism.Richard Dean - 2012 - Social Theory and Practice 38 (4):577-597.
    There seems to be something wrong with passing moralistic judgments on others’ moral character. Immanuel Kant’s ethics provides insight into an underexplored way in which moralistic judgments are problematic, namely, that they are both a sign of fundamentally poor character in the moralistic person herself and an obstacle to that person’s own moral self-improvement. Kant’s positions on these issues provide a basically compelling argument against moralistic judgment of others, an argument that can be detached from the most controversial elements of (...)
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  31.  8
    On the march or on the margins? Affirmations and erasures of feminist activism in the UK.Jonathan Dean - 2012 - European Journal of Women's Studies 19 (3):315-329.
    In the UK, many have argued that the past five years or so have seen an increase in the radicalism and visibility of feminist activism, jarring somewhat with the strong emphasis on loss in much recent scholarship – as well as media commentary – on feminist politics. Against this backdrop, this article asks how, and to what extent, this resurgence of feminist activism has unsettled the centrality of loss within the affective economies of contemporary British feminism, by examining a range (...)
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  32.  35
    State-Phobia, Civil Society, and a Certain Vitalism.Kaspar Villadsen & Mitchell Dean - 2012 - Constellations 19 (3):401-420.
  33.  9
    H. A. L. Fisher, reconstruction and the development of the 1918 education act.D. W. Dean - 1970 - British Journal of Educational Studies 18 (3):259-276.
  34. Agency and dialectics: What critical realism can learn from Althusser's Marxism.Kathryn Dean - 2006 - In Realism, philosophy and social science. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 123--147.
     
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  35.  24
    A Diverse and Flexible Teaching Toolkit Facilitates the Human Capacity for Cumulative Culture.Emily R. R. Burdett, Lewis G. Dean & Samuel Ronfard - 2018 - Review of Philosophy and Psychology 9 (4):807-818.
    Human culture is uniquely complex compared to other species. This complexity stems from the accumulation of culture over time through high- and low-fidelity transmission and innovation. One possible reason for why humans retain and create culture, is our ability to modulate teaching strategies in order to foster learning and innovation. We argue that teaching is more diverse, flexible, and complex in humans than in other species. This particular characteristic of human teaching rather than teaching itself is one of the reasons (...)
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  36. Civil society: beyond the public sphere.Jodi Dean - 1996 - In David M. Rasmussen (ed.), Handbook of critical theory. Cambridge: Blackwell. pp. 220--242.
     
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  37.  22
    Education and Policy in England in the Twentieth Century.Peter Gordon, Richard Aldrich & Dennis Dean - 1992 - British Journal of Educational Studies 40 (1):81-82.
  38.  5
    Oxford Studies in Metaphysics: Volume 10.Karen Bennett & Dean W. Zimmerman (eds.) - 2017 - Oxford University Press UK.
    Much of the most interesting work in philosophy today is metaphysical in character. Oxford Studies in Metaphysics is a forum for the best new work in this flourishing field. OSM offers a broad view of the subject, featuring not only the traditionally central topics such as existence, identity, modality, time, and causation, but also the rich clusters of metaphysical questions in neighbouring fields, such as philsophy of mind and philosophy of science. Besides independent essays, volumes will often contain a critical (...)
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  39.  14
    Editorial Note.Megan Dean - 2014 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 24 (3):2-2.
    We likely do not need to convince readers of this journal that “obesity” is a topic of great contemporary importance.1 Claims about the “rapidly growing” prevalence of overweight and obese people worldwide (World Health Organization (WHO) Consultation on Obesity 2000), the threat that obesity poses to individuals’ and especially children’s health (Mauro et al. 2008, 173; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 2014a; World Health Organization (WHO) Consultation on Obesity 2000; World Health Organization 2014; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (...)
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  40. Setting syntactic parameters.Janet Dean Fodor - 2001 - In Mark Baltin & Chris Collins (eds.), The Handbook of Contemporary Syntactic Theory. Blackwell.
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  41.  8
    Differences in Indicators of Socio-Psychological Integration Between Refugees from Syria and Receiving Community in Croatia.Jana Kiralj Lacković & Dean Ajduković - 2024 - Human Affairs 34 (2):244-268.
    Socio-psychological integration is a dimension of integration affecting refugees and receiving community members alike, and is related to those integration goals which promote positive intergroup attitudes, close social proximity, interrelation of social networks, low levels of perceived intergroup threat, positive intergroup contact, etc. The goal of this study was to explore the differences in the levels of indicators of socio-psychological integration in both groups. Six hundred receiving community members in Croatia, and 149 refugees from Syria in Croatia participated in the (...)
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  42.  13
    Stimulus-driven reorienting in the ventral frontoparietal attention network: the role of emotional content.David W. Frank & Dean Sabatinelli - 2012 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 6.
  43.  59
    (Kivy on) the form–content identity thesis.Kelly Dean Jolley - 2008 - British Journal of Aesthetics 48 (2):193-204.
    Peter Kivy investigates the unity of form and content in the arts, particularly in poetry. While Kivy says much with which I happily agree, I sadly disagree with him about the impossibility of form–content identities. Kivy's arguments fail to compel: there are other ways of understanding form–content identities and the need for them that has been felt by artists and critics. CiteULike Connotea Del.icio.us What's this?
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  44.  35
    Discussion.Kelly Dean Jolley - 1993 - Philosophical Investigations 16 (4):327-332.
  45.  6
    Works of Violent Love.Eric Dean Rasmussen - 2010 - Symploke 18 (1-2):323-326.
  46. Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Religion Volume 9.Lara Buchak, Dean W. Zimmerman & Philip Swenson (eds.) - 2019 - Oxford University Press.
    Oxford Studies in Philosophy of Religion is an annual volume offering a regular snapshot of state-of-the-art work in this longstanding area of philosophy that has seen an explosive growth of interest over the past half century.
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  47.  49
    The structure of vitreous silica: Validity of the random network theory.R. J. Bell & P. Dean - 1972 - Philosophical Magazine 25 (6):1381-1398.
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  48.  8
    Equivalence notions and model minimization in Markov decision processes.Robert Givan, Thomas Dean & Matthew Greig - 2003 - Artificial Intelligence 147 (1-2):163-223.
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  49. Language and Philosophical Linguistics, 2003.John P. Hawthorne & Dean W. Zimmerman - 2003 - Blackwell.
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  50.  15
    Smuggled Doughnuts and Forbidden Fried Chicken: Addressing Tensions around Family and Food Restrictions in Hospitals.Megan A. Dean & Laura Guidry-Grimes - 2023 - Hastings Center Report 53 (4):10-15.
    It is a common practice for family members to bring food to hospitalized loved ones. However, in some cases, this food contravenes a patient's dietary plan. Such situations can create significant tension and distrust between health care professionals and families and may lead the former to doubt a family's willingness or ability to support patient recovery. This case‐study essay offers an ethical analysis of these situations. We draw on Hilde Lindemann's work to argue that providing food to family members is (...)
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