Results for 'Skip Worden'

982 found
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  1.  55
    Religion in Strategic Leadership: A Positivistic, Normative/Theological, and Strategic Analysis.Skip Worden - 2005 - Journal of Business Ethics 57 (3):221-239.
    This paper presents positivistic, normative/theological, and strategic analyses of the application of religion to the practice of strategic leadership in business. It is argued that elements of religion can enrich several components of strategic leadership. Furthermore, it is argued that the question of whether religion ought to be applied involves the more basic question of whether there is a common basis or a meta-framework relating theological and normative analyses. Finally, because the strategic value of religion in strategic leadership involves varying (...)
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  2.  39
    A Genealogy of Business Ethics: A Nietzschean Perspective.Skip Worden - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 84 (3):427-456.
    This article approaches the field of business ethics from a Nietzschean vantage point, which means explaining the weakness of the field by means of providing an etiological account of the values esteemed by the decadent business ethicists therein. I argue that such business ethicists have wandered from their immanent philosophical ground to act as scientists, business persons, and preaching-moralists as a way of evading their human self-contradictions. In actuality, this fleeing exacerbates them into a sickness of self-idolatry and selfloathing. I (...)
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  3.  14
    Aristotle’s Natural Wealth: The Role of Limitation in Thwarting Misordered Concupiscence.Skip Worden - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 84 (2):209-219.
    I argue that Aristotle's approach to the proper type of acquisition, use-value, want, and accumulation/storage of wealth is oriented less to excluding commercial activity, such as that of Aristotle's Athens, than to forestalling misordered concupiscence – the taking of an inherendy limited good for the unlimited, or highest, good. That is, his moral aversion to taking a means for an end lies behind his rendering of the sort of wealth that is natural. By stressing the limited nature of natural wealth, (...)
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  4.  38
    The Role of Integrity as a Mediator in Strategic Leadership: A Recipe for Reputational Capital. [REVIEW]Skip Worden - 2003 - Journal of Business Ethics 46 (1):31 - 44.
    In the context of a crisis of confidence in executive leadership in corporate America, this paper examines the role of integrity as a mediator within strategic leadership and its impact on credibility in reputational capital. A tension can occur within strategic leadership between the elements of strategic planning and leadership vision. This tension can destroy the credibility of reputational capital unless strategic leadership is managed effectively. Integrity can be used as the glue providing for credible leadership vision amid a strategic (...)
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  5.  26
    The Role of Religious and Nationalist Ethics in Strategic Leadership: The Case of J. N. Tata. [REVIEW]Skip Worden - 2003 - Journal of Business Ethics 47 (2):147 - 164.
    This paper examines the role that religious ethics, complemented by a nationalist principle, can play in a sustained exercise of strategic leadership, hypothesizing a positive association with a societal reputation for credibility or integrity. The key to this relation is the constraining effect on strategic or financial pressures, even if there is coherence in the long-term. J. N. Tata, the founder of Tata Industries who lived in British India, was a Parsee priest and an advocate for Indian national self-reliance and (...)
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  6.  62
    Aristotle’s Natural Wealth: The Role of Limitation in Thwarting Misordered Concupiscence. [REVIEW]Skip Worden - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 84 (2):209 - 219.
    I argue that Aristotle's approach to the proper type of acquisition, use-value, want, and accumulation/storage of wealth is oriented less to excluding commercial activity, such as that of Aristotle's Athens, than to forestalling misordered concupiscence – the taking of an inherendy limited good for the unlimited, or highest, good. That is, his moral aversion to taking a means for an end lies behind his rendering of the sort of wealth that is natural. By stressing the limited nature of natural wealth, (...)
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  7.  7
    Biography of God.Skip Heitzig - 2020 - Eugene, Oregon: Harvest House Publishers.
    The Biography of God offers a personal encounter with God-one that is uplifting, instructive, and practical for every area of life. This is a very conversational-style book that inspires, encourages, and enables readers to know God better.
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  8.  14
    Apocalyptic Dread: American Film at the Turn of the Millennium (review).Skip Willman - 2008 - Symploke 16 (1-2):331-333.
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  9.  22
    The Politics of James Bond: From Fleming's Novels to the Big Screen (review).Skip Willman - 2005 - Symploke 13 (1):350-352.
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  10.  13
    Union Rights and Inequalities.Stephen Bagwell, Skip Mark, Meridith LaVelle & Asia Parker - 2023 - Human Rights Review 24 (4):465-483.
    Competing arguments surrounding the relationships between inequalities and labor rights have persisted over time. This paper explores whether labor rights increase or decrease two types of wage inequalities: vertical inequality and horizontal inequality. Vertical inequalities reflect inequalities in wealth or income between individuals, while horizontal inequalities reflect inequalities between social, ethnic, economic, and political groups which are usually culturally defined or socially constructed. By broadening the scope beyond traditional indicators of inequality (i.e., vertical inequality) to include horizontal inequality, we test (...)
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  11. Bribery is Being Outlawed Worldwide.Skip Kalthenhauser - forthcoming - Business Ethics.
     
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  12.  38
    Cover Story: China.Skip Kaltenheuser - 1995 - Business Ethics: The Magazine of Corporate Responsibility 9 (3):20-23.
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  13.  9
    Cover Story: China.Skip Kaltenheuser - 1995 - Business Ethics: The Magazine of Corporate Responsibility 9 (3):20-23.
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  14.  28
    Ending Poverty With Capitalism.Skip Kaltenheuser - 1997 - Business Ethics 11 (2):7-7.
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  15.  13
    Ending Poverty With Capitalism.Skip Kaltenheuser - 1997 - Business Ethics: The Magazine of Corporate Responsibility 11 (2):7-7.
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  16.  15
    “Organic” by Any Other Name May Not Smell as Sweet.Skip Kaltenheuser - 1998 - Business Ethics 12 (3):9-9.
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  17.  12
    “Organic” by Any Other Name May Not Smell as Sweet.Skip Kaltenheuser - 1998 - Business Ethics: The Magazine of Corporate Responsibility 12 (3):9-9.
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  18.  15
    The 10th Annual Business Ethics Awards.Skip Kaltenheuser - 1998 - Business Ethics 12 (6):10-12.
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  19.  17
    The 10th Annual Business Ethics Awards.Skip Kaltenheuser - 1998 - Business Ethics: The Magazine of Corporate Responsibility 12 (6):10-12.
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  20.  11
    Working Ideas: Hanford Nuclear Site Radiates Innovation.Skip Kaltenheuser - 1999 - Business Ethics: The Magazine of Corporate Responsibility 13 (3):11-11.
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  21.  52
    Working Ideas.Skip Kaltenheuser - 1999 - Business Ethics 13 (3):11-11.
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  22.  22
    Warning Signs.Skip Kaltenheuser - 1998 - Business Ethics: The Magazine of Corporate Responsibility 12 (3):11-11.
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  23.  71
    Warning Signs.Skip Kaltenheuser - 1998 - Business Ethics: The Magazine of Corporate Responsibility 12 (3):11-11.
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  24. The Neurosciences: Paths of Discovery.F. G. Worden, J. P. Swazey & G. Adelman (eds.) - 1975 - MIT Press.
  25.  66
    Disengagement in the Digital Age: A Virtue Ethical Approach to Epistemic Sorting on Social Media.Kirsten J. Worden - 2019 - Moral Philosophy and Politics 6 (2):235-259.
    Using the Aristotelian virtue of friendship and concept of practical wisdom, this paper argues that engaging in political discourse with friends on social media is conducive to the pursuit of the good life because it facilitates the acquisition of the socio-political information and understanding necessary to live well. Previous work on social media, the virtues, and friendship focuses on the initiation and maintenance of the highest form of friendship (Aristotle’s ‘ideal friendship’) online. I argue that the information necessary to live (...)
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  26.  19
    The Work of Art in the Age of Transmedia Production (With Regards to Walter Benjamin).Daniel Worden - 2023 - Angelaki 28 (5):56-77.
    This essay is a rewriting of Walter Benjamin’s “The Work of Art in the Age of Its Technological Reproducibility,” a classic text in critical theory and media studies. Appropriating Benjamin’s sentence, paragraph, and essay structures, the essay presents a series of theoretical reflections on the status of art during the current age of transmedia production. The essay seeks to contribute to a theory of contemporary art that moves beyond capitalist, and increasingly fascist, ideologies. As in Benjamin’s essay, this work is (...)
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  27. Hugh Redwald Trevor-Roper 1914–2003.Blair Worden - 2008 - In Marshall P. J. (ed.), Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 150 Biographical Memoirs of Fellows, VI. pp. 247-284.
     
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  28.  8
    Hybrid cognition.R. P. Worden - 1999 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 6 (1):70-90.
    I propose that neural cognition is supported by non-neural storage of a 3-D model of local space, used in the planning of movements. Information is stored in wave-like excitations which couple to neurons in the thalamus, with the wave-vectors of excitations representing spatial positions. This hybrid of neural and non-neural cognition may have fitness advantages over any purely neural mechanism -- in information capacity, geometric accuracy, and fast selective retrieval. The wave excitations may be sustained on a Bose-condensed state of (...)
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  29. Milton's Republicanism and the Tyranny of Heaven.Blair Worden - 1990 - In Gisela Bock, Quentin Skinner & Maurizio Viroli (eds.), Machiavelli and Republicanism. Cambridge University Press. pp. 243.
  30.  33
    Primate Social Intelligence.Robert P. Worden - 1996 - Cognitive Science 20 (4):579-616.
    A computational theory of primate social intelligence is proposed in which primates represent social situations internally by discrete symbol structures, called scripts. Three well‐defined computational operations on scripts are sufficient to support social learning, planning, and prediction. This gives a formal, predictive model with which to analyse how primate social knowledge is acquired, as well as how it is used.The theory is compared with primate data, such as Cheney and Seyfarth's observations of vervet monkeys. It gives simple, understandable script‐based analyses (...)
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  31.  22
    The Holy Grail of Democratic Policing.Robert E. Worden & Caitlin J. Dole - 2019 - Criminal Justice Ethics 38 (1):41-54.
    Unwarranted, by NYU law professor Barry Friedman, offers a diagnosis of some of the contemporary ills of American policing and a prescribed cure. Between 2014 and 2016, incidents of fatal shootings...
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  32.  8
    Marketing deviance: The selling of game fowl.Donna K. Darden & Steven K. Worden - 1996 - Society and Animals 4 (2):27-44.
    We use conventional marketing concepts to examine the marketing of the deviant and stigmatized activity of cockfighting and show how the two differ. Our research is based on several years of active participant observation with cockfighters and the examination of several publications devoted to the sport. We find a paradoxical situation wherein people who compete with each other in an illegal activity must also establish their reputations for honesty and trustworthiness. Aspects of a gerontocracy characterize this deviant world.
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  33.  6
    Cockfighting: The marketing of deviance.Donna K. Darden & Steven K. Worden - 1996 - Society and Animals 4 (2):211-231.
    We use conventional marketing concepts to examine the marketing of the deviant and stigmatized activity of cockfighting and show how the two differ. Our research is based on several years of active participant observation with cockfighters and the examination of several publications devoted to the sport. We find a paradoxical situation wherein people who compete with each other in an illegal activity must also establish their reputations for honesty and trustworthiness. Aspects of a gerontocracy characterize this deviant world.
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  34.  17
    Divine Contingency: Theologies of Divine Embodiment in Maximos and Tsong Kha Pa.Skip Horton-Parker - 2011 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 31:245-248.
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  35.  20
    Constructing and Contesting Histories of Slavery at the Cape, South Africa.Antonia Malan & Nigel Worden - 2011 - In Slavery in Africa: Archaeology and Memory. pp. 393.
    This chapter discusses slavery in South Africa. Chattel slavery existed in early colonial South Africa from the inception of the Dutch permanent settlement in 1658 until formal emancipation of slaves in the British empire in the 1830s. More than 80,000 slaves were imported from throughout the Indian Ocean world during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Although in the time of apartheid this slave heritage was buried in the public consciousness, since the 1990s museums, historians, and archaeologists have unearthed and published (...)
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  36. Slavery in Africa: Archaeology and Memory.Malan Antonia & Worden Nigel - 2011
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  37.  11
    Semantic processing without permanent storage.George Mandler & Patricia E. Worden - 1973 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 100 (2):277.
  38.  9
    Sentence-demonstration ability in reading-disabled vs. normal college students.Daniel W. Kee, Patricia E. Worden & Barbara Throckmorton - 1984 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 22 (3):183-185.
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  39.  2
    The Process and Effects of Mass Communication. [REVIEW]John K. Worden - 1974 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 8 (1):122.
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  40.  37
    IRB and Research Regulatory Delays Within the Military Health System: Do They Really Matter? And If So, Why and for Whom?Michael C. Freed, Laura A. Novak, William D. S. Killgore, Sheila A. M. Rauch, Tracey P. Koehlmoos, J. P. Ginsberg, Janice L. Krupnick, Albert "Skip" Rizzo, Anne Andrews & Charles C. Engel - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (8):30-37.
    Institutional review board delays may hinder the successful completion of federally funded research in the U.S. military. When this happens, time-sensitive, mission-relevant questions go unanswered. Research participants face unnecessary burdens and risks if delays squeeze recruitment timelines, resulting in inadequate sample sizes for definitive analyses. More broadly, military members are exposed to untested or undertested interventions, implemented by well-intentioned leaders who bypass the research process altogether. To illustrate, we offer two case examples. We posit that IRB delays often appear in (...)
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  41.  6
    Global cooperation achieved through small behavioral changes among strangers.G. Hartvigsen, L. Worden & S. A. Levin - 2000 - Complexity 5 (3):14.
  42.  1
    Key Beliefs, Ultimate Questions and Life Issues.Peter Smith & David Worden - 2003 - Heinemann.
    This title is written to match GCSE Religious Studies AQA B, option 2 and can be used as part of a full course or short course. It contains summaries and practise exam questions at the end of each section to help prepare for exams.
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  43.  22
    Changing visions of excellence in ontario school policy: The cases of living and learning and for the love of learning.Rosa Bruno-Jofré & George Skip Hills - 2011 - Educational Theory 61 (3):335-349.
    In this essay, Rosa Bruno-Jofré and George Hills examine two major Ontario policy documents: 1968's Living and Learning and 1994's For the Love of Learning. The purpose is, first, to gain insight into the uses of the term “excellence” in the context of discourse about educational aims and evaluation, and, second, to explore how these uses may have changed over time. Bruno-Jofré and Hills employ the conceptual framework developed by Madhu Prakash and Leonard Waks to elucidate the varied notions of (...)
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  44.  18
    Skip the Trip? Five Arguments on the Use of Nonhallucinogenic Psychedelics in Psychiatry.Andrew Peterson & Dominic Sisti - 2022 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 31 (4):472-476.
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  45.  29
    Hopping, skipping or jumping to conclusions? Clarifying the role of the JTC bias in delusions.Cordelia Fine, Mark Gardner, Jillian Craigie & Ian Gold - 2007 - Cogn Neuropsychiatry 12 (1):46-77.
    Introduction. There is substantial evidence that patients with delusions exhibit a reasoning bias—known as the “jumping to conclusions” bias—which leads them to accept hypotheses as correct on the basis of less evidence than controls. We address three questions concerning the JTC bias that require clarification. Firstly, what is the best measure of the JTC bias? Second, is the JTC bias correlated specifically with delusions, or only with the symptomatology of schizophrenia? And third, is the bias enhanced by emotionally salient material? (...)
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  46.  86
    Hop, Skip and jump: The agonistic conception of truth.Stephen Yablo - 1993 - Philosophical Perspectives 7:371-396.
  47.  19
    Skip the Age of Playback.Sebastian Kirschner - 2012 - Emotion Review 4 (3):285-286.
    Kathleen Higgins (2012) claims that emotional responses to music are mostly social constructs, derived from the cultural transmission of musical knowledge. I agree with this general idea, but question Higgins’ ethnocentric and narrow view, which reduces music mainly to the art of combining sounds to produce beauty of form and expression of emotion. Instead, I propose that the distinctive and unique behavior of active music-making evolved culturally to serve a range of adaptive functions in the social environments humans used to (...)
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  48.  8
    Skipping sex: A nonrecombinant genomic assemblage of complementary reproductive modules.Diego Hojsgaard & Manfred Schartl - 2021 - Bioessays 43 (1):2000111.
    The unusual occurrence and developmental diversity of asexual eukaryotes remain a puzzle. De novo formation of a functioning asexual genome requires a unique assembly of sets of genes or gene states to disrupt cellular mechanisms of meiosis and gametogenesis, and to affect discrete components of sexuality and produce clonal or hemiclonal offspring. We highlight two usually overlooked but essential conditions to understand the molecular nature of clonal organisms, that is, a nonrecombinant genomic assemblage retaining modifiers of the sexual program, and (...)
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  49.  3
    Skipped and Postponed Adolescence of Aristocratic Women in Japan: Resurrecting the Culture / Nature Issue.Takie Sugiyama Lebra - 1995 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 23 (1):79-102.
  50.  49
    Skipping the tracks. The experience of musical improvisation online.Roberto Zanetti - 2016 - Aisthesis: Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 9 (1):71-86.
    The present article aims at analyzing the social and ontological effects of listening music online, with particular attention to the artistic practice of improvisation. In the first paragraph, I will briefly explain the essential concepts which ontology of music has traditionally counted on, and I will suggest an alternative theoretical approach, that I define as ontology of musical act. Then I will investigate the relation between recording practices and improvisation. In the final paragraph I will compare some features of musical (...)
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