Results for 'Amy Lewin'

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  1.  26
    Informed Consent and the Implications for Statutory Rape Reporting in Research With Adolescents.Stacy Hodgkinson, Amy Lewin, Bora Chang, Lee Beers & Tomas Silber - 2014 - American Journal of Bioethics 14 (10):54-55.
  2.  60
    Social Networkers' Attitudes Toward Direct-to-Consumer Personal Genome Testing.Amy McGuire, Christina Diaz, Tao Wang & Susan Hilsenbeck - 2009 - American Journal of Bioethics 9 (6-7):3-10.
    Purpose: This study explores social networkers' interest in and attitudes toward personal genome testing (PGT), focusing on expectations related to the clinical integration of PGT results. Methods: An online survey of 1,087 social networking users was conducted to assess 1) use and interest in PGT; 2) attitudes toward PGT companies and test results; and 3) expectations for the clinical integration of PGT. Descriptive statistics were calculated to summarize respondents' characteristics and responses. Results: Six percent of respondents have used PGT, 64% (...)
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  3.  12
    Emotional fundamentalism and education of the body.Amy N. Sojot - 2022 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 54 (7):927-937.
    This article examines the productive capacity of emotion through the concept of emotional fundamentalism. Emotional fundamentalism combines several key concepts—fundamentalism, affective labor, biopolitics, and capitalism’s contradictions—developed by Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri in Empire, Multitude, and Commonwealth to describe the intensified attention to the body in education. I investigate the implications of the increased organizational and corporate interest in emotion using an ongoing socio-emotional learning study and the introduction of artificial intelligence aggression detectors in schools. Doing so demonstrates the tendency (...)
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  4.  65
    Power and the Politics of Difference: Oppression, Empowerment, and Transnational Justice.Amy Allen - 2008 - Hypatia 23 (3):156-172.
    In this paper, I examine Iris Marion Young's conception of power, arguing that it is incomplete in at least two ways. First, Young tends to equate the term power with the narrower notions of ‘oppression’ and ‘domination.’ Thus, Young lacks a satisfactory analysis of individual and collective empowerment. Second, as Young herself admits, it is not obvious that her analysis of power can be useful in the context of thinking about transnational justice. I conclude by considering one way in which (...)
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  5.  49
    The Economic and Career Effects of Sexual Harassment on Working Women.Amy Blackstone, Christopher Uggen & Heather McLaughlin - 2017 - Gender and Society 31 (3):333-358.
    Many working women will experience sexual harassment at some point in their careers. While some report this harassment, many leave their jobs to escape the harassing environment. This mixed-methods study examines whether sexual harassment and subsequent career disruption affect women’s careers. Using in-depth interviews and longitudinal survey data from the Youth Development Study, we examine the effect of sexual harassment for women in the early career. We find that sexual harassment increases financial stress, largely by precipitating job change, and can (...)
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  6. Introduction.Amy Allen & Eduardo Mendieta - 2021 - In Amy Allen & Eduardo Mendieta (eds.), Decolonizing ethics: the critical theory of Enrique Dussel. University Park, Pennsylvania: The Pennsylvania State University Press.
  7.  7
    7. The History of Historicity: The Critique of Reason in Foucault.Amy Allen - 2016 - In ChristopherVE Penfield, Vernon W. Cisney & Nicolae Morar (eds.), Between Foucault and Derrida. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 125-137.
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  8.  8
    Introduction.Amy Gutmann - 2016 - In J. M. Coetzee (ed.), The Lives of Animals. Princeton University Press. pp. 1-12.
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  9.  40
    The entanglement of power and validity : Foucault and critical theory.Amy Allen - 2010 - In Christopher Falzon (ed.), Foucault and Philosophy. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 78--98.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Subjection and Autonomy: Foucault contra Habermas What Is Fallacious About the Genetic Fallacy? Conclusion References.
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  10.  6
    Bruce Scholten: Dairy farming in the 21st century: global ethics and politics.Amy Trauger - forthcoming - Agriculture and Human Values:1-2.
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  11.  36
    “Psychoanalysis and Ethnology” Revisited: Foucault's Historicization of History.Amy Allen - 2017 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 55 (S1):31-46.
    This article re-examines the closing sections of Michel Foucault's The Order of Things in order to address the longstanding question of whether he is best understood as a philosopher or a historian. My central argument is that this question misses the crucial point of Foucault's work, which is to historicize the notion of history, which Foucault takes to be central to the historical a priori of modernity. An examination of his historicization of History thus reveals that Foucault is neither simply (...)
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  12. Perfectionism, feminism and public reason.Amy R. Baehr - 2008 - Law and Philosophy 27 (2):193 - 222.
  13.  97
    An inquiry into Paul cezanne: The role of the artist in studies of perception and consciousness.Amy Ione - 2000 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 7 (8-9):57-74.
    [opening paragraph]: An intriguing element of Paul Cezanne's legacy is that while he aligned his paintings with the classical Renaissance tradition of Western art, his innovative body of work ushered in a decisive break with the standards of that tradition in the twentieth century. The many ways in which Cezanne's representational system deviates from the pluralistic art of the twentieth century suggests that probing his allegiance to classicism offers a unique vantage point for studying visual art, perception, and consciousness. It (...)
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  14. Reason, power and history.Amy Allen - 2014 - Thesis Eleven 120 (1):10-25.
    This paper re-examines the relationship between power, reason and history in Horkheimer and Adorno’s "Dialectic of Enlightenment." Contesting Habermas’ highly influential reading of the text, I argue that "Dialectic of Enlightenment," far from being a dead-end for critical theory, opens up important lines of thought in the philosophy of history that contemporary critical theorists would do well to recover. My focus is on the relationship that Horkheimer and Adorno trace between enlightenment rationality and the domination of inner and outer nature.
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  15.  62
    Psychoanalysis and the Methodology of Critique.Amy Allen - 2016 - Constellations 23 (2):244-254.
    In his account of critical theory as diagnosing social pathologies of reason, Axel Honneth has rehabilitated the analogy between critical theory and psychoanalysis – according to which the critical theorist stands in relation to the pathological social order as the analyst stands in relation to the analysand, and the aim of critical theory is to effect the diagnosis and, ultimately, the cure of social disorders or pathologies. In this article, I show that Honneth, like Habermas before him, has an overly (...)
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  16.  4
    Nest-works.Amy-Claire Huestis - 2021 - Technoetic Arts 19 (3):227-241.
    Two years ago, a nest box outside my window held a pair of Violet-Green Swallow. I counted six swallows fledge from the box and take their first flights in the July rain. Leaving the roof of the nest box, they flew in little loops out over the water, trying out their wings. I watched them from the dock, their bodies suspended in the air between the raindrops. This experience was the inspiration for what I call ‘nest-works’ – for poetic wilding (...)
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  17.  98
    Are We Driven? Critical Theory and Psychoanalysis Reconsidered.Amy Allen - 2015 - Critical Horizons 16 (4):311-328.
    If, as Axel Honneth has recently argued, critical theory needs psychoanalysis for meta-normative and explanatory reasons, this does not settle the question of which version of psychoanalysis critical theorists should embrace. In this paper, I argue against Honneth's favoured version – an intersubjectivist interpretation of Winnicott's object-relations theory – and in favour of an alternative based on the drive-theoretical work of Melanie Klein. Klein's work, I argue, provides critical theorists with a more realistic conception of the person and a richer (...)
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  18.  37
    Jean‐Jacques Rousseau, the Mechanised Clock and Children's Time.Amy Shuffelton - 2017 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 51 (4):837-849.
    This article explores a perplexing line from Rousseau's Emile: his suggestion that the ‘most important rule’ for the educator is ‘not to gain time but to lose it’. An analysis of what Rousseau meant by this line, the article argues, shows that Rousseau provides the philosophical groundwork for a radical critique of the contemporary cultural framework that supports homework, standardised testing, and the competitive extracurricular activities that consume children's time. He offers important insights to contemporary parents and educators wishing to (...)
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  19.  9
    Regulating Estrangement: Human–Animal Chimeras in Postgenomic Biology.Amy Hinterberger - 2020 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 45 (6):1065-1086.
    Why do laws and regulations marking boundaries between humans and other animals proliferate amid widespread proclamations of the waning of the species concept and the consensus that life is a continuum? Here I consider a recent spate of new guidelines and regulations in the United Kingdom and United States that work to estrange human bodies from other animals in biomedicine. Using the idea of a bioconstitutional moment to understand how state institutions deliberate over “human–animal chimeras,” I address how nations differently (...)
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  20.  38
    Beauvoir, Irigaray, and the Mystical.Amy M. Hollywood - 1994 - Hypatia 9 (4):158 - 185.
    By reading the analyses of mysticism found in Beauvoir and Irigaray with and against some medieval women's mystical texts, the paper articulates a possible space for the divine within feminist thought.
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  21. A Brief History of Trans Philosophy.Amy Marvin - 2019 - Contingent Magazine.
    Provides a brief account of trans philosophy organizing in the 2010s and argues for the importance of building spaces for trans philosophers.
     
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  22. Cartesian prejudice: Gender, education and authority in Poulain de la Barre.Amy M. Schmitter - 2018 - Philosophy Compass 13 (12):e12553.
    The 17th century author François Poulain de la Barre was an important contributor to a pivotal moment in the history of feminist thought. Poulain borrows from many of Descartes’s doctrines, including his dualism, distrust of epistemic authority, accounts of imagination, and passion, and at least some aspects of his doxastic voluntarism; here I examine how he uses a Cartesian notion of prejudice for an anti-essentializing philosophy of women’s education and the formation of the tastes, talents and interests of individuals. ‘Prejudice’ (...)
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  23.  17
    Klee and kandinsky polyphonic painting, chromatic chords and synaesthesia.Amy Ione - 2004 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 11 (3-4):148-158.
    As an artist I admittedly scrutinize all of the theories related to the arts closely. I do this for a number of reasons. The obvious one is that I have a deeply felt personal relationship with the subject matter. Less obvious is my experience in general. My early research was motivated by a desire to discover the historical circumstances that led to the difficulty in fitting visual art into the discussions I encountered. Generally, it seemed that the dominant framework trivialized (...)
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  24.  2
    Processional Poem: If we could know.Amy Edith Johnson - 2016 - In Susan Neiman, Peter Galison & Wendy Doniger (eds.), What Reason Promises: Essays on Reason, Nature and History. Boston: De Gruyter.
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  25. 14 Gender, Race, Raza.Amy Kaminsky - 1994 - In Abigail J. Stewart (ed.), Theorizing feminism: parallel trends in the humanities and social sciences. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. pp. 295.
  26.  9
    Aggressive And Loving Men: Gender Hegemony in Christian Hardcore Punk.Amy D. McDowell - 2017 - Gender and Society 31 (2):223-244.
    This research uses Christian Hardcore punk to show how evangelical Christian men respond to changes in gender relations that threaten hegemonic masculinity through a music subculture. Drawing on interviews and participant observations of live music shows, I find that Christian Hardcore ministry involves a hybrid mix of aggressive and loving performances of manhood. Christian Hardcore punk men fortify the idea that men and women are essentially opposites through discourse and the segregation of music spaces, even as they deviate from dominant (...)
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  27.  34
    How Not to Critique the Critique of Progress: A Reply to Payrow Shabani.Amy Allen - 2017 - Journal of Value Inquiry 51 (4):681-687.
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  28. Feminism and the subject of politics.Amy Allen - 2009 - In Boudewijn de Bruin & Christopher F. Zurn (eds.), New waves in political philosophy. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan.
  29.  49
    Conceptual Integration of Arithmetic Operations With Real‐World Knowledge: Evidence From Event‐Related Potentials.Amy M. Guthormsen, Kristie J. Fisher, Miriam Bassok, Lee Osterhout, Melissa DeWolf & Keith J. Holyoak - 2016 - Cognitive Science 40 (3):723-757.
    Research on language processing has shown that the disruption of conceptual integration gives rise to specific patterns of event-related brain potentials —N400 and P600 effects. Here, we report similar ERP effects when adults performed cross-domain conceptual integration of analogous semantic and mathematical relations. In a problem-solving task, when participants generated labeled answers to semantically aligned and misaligned arithmetic problems, the second object label in misaligned problems yielded an N400 effect for addition problems. In a verification task, when participants judged arithmetically (...)
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  30.  40
    Denying Corporate Rights and Punishing Corporate Wrongs.Amy J. Sepinwall - 2015 - Business Ethics Quarterly 25 (4):517-534.
    Scholars addressing the moral status of corporations are motivated by a pair of conflicting anxieties: If corporations are not moral agents, we will be unable to blame them for their wrongs. But if corporations are moral agents, we will have to recognize corporate moral rights, and the legal rights that flow therefrom. In early and under-appreciated work, Tom Donaldson sought to allay both concerns at once: Corporations, he argued, are not moral persons, and so are not eligible for many of (...)
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  31.  29
    Currents in Contemporary Ethics: Meeting the Growing Demands of Genetic Research.Amy L. McGuire & Richard A. Gibbs - 2006 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 34 (4):809-812.
    The promise of personalized medicine and the quest for a greater understanding of the genetic basis of disease has transformed the research enterprise. The Director of the National Institutes of Health, Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D., recently predicted “that comprehensive, genomics- based health care will become the norm, with individualized preventive medicine and early detection of illnesses.” This excitement about the potential scientific and clinical advances that may come from genomics- based research has led several NIH institutions to launch initiatives for (...)
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  32.  39
    Studying the amateur artist: A perspective on disguising data collected in human subjects research on the internet.Amy Bruckman - 2002 - Ethics and Information Technology 4 (3):217-231.
    In the mid-1990s, the Internet rapidly changedfrom a venue used by a small number ofscientists to a popular phenomena affecting allaspects of life in industrialized nations. Scholars from diverse disciplines have taken aninterest in trying to understand the Internetand Internet users. However, as a variety ofresearchers have noted, guidelines for ethicalresearch on human subjects written before theInternet's growth can be difficult to extend toresearch on Internet users.In this paper, I focus on one ethicalissue: whether and to what extent to disguisematerial (...)
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  33. .Amy Russell - 2016
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  34.  31
    The Ethical Health Lawyer.Amy L. McGuire, Mary A. Majumder & J. Richard Cheney - 2005 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 33 (3):603-607.
  35.  18
    Feeding relations: applying Luhmann’s operational theory to the food system.Amy Guptill & Emelie Peine - 2021 - Agriculture and Human Values 38 (3):741-752.
    Current, prevalent models of the food system, including complex-adaptive systems theories and commodity-as-relation thinking, have usefully analyzed the food system in terms of its elements and relationships, confronting persistent questions about a system’s identity and leverage points for change. Here, inspired by Heldke’s analysis, we argue for another approach to the “system-ness” of food that carries those key questions forward. Drawing on Niklas Luhmann’s systems theory, we propose a model of the food system defined by the relational process of feeding (...)
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  36.  4
    Lessons from Environmental Regulation.Amy Sinden - 2018 - Hastings Center Report 48 (S1):56-64.
    Much of the most substantive and in‐depth experience with formal cost‐benefit analysis in the public policy realm has occurred in the context of federal environmental regulation in the United States. This experience has many important lessons to teach in the realm of synthetic biology. Indeed, many of the dangers and pitfalls that arise when decision‐makers use formal CBA to evaluate environmental regulation seem likely to arise in the synthetic biology context as well, sometimes in particularly troubling forms. Unfortunately, while in (...)
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  37.  31
    Introduction.Amy Allen & Anthony Steinbock - 2014 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 28 (3):213-218.
    This is an introduction to a volume of articles containing highlights from the fifty-second annual meeting of the Society for Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy (SPEP) at the University of Oregon from October 24–26, 2013. All three of the plenary sessions for this conference constituted reflections on limits of various kinds: the limits of conceptual thinking, the limits of continental philosophy understood as a kind of post-Kantian quasi-transcendental enterprise, and the idea that SPEP’s guiding orientation is an openness to experience that (...)
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  38.  4
    Nuevo y viejo.Amy Culliford - 2022 - New York, NY: Crabtree Publishing. Edited by Pablo de la Vega.
    In this book, early readers will discover the concept of opposites using new and old objects all around them! Using engaging and colorful photographs, simple sentences, and exciting sight words, young readers will enjoy learning about new and old things, while practicing their reading skills. This book also includes a page for caregivers and teachers that suggests guiding questions to help aid in reading comprehension.
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  39.  5
    Power and the Subject.Amy Allen - 2013 - In Christopher Falzon, Timothy O'Leary & Jana Sawicki (eds.), A Companion to Foucault. Malden Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 337–352.
    This essay focuses on three moments in Foucault's lifelong engagement with the pressing political question of the relationship between power and the subject. The first moment involves Foucault's examination of madness and Foucault's account of the relationship between the social‐institutional and conceptual exclusion of madness and the constitution of the rational subject in modernity, as this is articulated in the History of Madness (HM). The second moment focuses on Foucault's later account of subjection and normalization, as presented in Foucault's famous (...)
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  40.  23
    The association between temperament and depressive symptoms in adolescence: Brooding and reflection as potential mediators.Amy Mezulis, Jordan Simonson, Elizabeth McCauley & Ann Vander Stoep - 2011 - Cognition and Emotion 25 (8):1460-1470.
  41.  22
    Feminism as critique: comments on Johanna Oksala’s feminist experiences.Amy Allen - 2018 - Continental Philosophy Review 52 (1):115-123.
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  42.  10
    Introduction.Amy Allen - 2002 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 10 (2):119 – 121.
  43.  4
    Prague: Twenty years later.Amy Allen - 2017 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 43 (3):270-271.
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  44.  60
    Race, Empire and the Idea of Human Development by Thomas McCarthy.Amy Allen - 2011 - Constellations 18 (3):487-492.
  45.  21
    Rationality, Normativity, and Critique.Amy Allen - 2017 - Philosophy Today 61 (4):1059-1068.
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  46.  22
    Working through Critical Theory’s Colonial Unconscious.Amy Allen - 2020 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 41 (1):185-205.
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  47.  54
    Wang Yang-Ming: A philosopher of practical action.Amy Ihlan - 1993 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 20 (4):451-463.
  48. Practice, belief, and feminist philosophy of religion.Amy Hollywood - 2004 - In Kevin Schilbrack (ed.), Thinking through rituals: philosophical perspectives. New York: Routledge. pp. 52--71.
  49. Feminist politics and feminist pluralism: Can we do feminist political theory without theories of gender?Amy R. Baehr - 2004 - Journal of Political Philosophy 12 (4):411–436.
  50.  37
    Peircean Polymorphism: Between Realism and Anti-realism.Amy L. McLaughlin - 2009 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 45 (3):402-421.
    This paper provides a framework, based on Peircean pragmatism and a supplemental metaphysical principle, for reconciling realism and antirealism. Peircean polymorphism, the resultant position defended in the paper, is a realist position, accepting that there is a world that exists and has characteristics of its own, independently of our experience of it. The position denies, however, what I call the uniqueness assumption about truth -- that it is possible for one, unique representational approach to adequately represent reality. While Peirce does (...)
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