Results for 'Suzanna Sherry'

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  1. Judges of character.Suzanna Sherry - 2007 - In Colin Patrick Farrelly & Lawrence Solum (eds.), Virtue jurisprudence. Palgrave-Macmillan.
     
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  2.  25
    Beyond All Reason: The Radical Assault on Truth in American Law.Daniel A. Farber & Suzanna Sherry - 1997 - New York: Oxford University Press USA. Edited by Suzanna Sherry.
    Would you want to be operated on by a surgeon trained at a medical school that did not evaluate its students? Would you want to fly in a plane designed by people convinced that the laws of physics are socially constructed? Would you want to be tried by a legal system indifferent to the distinction between fact and fiction? These questions may seem absurd, but these are theories being seriously advanced by radical multiculturalists that force us to ask them. These (...)
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  3. Unsupervised learning with global objective functions.Suzanna Becker & R. Zemel - 1995 - In Michael A. Arbib (ed.), Handbook of Brain Theory and Neural Networks. MIT Press. pp. 997--1000.
     
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  4. The Second Self: Computers and the Human Spirit.Sherry Turkle - 1984 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 63:520.
     
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  5.  65
    Children’s Interpretation of Facial Expressions: The Long Path from Valence-Based to Specific Discrete Categories.Sherri C. Widen - 2013 - Emotion Review 5 (1):72-77.
    According to a common sense theory, facial expressions signal specific emotions to people of all ages and therefore provide children easy access to the emotions of those around them. The evidence, however, does not support that account. Instead, children’s understanding of facial expressions is poor and changes qualitatively and slowly over the course of development. Initially, children divide facial expressions into two simple categories (feels good, feels bad). These broad categories are then gradually differentiated until an adult system of discrete (...)
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  6.  84
    Authenticity in the age of digital companions.Sherry Turkle - 2007 - Interaction Studies 8 (3):501-517.
    The first generation of children to grow up with electronic toys and games saw computers as our “nearest neighbors.” They spoke of computers as rational machines and of people as emotional machines, a fragile formulation destined to be challenged. By the mid-1990s, computational creatures, including robots, were presenting themselves as “relational artifacts,” beings with feelings and needs. One consequence of this development is a crisis in authenticity in many quarters. In an increasing number of situations, people behave as though they (...)
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  7.  9
    The Roles of Social Value Orientation and Anticipated Emotions in Intergroup Resource Allocation Decisions.Suzanna Awang Bono, Job van der Schalk & Antony S. R. Manstead - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  8. Cancer patients facing death : is the patient who focuses on living in denial of his/her death?Sherry R. Schachter - 2009 - In Michael K. Bartalos (ed.), Speaking of death: America's new sense of mortality. Westport, Conn.: Praeger.
     
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  9.  19
    Commentary: Security forces practices in Egypt.Virginia N. Sherry - 1993 - Criminal Justice Ethics 12 (2):2-44.
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  10.  12
    Rational Theology and the Creativity of God.Patrick Sherry - 1984 - Religious Studies 20 (2):310-312.
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  11.  56
    Authenticity in the age of digital companions.Sherry Turkle - 2007 - Interaction Studies. Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systemsinteraction Studies / Social Behaviour and Communication in Biological and Artificial Systemsinteraction Studies 8 (3):501-517.
    The first generation of children to grow up with electronic toys and games saw computers as our “nearest neighbors.” They spoke of computers as rational machines and of people as emotional machines, a fragile formulation destined to be challenged. By the mid-1990s, computational creatures, including robots, were presenting themselves as “relational artifacts,” beings with feelings and needs. One consequence of this development is a crisis in authenticity in many quarters. In an increasing number of situations, people behave as though they (...)
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  12. Fostering creativity and innovation without encouraging unethical behavior.Sherrie E. Human, David A. Baucus, William I. Norton & Melissa S. Baucus - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 81 (1):97-115.
    Many prescriptions offered in the literature for enhancing creativity and innovation in organizations raise ethical concerns, yet creativity researchers rarely discuss ethics. We identify four categories of behavior proffered as a means for fostering creativity that raise serious ethical issues: breaking rules and standard operating procedures; challenging authority and avoiding tradition; creating conflict, competition and stress; and taking risks. We discuss each category, briefly identifying research supporting these prescriptions for fostering creativity and then we delve into ethical issues associated with (...)
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  13.  84
    Descriptive and Prescriptive Definitions of Emotion.Sherri C. Widen & James A. Russell - 2010 - Emotion Review 2 (4):377-378.
    Izard (2010) did not seek a descriptive definition of emotion—one that describes the concept as it is used by ordinary folk. Instead, he surveyed scientists’ prescriptive definitions—ones that prescribe how the concept should be used in theories of emotion. That survey showed a lack of agreement today and thus raised doubts about emotion as a useful scientific concept.
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  14. Students' conceptual ecologies and the process of conceptual change in evolution.Sherry S. Demastes, Ronald G. Good & Patsye Peebles - 1995 - Science Education 79 (6):637-666.
  15.  17
    Folk Dress, Fiestas, and Festivals.Sherry L. Field, Michelle Bauml, Ron W. Wilhelm & Joelle Jenkins - 2012 - Journal of Social Studies Research 36 (1):22-46.
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  16.  34
    Do proposed facial expressions of contempt, shame, embarrassment, and compassion communicate the predicted emotion?Sherri C. Widen, Anita M. Christy, Kristen Hewett & James A. Russell - 2011 - Cognition and Emotion 25 (5):898-906.
  17. The Tree of the Credo: Symbolism of the Tree in Medieval Images of the Christian Creed.Suzanna B. Simor - 2000 - Analecta Husserliana 66:45-56.
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  18. Randomized Controlled Trials and the Flow of Information.Sherri Roush - unknown
    Nancy is ultimately most concerned about how to determine the relevance of evidence to implementation of evidence-based policy guidelines, in other words, the transferability of study results to a population different from the one that was studied and in which procedures or conditions are not the same as those in the study. And she is concerned about the privileged position Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs) are given in the ranking schemes for evidence-based policy, because as she sees it RCTs do not (...)
     
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  19.  32
    The Role of God in Spinoza's Metaphysics.Sherry Deveaux - 2007 - London and New York: Bloomsbury (Continuum).
    Baruch Spinoza began his studies learning Hebrew and the Talmud, only to be excommunicated at the age of twenty-four for supposed heresy. Throughout his life, Spinoza was simultaneously accused of being an atheist and a God-intoxicated man. Bertrand Russell said that, compared to others, Spinoza is ethically supreme, 'the noblest and most lovable of the great philosophers'. This book is an exploration of (a) what Spinoza understood God to be, (b) how, for him, the infinite and eternal power of God (...)
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  20.  32
    Remembering the past and imagining the future: A neural model of spatial memory and imagery.Patrick Byrne, Suzanna Becker & Neil Burgess - 2007 - Psychological Review 114 (2):340-375.
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  21.  35
    The meaning of home workplaces for women.Sherry Ahrentzen - 1997 - In John Paul Jones, Heidi J. Nast & Susan M. Roberts (eds.), Thresholds in feminist geography: difference, methodology, and representation. Lanham, Md.: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. pp. 77--92.
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  22.  20
    Justifiable discrimination? on Cameron et al’s proportionality test.Sherry Kao - 2021 - Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (8):563-564.
    With increasing inoculations and emerging coronavirus variants, governments worldwide are challenged to adopt proper liberty-restricting measures to reduce the spread of COVID-19 and minimise grave consequences for liberty and well-being caused by over a year-long pandemic. Cameron et al ’s proposal of a selective strategy addresses this pressing issue.1 Following Savulescu and Cameron, they argue for limiting the liberty of the elderly. But, instead of claiming not doing so is an instance of wrongful levelling down equality, they argue this discriminative (...)
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  23.  18
    Education and the selection task.Sherri L. Jackson & Richard A. Griggs - 1988 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 26 (4):327-330.
  24.  31
    Children's and adults' understanding of the “disgust face”.Sherri C. Widen & James A. Russell - 2008 - Cognition and Emotion 22 (8):1513-1541.
  25.  18
    Epistemic universalism and the shortcomings of curricular multicultural science education.Sherry A. Southerland - 2000 - Science & Education 9 (3):289-307.
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  26. Aesthetics of the Everyday.Sherri Irvin - 2009 - In Stephen Davies, Kathleen Marie Higgins, Robert Hopkins, Robert Stecker & David Cooper (eds.), Blackwell Companion to Aesthetics. Malden, MA: Wiley. pp. 136-139.
    This reference essay surveys recent work in the emerging sub-discipline of everyday aesthetics, which builds on the work of John Dewey to resist sharp distinctions between art and non-art domains and argue that aesthetic concepts are properly applied to ordinary domains of experience.
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  27. Finding Our Way through Phenotypes.Andrew R. Deans, Suzanna E. Lewis, Eva Huala, Salvatore S. Anzaldo, Michael Ashburner, James P. Balhoff, David C. Blackburn, Judith A. Blake, J. Gordon Burleigh, Bruno Chanet, Laurel D. Cooper, Mélanie Courtot, Sándor Csösz, Hong Cui, Barry Smith & Others - 2015 - PLoS Biol 13 (1):e1002033.
    Despite a large and multifaceted effort to understand the vast landscape of phenotypic data, their current form inhibits productive data analysis. The lack of a community-wide, consensus-based, human- and machine-interpretable language for describing phenotypes and their genomic and environmental contexts is perhaps the most pressing scientific bottleneck to integration across many key fields in biology, including genomics, systems biology, development, medicine, evolution, ecology, and systematics. Here we survey the current phenomics landscape, including data resources and handling, and the progress that (...)
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  28.  14
    Does the emphasis on caring within nursing contribute to nurses' silence about practice issues?Sherry Dahlke & Sarah Stahlke Wall - 2017 - Nursing Philosophy 18 (3):e12150.
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  29.  1
    Physician-Based Approaches to Price Transparency: A Solution in Search of a Problem?Sherry Glied - 2024 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 52 (1):31-33.
    Physician-based transparency approaches have been advanced as a strategy for informing patients of the likely financial consequences of using services. The structure of health care pricing and insurance coverage, and the low uptake of existing tools, suggest these approaches are likely to be unwieldy and unsuccessful. They may also generate new ethical challenges.
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  30.  36
    The prelude to the millennium: The backstory of digital aesthetics.Sherry Mayo - 2008 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 42 (1):100-113.
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  31. Thomas Henry Huxley: The Evolution of a Scientist.Sherrie Lyons - 2000 - Journal of the History of Biology 33 (3):594-597.
  32.  81
    The origins of T. H. Huxley's saltationism: History in Darwin's shadow.Sherrie L. Lyons - 1995 - Journal of the History of Biology 28 (3):463-494.
  33.  17
    The Ethnographer’s Apprentice: Trying Consumer Culture from the Outside In.John F. Sherry - 2008 - Journal of Business Ethics 80 (1):85-95.
    Anthropologists have long wrestled with their impact upon the people they study. Historically, the discipline has served and subverted colonial agendas, but views itself traditionally as an advocate for the disempowered and as an instrument of public policy. Marketing is now among the pre-eminent institutions of cultural stability and change at work on the planet. Currently, ethnography is assuming a growing importance in the marketer's effort to influence the accommodation and resistance of consumers to the neocolonial forces of globalization. The (...)
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  34.  7
    South Philippine languages.Sherri Brainard - 2006 - In Keith Brown (ed.), Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics. Elsevier. pp. 11--580.
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  35.  4
    Child care or child neglect?: Baby farming in late-nineteenth-century philadelphia.Sherri Broder - 1988 - Gender and Society 2 (2):128-148.
    This article examines baby farming as an urban neighborhood-based system of group child care in Philadelphia in the late nineteenth century and considers the dangers and abuses the practice of baby farming posed for parents, children, and baby farmers. It explores reformers' early efforts to regulate the city's baby farms. Finally, the essay also investigates the ways in which the residents of Philadelphia's poor neighborhoods monitored the child-care establishments in their communities that catered to working mothers.
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  36. The Essence of Spinoza's God.Sherry Lynn Deveaux & Sherry Deveaux - 2000 - Dissertation, University of California, Davis
    In my dissertation I approach the subject of the attributes of God in Spinoza's metaphysics by considering three pivotal and closely linked problems. I discuss the problem of the relation of God to the attributes, the problem of the essence of God, and the problem of the true conception of God. ;I examine three interpretations of God and the attributes in Spinoza: that of Jonathan Bennett, according to which God is the thing that has the attributes and modes as properties, (...)
     
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  37.  36
    Becoming a Critical Thinker: A User Friendly Manual.Sherry Diestler - 2009 - Boston: Pearson/Prentice Hall.
    Developing Instinctive Analytical Skills in Students Becoming a Critical Thinker: A User Friendly Manual trains students to distinguish high-quality, well-supported arguments from those with little or no evidence to support them. It develops the skills required to effectively evaluate the many claims facing them as citizens, learners, consumers, and human beings, and also to be effective advocates for their beliefs. Teaching and Learning Experience Personalize Learning - MyThinkingLabdelivers proven results in helping students succeed, provides engaging experiences that personalize learning, and (...)
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  38.  9
    Discover your authentic self: be you, be free, be happy.Sherrie Dillard - 2016 - Woodbury, MN: Llewellyn Publications.
    Embrace your authentic self and let your soul's light shine forth with guidance from 150 lessons meant to inspire, motivate, and teach. This empowering book helps you shed what is false and come to know, accept, and express your true self. With essays to uplift and engage you through personal stories, meditations, exercises, affirmations, and question prompts, Discover Your Authentic Self shows you how to live according to your passions and purpose. Explore a range of topics for self-discovery, including intuition, (...)
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  39.  12
    In search of the dragon: Mt. Murō’s sacred topography.Sherry Fowler - 1997 - Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 24 (1-2):145-161.
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  40. The TARES Test: Five Principles for Ethical Persuasion.Sherry Baker & David Martinson - 2001 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 16 (2-3):148-175.
    Whereas professional persuasion is a means to an immediate and instrumental end, ethical persuasion must rest on or serve a deeper, morally based final end. Among the moral final ends of journalism, for example, are truth and freedom. There is a very real danger that advertisers and public relations practitioners will play an increasingly dysfunctional role in the communications process if means continue to be confused with ends in professional persuasive communications. Means and ends will continue to be confused unless (...)
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  41.  16
    How nurses’ use of language creates meaning about healthcare users and nursing practice.Sherry Dahlke & Kathleen F. Hunter - 2020 - Nursing Inquiry 27 (3):e12346.
    Nursing practice occurs in the context of conversations with healthcare users, other healthcare professionals, and healthcare institutions. This discussion paper draws on symbolic interactionism and Fairclough's method of critical discourse analysis to examine language that nurses use to describe the people in their care and their practice. We discuss how nurses’ use of language constructs meaning about healthcare users and their own work. Through language, nurses are articulating what they believe about healthcare users and nursing practice. We argue that the (...)
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  42.  31
    The patient's perspective on the need for informed consent for minimal risk studies: Development of a survey-based measure.Sherrie H. Kaplan, Adrijana Gombosev, Sheila Fireman, James Sabin, Lauren Heim, Lauren Shimelman, Rebecca Kaganov, Kathryn E. Osann, Thomas Tjoa & Susan S. Huang - 2016 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 7 (2):116-124.
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  43. Understanding students' explanations of biological phenomena: Conceptual frameworks or p‐prims?Sherry A. Southerland, Eleanor Abrams, Catherine L. Cummins & Julie Anzelmo - 2001 - Science Education 85 (4):328-348.
     
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  44. The State of the Discipline: New Data on Women Faculty in Philosophy.Sherri Lynn Conklin, Irina Artamonova & Nicole Hassoun - 2019 - Ergo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 6.
    This paper presents data on the representation of women at 98 philosophy departments in the United States, which were ranked by the Philosophical Gourmet Report (PGR) in 2015 as well as all of those schools on which data from 2004 exist. The paper makes four points in providing an overview of the state of the field. First, all programs reveal a statistically significant increase in the percentage of women tenured/tenure-track faculty, since 2004. Second, out of the 98 US philosophy departments (...)
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  45. Closure Failure and Scientific Inquiry.Sherri Roush - 2017 - Res Philosophica 94 (2):1-25.
    Deduction is important to scientific inquiry because it can extend knowledge efficiently, bypassing the need to investigate everything directly. The existence of closure failure—where one knows the premises and that the premises imply the conclusion but nevertheless does not know the conclusion—is a problem because it threatens this usage. It means that we cannot trust deduction for gaining new knowledge unless we can identify such cases ahead of time so as to avoid them. For philosophically engineered examples we have “inner (...)
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  46.  24
    Where are the Women: The Ethnic Representation of Women Authors in Philosophy Journals by Regional Affiliation and Specialization.Sherri Lynn Conklin, Michael Nekrasov & Jevin West - 2023 - European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 19 (1):4-48.
    Using bibliographic metadata from 177 Philosophy Journals between 1950 and 2020, this article presents new data on the under- representation of women authors in philosophy journals across decades and across four different compounding factors. First, we examine how philosophy fits in comparison to other academic disciplines. Second, we consider how the regional academic context in which Philosophy Journals operate impacts on author gender proportions. Third, we consider how the regional specialization of a journal impacts on author gender proportions. Fourth, and (...)
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  47. The Pervasiveness of the Aesthetic in Ordinary Experience.Sherri Irvin - 2008 - British Journal of Aesthetics 48 (1):29-44.
    I argue that the experiences of everyday life are replete with aesthetic character, though this fact has been largely neglected within contemporary aesthetics. As against Dewey's account of aesthetic experience, I suggest that the fact that many everyday experiences are simple, lacking in unity or closure, and characterized by limited or fragmented awareness does not disqualify them from aesthetic consideration. Aesthetic attention to the domain of everyday experience may provide for lives of greater satisfaction and contribute to our ability to (...)
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  48.  22
    Women's reactions to job loss: The moral dilemmas of a plant closing. [REVIEW]Suzanna Smith - 1991 - Agriculture and Human Values 8 (3):35-45.
    Blue collar women in declining industries tend to suffer permanent job loss as a result of dislocation, and women living in rural areas may be particularly vulnerable to extended unemployment. Relatively little is known about their experiences, in part because existing conceptual models do not adequately represent women's perspectives. In this study it is proposed that an ethic of care, as conceptualized by Carol Gilligan, shapes women's interpretations of the meaning of job dislocation. Gilligan's constructs are applied to a study (...)
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  49.  56
    The evolution of multiple memory systems.David F. Sherry & Daniel L. Schacter - 1987 - Psychological Review 94 (4):439-454.
  50. Resisting Body Oppression: An Aesthetic Approach.Sherri Irvin - 2017 - Feminist Philosophy Quarterly 3 (4):1-26.
    Open Access: This article argues for an aesthetic approach to resisting oppression based on judgments of bodily unattractiveness. Philosophical theories have often suggested that appropriate aesthetic judgments should converge on sets of objects consensually found to be beautiful or ugly. The convergence of judgments about human bodies, however, is a significant source of injustice, because people judged to be unattractive pay substantial social and economic penalties in domains such as education, employment and criminal justice. The injustice is compounded by the (...)
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