Results for 'Rhett Diessner'

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  1.  80
    Who engages with moral beauty?Rhett Diessner, Ravi Iyer, Meghan M. Smith & Jonathan Haidt - 2013 - Journal of Moral Education 42 (2):139-163.
    Aristotle considered moral beauty to be the telos of the human virtues. Displays of moral beauty have been shown to elicit the moral emotion of elevation and cause a desire to become a better person and to engage in prosocial behavior. Study 1 (N = 5380) shows engagement with moral beauty is related to several psychological constructs relevant to moral education, and structural models reveal that the story of engagement with moral beauty may be considered a story of love and (...)
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  2.  16
    Cognitive-Developmental Education Based on Stages of Understanding Experiences of Beauty.Rhett Diessner, Lana Schuerman, Amy Smith, Kelsey Marker, Alex Wilson & Katherine Wilson - 2016 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 50 (3):27-52.
    Arthur Danto has written:I came to view that in writing about beauty as a philosopher, I was addressing the deepest kind of issue there is. Beauty is but one of an immense range of aesthetic qualities, and philosophical aesthetics has been paralyzed by focusing as narrowly on beauty as it has. But beauty is the only one of the aesthetic qualities that is also a virtue, like truth and goodness. It is not simply among the values we live by, but (...)
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  3.  79
    The Beauty of the Psyche and Eros Myth: Integrating Aesthetics into Introduction to Psychology.Rhett Diessner & Kayla Burke - 2011 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 45 (4):97-108.
    Beginning in the late 1990s we became convinced that our undergraduate psychology students needed classroom experiences that set the conditions for them to become more engaged with beauty. We recognized the intrinsic importance of beauty to human psychological development, beyond any utilitarian concerns.1 But we also believed that there were important psychological benefits to be gained by becoming increasingly engaged with beauty. In this paper we briefly describe some of those benefits that have been documented in the psychological research literature (...)
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  4.  94
    Moral Elevation and Economic Games: The Moderating Role of Personality.Rico Pohling, Rhett Diessner, Shawnee Stacy, Destiny Woodward & Anja Strobel - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  5.  49
    Index to Volume 45.Dina Zoe Belluigi, Michael Belshaw, Michael Benton, Deborah Bradley, Bert Cardullo, Janine Certo, Wayne Brinda, Leslie Cunliffe, E. M. Dadlez & Rhett Diessner - 2011 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 45 (4).
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  6.  20
    Closing the gaps among a web of DNA repair disorders.Rhett J. Michelson & Ted Weinert - 2000 - Bioessays 22 (11):966-969.
    As recently as six years ago, three human diseases with similar phenotypes were mistakenly believed to be caused by a single genetic defect. The three diseases, Ataxia-telangiectasia, Nijmegen breakage syndrome, and an AT-like disorder are now known, however, to have defects in three separate genes: ATM, NBS1, and MRE11. Furthermore, new recent studies have shown now that all three gene products interact; the ATM kinase phosphorylates NBS1,1 which, in turn, associates with MRE11 to regulate DNA repair. Remarkably or expectedly, depending (...)
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  7.  51
    After the Republic.Rhett Gayle - 2011 - Philosophy of Management 10 (3):7-24.
    This article discusses views of leadership in the light of the financial crisis. Giving attention to views such as Plato and modern technocratic views, the paper is structured around a discussion of a specific organisation; Manchester: Knowledge Capital (M:KC), an organisation that seems to me to exemplify in practice the ideas about leadership that I am proposing as being a valuable way forward.
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  8. Beginning in an-other place: oppugnancy and the formation of Black sociology.Rhett S. Jones - 1992 - The Griot 1:15-26.
     
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  9. Why pan-Africanism failed: Blackness and international relations.Rhett Jones - 1995 - The Griot 14 (1):420.
     
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  10. Self-transformation and Spiritual Exemplars.Victoria S. Harrison & Rhett Gayle - 2020 - European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 12 (4):9-26.
    This paper focuses on the process of self-transformation through which a person comes to embody the ideal of her religion’s vision of the divine, as far as that ideal is expressible in a human life. The paper is concerned with the self as the subject of religious commitments, traits, religious aspirations and religiously inspired ideals. The self-transformative journey that people are invited to undertake poses a number of philosophical and practical difficulties; the paper explores some of these difficulties, concentrating on (...)
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  11.  8
    Skill-Biased Liberalization: Germany’s Transition to the Knowledge Economy.David Hope, Niccolo Durazzi & Sebastian Diessner - 2022 - Politics and Society 50 (1):117-155.
    This article conceptualizes the evolution of the German political economy as the codevelopment of technological and institutional change. The notion of skill-biased liberalization is introduced to capture this process and contrasted with the two dominant theoretical frameworks employed in contemporary comparative political economy scholarship—dualization and liberalization. Integrating theories from labor economics, the article argues that the increasing centrality of high skills complementary in production to information and communications technology has weakened the traditional complementarity among specific skills, regulated industrial relations, and (...)
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  12.  7
    Discovering Alabama Forests.Doug Phillips, Robert P. Falls & Rhett Johnson - 2006 - University Alabama Press.
    In Discovering Alabama Forests, ecologist-educator Doug Phillips and photographer Robert Falls celebrate the current health and diversity of Alabama woodlands while sounding a call for their wise management and protection in the future.
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  13.  4
    Book Review: Outlaw Women: Prison, Rural Violence, and Poverty in the American West by Susan Dewey, Bonnie Zare, Catherine Connolly, Rhett Epler, and Rosemary Bratton. [REVIEW]Amber Kelly - 2020 - Gender and Society 34 (6):1047-1049.
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  14.  64
    Rape and Persuasive Definition.Keith Burgess-Jackson - 1995 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 25 (3):415 - 454.
    If we [women] have not stopped rape, we have redefined it, we have faced it, and we have set up the structures to deal with it for ourselves.[T]he definition of rape, which has in the past always been understood to mean the use of violence or the threat of it to force sex upon an unwilling woman, is now being broadened to include a whole range of sexual relations that have never before in all of human experience been regarded as (...)
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  15.  7
    Aesthetics equals politics: new discourses across art, architecture, and philosophy.Mark Foster Gage (ed.) - 2019 - Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
    How aesthetics—understood as a more encompassing framework for human activity—might become the primary discourse for political and social engagement. These essays make the case for a reignited understanding of aesthetics—one that casts aesthetics not as illusory, subjective, or superficial, but as a more encompassing framework for human activity. Such an aesthetics, the contributors suggest, could become the primary discourse for political and social engagement. Departing from the “critical” stance of twentieth-century artists and theorists who embraced a counter-aesthetic framework for political (...)
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