Results for 'M. Gullick'

980 found
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  1.  4
    Malaysia and Its Neighbours.J. M. Wilson & J. M. Gullick - 1968 - British Journal of Educational Studies 16 (1):107.
  2.  18
    Understanding less than nothing: children's neural response to negative numbers shifts across age and accuracy.Margaret M. Gullick & George Wolford - 2013 - Frontiers in Psychology 4.
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  3. Keith Ansell-Pearson, An Introduction to Nietzsche as Political Thinker.M. Gullick - forthcoming - Radical Philosophy.
     
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  4.  62
    The relationship of ethics education to moral sensitivity and moral reasoning skills of nursing students.Mihyun Park, Diane Kjervik, Jamie Crandell & Marilyn H. Oermann - 2012 - Nursing Ethics 19 (4):568-580.
    This study described the relationships between academic class and student moral sensitivity and reasoning and between curriculum design components for ethics education and student moral sensitivity and reasoning. The data were collected from freshman (n = 506) and senior students (n = 440) in eight baccalaureate nursing programs in South Korea by survey; the survey consisted of the Korean Moral Sensitivity Questionnaire and the Korean Defining Issues Test. The results showed that moral sensitivity scores in patient-oriented care and conflict were (...)
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  5.  5
    Istoricheskoe i logicheskoe: filosofsko-metodologicheskiĭ analiz: monografii︠a︡.M. M. Prokhorov - 2004 - Nizhniĭ Novgorod: Volzhskai︠a︡ gos. inzhenerno-pedagog..
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  6.  26
    A phenomenological construct of caring among spouses following acute coronary syndrome.Janice Gullick, Mark Krivograd, Susan Taggart, Susana Brazete, Lise Panaretto & John Wu - 2017 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 20 (3):393-404.
    The aim of this study was interpret the existential construct of family caring following Acute Coronary Syndrome. Family support is known to have a positive impact on recovery and adjustment after cardiac events. Few studies provide philosophically-based, interpretative explorations of carer experience following a spouse’s ischaemic event. As carer experiences, behaviours and meaning-making may impact on the quality of the support they provide to patients, further understanding could improve both patient outcomes and family experience. Fourteen spouses of people experiencing Acute (...)
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  7.  23
    Heideggerian hermeneutic phenomenology as method: modelling analysis through a meta-synthesis of articles on Being-towards-death.Janice Gullick & Sandra West - 2020 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 23 (1):87-105.
    While the richness of Heideggerian philosophy is attractive as a healthcare research framework, its density means authors rarely utilise its fullest possibilities as an hermeneutic analytic structure. This article aims to clarify Heideggerian hermeneutic analysis by taking one discrete element of Heideggerian philosophy (Being-towards-death), and using it’s clearly defined structure to conduct a meta-synthesis of Heideggerian phenomenological studies on the experience of living with a potentially life-limiting illness. The findings richly illustrate Heidegger’s philosophy that there is either an inauthentic positioning (...)
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  8.  23
    Heideggerian structures of Being-with in the nurse–patient relationship: modelling phenomenological analysis through qualitative meta-synthesis.Janice Gullick, John Wu, Cindy Reid, Agness Chisanga Tembo, Sara Shishehgar & Lisa Conlon - 2020 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 23 (4):645-664.
    Heideggerian philosophy is frequently chosen as a philosophical framing, and/or a hermeneutic analytical structure in qualitative nursing research. As Heideggerian philosophy is dense, there is merit in the development of scholarly resources that help to explain discrete Heideggerian concepts and to uncover their relevance to contemporary human experience. This paper uses a meta-synthesis methodology to pool and synthesise findings from 29 phenomenological research reports on Being-with in the nurse–patient relationship. We firstly considered and secured the most relevant Heideggerian elements to (...)
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  9.  21
    Las Actas de los mártires. Una actualización de los Documentos Sobre los Primeros Cristianos.Mª Amparo Mateo Donet - 2014 - Augustinianum 54 (2):375-400.
    This paper is an update of the documents we have concerning the Acts of the Christian martyrs, focused on three main aspects: 1) the kind of acts we know of and their classification from the point of view of their historic value; 2) the versions or editions of the texts that are most accepted by scholars; 3) the relevance of the different parts that make up these documents in order to discern the original text from passages that were rewritten or (...)
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  10.  18
    Philosophical underpinnings of intersubjectivity and its significance to phenomenological research: A discussion paper.Agness Chisanga Tembo, Janice Gullick & Joseph Francis Pendon - 2023 - Nursing Philosophy 24 (1):e12416.
    Intersubjectivity is the proposition that human experience occurs in a world of shared and embodied understandings, mediated by culture and language. Nursing is fundamentally relational, and nursing research stems from an exchange between participants and researchers and indeed around the transaction of the patient and the nurse in the intersubjective space of clinical settings. Through the philosophical standpoints of Husserl, Merleau‐Ponty, Heidegger, and Gadamer we examine these differing philosophical constructs of intersubjectivity and the contribution of these positions to phenomenological nursing (...)
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  11.  16
    Rehearsing Better Worlds: Poetry as A Way of Happening in the Works of Tomlinson and MacDiarmid.Duncan Gullick Lien - 2018 - Philosophy and Literature 42 (1):185-200.
    W. H. Auden's dictum "poetry makes nothing happen" has an enduring currency in poetic criticism, quoted ad nauseam to support the view that poetic discourse must never fall subservient to political ends.1 Conventional wisdom would hold that Hugh MacDiarmid, a poet more often noted for his obstinate commitment to communism, patently failed to heed this dictum. Indeed, as Scott Lyall notes, MacDiarmid's political poems are almost never anthologized, suggesting that the poems in which MacDiarmid's political views are made explicit are (...)
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  12. Aristotle and the pre-socratics.Thomas M. Robinson - 2004 - In Jorge J. E. Gracia & Jiyuan Yu (eds.), Uses and abuses of the classics: Western interpretations of Greek philosophy. Burlington, VT: Ashgate.
     
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  13. The Argument for Panpsychism from Experience of Causation.Hedda Hassel Mørch - 2019 - In William Seager (ed.), The Routledge Handbook of Panpsychism. Routledge.
    In recent literature, panpsychism has been defended by appeal to two main arguments: first, an argument from philosophy of mind, according to which panpsychism is the only view which successfully integrates consciousness into the physical world (Strawson 2006; Chalmers 2013); second, an argument from categorical properties, according to which panpsychism offers the only positive account of the categorical or intrinsic nature of physical reality (Seager 2006; Adams 2007; Alter and Nagasawa 2012). Historically, however, panpsychism has also been defended by appeal (...)
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  14.  3
    Professional ethics--for whose benefit?D. Gullick - 1982 - Journal of Medical Ethics 8 (3):163-163.
  15.  2
    al-Ḥurrīyah ʻinda Ibn ʻArabī.Majdī Muḥammad Ibrāhīm - 2004 - al-Ẓāhir, al-Qāhirah: Maktabat al-Thaqāfah al-Dīnīyah.
    Ibn al-ʻArabī, 1165-1240; views on freedom; Sufism; Islamic philosophy.
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  16. Focus: 271-297.M. Rooth - 1996 - In Shalom Lappin (ed.), The handbook of contemporary semantic theory. Cambridge, Mass., USA: Blackwell Reference. pp. 271-297.
     
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  17.  56
    Empedocles, the extant fragments.M. R. Wright - 1995 - Cambridge: Hackett Pub. Co.. Edited by M. R. Wright.
    Greek text, english translation and commentary on the surviving fragments of Empedocles (fragments as known in 1981, does not include more recent finds).
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  18.  12
    What nursing chooses not to know: Practices of epistemic silence/silencing.Jessica Dillard-Wright, Claire Valderama-Wallace, Lucinda Canty, Amélie Perron, Ismalia De Sousa & Janice Gullick - 2023 - Nursing Philosophy 24 (3):e12443.
    Drawing from a keynote panel held at the hybrid 25th International Philosophy of Nursing Conference, this discussion paper examines the question of epistemic silence in nursing from five different perspectives. Contributors include US‐based scholar Claire Valderama‐Wallace, who meditated on ecosystems of settler colonial logics of nursing; American scholar Lucinda Canty discussed the epistemic silencing of nurses of colour; Canadian scholar Amelie Perron interrogated the use of disobedience and parrhesia in and for nursing; Canada‐based scholar Ismalia De Sousa considered what nursing (...)
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  19.  23
    Look, no hands!Eric M. Patterson & Janet Mann - 2012 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 35 (4):235-236.
    Contrary to Vaesen's argument that humans are unique with respect to nine cognitive capacities essential for tool use, we suggest that although such cognitive processes contribute to variation in tool use, it does not follow that these capacities arenecessaryfor tool use, nor that tool use shaped cognition per se, given the available data in cognitive neuroscience and behavioral biology.
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  20. The civil society argument.M. Walzer - 1995 - In Julia Stapleton (ed.), Group rights: perspectives since 1900. Bristol: Thoemmes Press.
     
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  21. The ethic of the care for the self as a practice of freedom: An interview with Michael Foucault on 20th January 1984.M. Foucault - 1987 - In James William Bernauer & David M. Rasmussen (eds.), The Final Foucault. Cambridge: MIT Press.
     
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  22. The Embedded Neuron, the Enactive Field?M. Chirimuuta & I. Gold - 2009 - In John Bickle (ed.), The Oxford handbook of philosophy and neuroscience. New York: Oxford University Press.
    The concept of the receptive field, first articulated by Hartline, is central to visual neuroscience. The receptive field of a neuron encompasses the spatial and temporal properties of stimuli that activate the neuron, and, as Hubel and Wiesel conceived of it, a neuron’s receptive field is static. This makes it possible to build models of neural circuits and to build up more complex receptive fields out of simpler ones. Recent work in visual neurophysiology is providing evidence that the classical receptive (...)
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  23. Na tenevoĭ storone: materialy k istorii seminara M.A. Rozova po ėpistemologii i filosofii nauki v Novosibirskom akademgorodke.M. A. Rozov & S. S. Rozova (eds.) - 1996 - Novosibirsk: Gosudarstvennyĭ komitet RF po vysshemu obrazovanii︠u︡, Novosibirskiĭ gosydarstvennyĭ universitet.
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  24.  12
    Naturalizing the transcendental: a pragmatic view.Sami Pihlström - 2003 - Amherst, N.Y.: Humanity Books.
  25. Introduction to Logic.Irving M. Copi - manuscript
    There are obvious benefits to be gained from the study of logic: heightened ability to express ideas clearly and concisely, increased skill in defining one's terms, enlarged capacity to formulate arguments rigorously and to analyze them critically. But the greatest benefit, in my judgment, is the recognition that reason can be applied in every aspect of human affairs.
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  26. An Introduction to Nietzsche as Political Thinker. [REVIEW]Mark Gullick - 1996 - Radical Philosophy 77.
     
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  27.  14
    Book reviews. [REVIEW]Mark W. Gullick - 1987 - British Journal of Aesthetics 27 (2):289-290.
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  28.  12
    Book reviews. [REVIEW]Mark Gullick - 1988 - British Journal of Aesthetics 28 (3):289-290.
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  29.  11
    Book reviews. [REVIEW]Mark Gullick - 1992 - British Journal of Aesthetics 32 (2):289-290.
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  30.  8
    Book reviews. [REVIEW]Mark Gullick - 1994 - British Journal of Aesthetics 34 (3):289-290.
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  31.  14
    Book reviews. [REVIEW]Mark Gullick - 1995 - British Journal of Aesthetics 35 (3):289-290.
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  32.  3
    Book reviews. [REVIEW]Mark Gullick - 1996 - British Journal of Aesthetics 36 (2):289-290.
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  33.  14
    Book reviews. [REVIEW]Mark Gullick - 1998 - British Journal of Aesthetics 38 (2):289-290.
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  34. "Coleridge and the Self: Romantic Egotism": Stephen Bygrave. [REVIEW]Mark W. Gullick - 1987 - British Journal of Aesthetics 27 (2):193.
     
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  35. "Genius and Monologue": Ken Frieden. [REVIEW]Mark Gullick - 1988 - British Journal of Aesthetics 28 (3):298.
     
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  36.  25
    Book reviews. [REVIEW]Mark W. Gullick - 1986 - British Journal of Aesthetics 26 (3):289-290.
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  37.  7
    Book reviews. [REVIEW]Marx Gullick - 1991 - British Journal of Aesthetics 31 (1):289-290.
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  38. "Gadamer's Hermeneutics: A Reading of" Truth and Method: Joel C. Weinsheimer. [REVIEW]Mark W. Gullick - 1986 - British Journal of Aesthetics 26 (3):289.
  39. Conspiracy Theories and Evidential Self-Insulation.M. Giulia Napolitano - 2021 - In Sven Bernecker, Amy K. Flowerree & Thomas Grundmann (eds.), The Epistemology of Fake News. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 82-105.
    What are conspiracy theories? And what, if anything, is epistemically wrong with them? I offer an account on which conspiracy theories are a unique way of holding a belief in a conspiracy. Specifically, I take conspiracy theories to be self-insulating beliefs in conspiracies. On this view, conspiracy theorists have their conspiratorial beliefs in a way that is immune to revision by counter-evidence. I argue that conspiracy theories are always irrational. Although conspiracy theories involve an expectation to encounter some seemingly disconfirming (...)
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  40. The masses in a representative democracy.M. Oakeshott - 1995 - In Julia Stapleton (ed.), Group rights: perspectives since 1900. Bristol: Thoemmes Press.
     
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  41.  92
    Varieties of three-valued Heyting algebras with a quantifier.M. Abad, J. P. Díaz Varela, L. A. Rueda & A. M. Suardíaz - 2000 - Studia Logica 65 (2):181-198.
    This paper is devoted to the study of some subvarieties of the variety Qof Q-Heyting algebras, that is, Heyting algebras with a quantifier. In particular, a deeper investigation is carried out in the variety Q 3 of three-valued Q-Heyting algebras to show that the structure of the lattice of subvarieties of Qis far more complicated that the lattice of subvarieties of Heyting algebras. We determine the simple and subdirectly irreducible algebras in Q 3 and we construct the lattice of subvarieties (...)
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  42. Dilemmas of ideology.M. Billig - 1988 - In Michael Billig (ed.), Ideological dilemmas: a social psychology of everyday thinking. Newbury Park: Sage Publications. pp. 25--42.
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  43. Computing machinery and intelligence.Alan M. Turing - 1950 - Mind 59 (October):433-60.
    I propose to consider the question, "Can machines think?" This should begin with definitions of the meaning of the terms "machine" and "think." The definitions might be framed so as to reflect so far as possible the normal use of the words, but this attitude is dangerous, If the meaning of the words "machine" and "think" are to be found by examining how they are commonly used it is difficult to escape the conclusion that the meaning and the answer to (...)
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  44.  32
    Growing explanations: historical perspectives on recent science.M. Norton Wise (ed.) - 2004 - Durham: Duke University Press.
    This collection addresses a post-WWII shift in the hierarchy of scientific explanations, where the highest goal moves from reductionism towards some ...
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  45.  31
    The indispensability of moral principles in governance.M. E. Abam - 2011 - Sophia: An African Journal of Philosophy 10 (2).
  46.  3
    ????????????????????????Karim Abdeldai̇m - 2016 - Journal of Turkish Studies 11 (Volume 11 Issue 15):1-1.
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  47. Barbara Kruger.M. Corris & L. R. Lippard - 2007 - In Diarmuid Costello & Jonathan Vickery (eds.), Art: key contemporary thinkers. New York: Berg. pp. 24.
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  48. Its power is founded on a kind of structural analysis of the poetics of ritual'(lc, P. 119). John Welchman.M. Kelley - 2007 - In Diarmuid Costello & Jonathan Vickery (eds.), Art: key contemporary thinkers. New York: Berg. pp. 16.
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  49.  37
    Zhuangzi’s Word, Heidegger’s Word, and the Confucian Word.Eske J. Møllgaard - 2014 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 41 (3-4):454-469.
    Traditional Chinese commentators rightly see that understanding Zhuangzi's way with words is the presupposition for understanding Zhuangzi at all. They are not sure, however, if Zhuangzi's words are super-effective or pure nonsense. I consider Zhuangzi's experience with language, and then turn to Heidegger's word of being to see if it may throw light on Zhuangzi's way of saying. I argue that a conversation between Heidegger and Zhuangzi on language is possible, but only by expanding Heidegger's notion of Gestell and through (...)
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  50. No Work For a Theory of Universals.M. Eddon & Christopher J. G. Meacham - 2015 - In Jonathan Schaffer & Barry Loewer (eds.), A Companion to David Lewis. Oxford, UK: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 116-137.
    Several variants of Lewis's Best System Account of Lawhood have been proposed that avoid its commitment to perfectly natural properties. There has been little discussion of the relative merits of these proposals, and little discussion of how one might extend this strategy to provide natural property-free variants of Lewis's other accounts, such as his accounts of duplication, intrinsicality, causation, counterfactuals, and reference. We undertake these projects in this paper. We begin by providing a framework for classifying and assessing the variants (...)
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