Results for 'Britt Dahlberg'

229 found
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  1.  10
    Bridging Psychiatric and Anthropological Approaches: The Case of “Nerves” in the United States.Britt Dahlberg, Frances K. Barg, Joseph J. Gallo & Marsha N. Wittink - 2009 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 37 (3):282-313.
  2.  21
    Beyond quality in early childhood education and care: postmodern perspectives.Gunilla Dahlberg - 1999 - Philadelphia, PA: Falmer Press. Edited by Peter Moss & Alan R. Pence.
    With places at nursery school promised for every child above the age of four, this book raises the stakes by looking at the quality of what is provided, and how that compares to what should be provided. Beyond Quality In Early Childhood Education and Care challenges received wisdom and the tendency to reduce philosophical issues of value to purely technical issues of measurement and management. In its place, it offers alternative ways of understanding early childhood, early childhood institutions and pedagogical (...)
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  3.  41
    Commodifying adolescence for performance and profit: Language and gender in Japanese idol music.Hannah E. Dahlberg-Dodd - forthcoming - Empedocles: European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication.
    Japanese pop idols occupy an ambiguous position in the broader popular music landscape, straddling a line between fiction and non-fiction, simultaneously characterological yet physically instantiated. As idealized representations of the girl or boy next door, idols serve as both ‘image characters’ who can be used to sell a variety of products, as well as ‘quasi companions’ meant to provide fans with a manufactured sense of intimacy. Using a joint quantitative and qualitative approach, this article analyses the lyrics of female idol (...)
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  4.  27
    Seculum Est Speculum: Isaac Watts And Recovering the Use of Nature in Spiritual Formation.Britt Stokes - 2022 - Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 15 (2):224-248.
    The link between nature and the spiritual life has been a mainstay in Christianity going back to the beginning of Scripture. However, our modern context has veered toward a humancentric emphasis in the use of nature for spiritual purposes. This article seeks to recover a framework for connecting nature and the spiritual life by analyzing and applying the writings of the hymn-writer Isaac Watts. Influenced by the English Puritans and the eighteenth-century English naturalists, Watts leverages the empirical and the spiritual (...)
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  5.  27
    Neurophysiology of temporal orienting in ventral visual stream.Britt Anderson & David L. Sheinberg - 2010 - In Anna C. Nobre & Jennifer T. Coull (eds.), Attention and Time. Oxford University Press. pp. 407.
  6.  17
    Acta Genetica et Statistica Medica.Gunnar Dahlberg, H. Sjövall, What Does Normal Mean & By G. Dahlberg - 1951 - The Eugenics Review 43 (1).
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  7.  29
    Description vs. interpretation - a new understanding of an old dilemma in human science research.Karin M. E. Dahlberg & Helena K. Dahlberg - 2004 - Nursing Philosophy 5 (3):268-273.
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  8.  29
    Moving Toward Connectedness – A Qualitative Study of Recovery Processes for People With Borderline Personality Disorder.Britt Kverme, Eli Natvik, Marius Veseth & Christian Moltu - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  9.  15
    Descriptions of long-term impact from inter-professional ethics communication in groups.Britt-Marie Wälivaara, Karin Zingmark & Catarina Fischer-Grönlund - 2023 - Nursing Ethics 30 (4):614-625.
    Background On a daily basis, healthcare professionals deal with various ethical issues and it can be difficult to determine how to act best. Clinical ethics support (CES) has been developed to provide support for healthcare professionals dealing with complex ethical issues. A long-term perspective of participating in inter-professional dialogue and reflective-based CES sessions is seemingly sparse in the literature. Research aim The aim was to describe experiences of impact of Inter-professional Ethics Communication in groups (IEC) based on Habermas’ theory of (...)
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  10.  22
    Control over the strength of connections between modules: a double dissociation between stimulus format and task revealed by Granger causality mapping in fMRI.Britt Anderson, Sherif Soliman, Shannon O’Malley, James Danckert & Derek Besner - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  11.  11
    Intellectuals in the Society of Spectacle.Christopher Britt & Eduardo Subirats (eds.) - 2021 - Springer Verlag.
    This book reveals the sense in which our postmodern societies are characterized by the obscene absence of the intellectual. The modern intellectual--who had once been associated with humanism and enlightenment—has in our day been replaced by media stars, talking heads, and technical experts. At issue is the ongoing crisis of democracy, under the aegis of the société du spectacle and its vast networks of politically-induced idiocy, industrially-produced biocide, and militarily-provoked genocide. Spectacle fills the resulting moral and intellectual vacuum with electronic (...)
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  12.  56
    Neural transplants are grey matters.Britt Anderson, Anjan Chatterjee & George Graham - 1995 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (1):46-47.
    The lesion and transplantation data cited by Sinden et al., when considered in tandem, seem to harbor an internal inconsistency, raising questions of false localization of function. The extrapolation of such data to cognitive impairment and potential treatment strategies in Alzheimer's disease is problematic. Patients with focal basal forebrain lesions (e.g., anterior communicating artery aneurysm rupture) might be a more appropriate target population.
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  13.  17
    The meaning of being a middle‐aged close relative of a person who has suffered a stroke, 1 month after discharge from a rehabilitation clinic.Britt Bäckström & Karin Sundin - 2007 - Nursing Inquiry 14 (3):243-254.
    The meaning of being a middle‐aged close relative of a person who has suffered a stroke, 1 month after discharge from a rehabilitation clinicThe sudden and unexpected impact of stroke may have a stressful affect on close relatives. To illuminate the essential meaning in the lived experience of a middle‐aged close relative of a person who has suffered a stroke, narrative interviews were conducted with 10 close relatives of people who had suffered their first stroke where both parties were aged (...)
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  14.  18
    The meaning of middle‐aged female spouses’ lived experience of the relationship with a partner who has suffered a stroke, during the first year postdischarge.Britt Bäckström, Kenneth Asplund & Karin Sundin - 2010 - Nursing Inquiry 17 (3):257-268.
    BÄCKSTRÖM B, ASPLUND K and SUNDIN K.Nursing Inquiry2010;17: 257–268 The meaning of middle‐aged female spouses’ lived experience of the relationship with a partner who has suffered a stroke, during the first year postdischargeStroke consequences present a great long‐term challenge to the spouses of the stroke sufferer. A longitudinal study with a phenomenological hermeneutic approach was used to illuminate the meanings of middle‐aged female spouses’ lived experience of their relationship with a partner who has suffered a stroke, during the first year (...)
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  15.  12
    Learning Through Shared Care.Britt Singletary - 2021 - Human Nature 32 (2):326-362.
    This study investigates how allomaternal care impacts human development outside of energetics by evaluating relations between important qualitative and quantitative aspects of AMC and developmental outcomes in a Western population. This study seeks to determine whether there are measurable differences in cognitive and language outcomes as predicted by differences in exposure to AMC via formal and informal networks. Data were collected from 102 mothers and their typically developing infants aged 13–18 months. AMC predictor data were collected using questionnaires, structured daily (...)
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  16. The locus of the myside bias in written argumentation.M. Anne Britt & Christopher R. Wolfe - 2008 - Thinking and Reasoning 14 (1):1-27.
    The myside bias in written argumentation entails excluding other side information from essays. To determine the locus of the bias, 86 Experiment 1 participants were assigned to argue either for or against their preferred side of a proposal. Participants were given either balanced or unrestricted research instructions. Balanced research instructions significantly increased the use of other side information. Participants' notes, rather than search patterns, predicted the myside bias. Participants who defined good arguments as those that can be “proved by facts” (...)
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  17.  4
    Dear Bonzo.Britt Elliot, Tod Chambers & Carl Elliot - 2003 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 14 (4):308-310.
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  18.  15
    Constructions of exclusion: the processes and outcomes of technological imperialism: Marie Hicks. Programmed inequality: how Britain discarded women technologists and lost its edge in computing. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2018, 352pp, US$20.00 PB Safiya U. Noble. Algorithms of oppression: how search engines reinforce racism. New York: New York University Press, 2018, 217pp, US$28.00 PB.Britt S. Paris - 2018 - Metascience 27 (3):493-498.
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  19.  16
    The Internet of Futures Past: Values Trajectories of Networking Protocol Projects.Britt Paris - 2021 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 46 (5):1021-1047.
    The Internet was conceptualized as a technology that would be capable of bringing about a better future, but recent literature in science and technology studies and adjacent fields provides numerous examples of how this pervasive sociotechnical system has been shaped and used to dystopic ends. This article examines different future imaginaries present in Future Internet Architecture projects funded by the National Science Foundation from 2006 to 2016, whose goal was to incorporate social values while building new protocols to replace Transmission (...)
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  20.  19
    ‘The Individual in the World - The World in the Individual’: Towards a Human Science Phenomenology that Includes the Social World.Karin Dahlberg - 2006 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 6 (sup1):1-9.
    Human science researchers tend to be targeted for critique on the grounds that their approach is too individualistic to take due cognisance of societal and political influences. What is accordingly advocated is that the phenomenological and so-called romantic theories should be abandoned in favour of analytic or continental theories that have as their main focus the system, the group, the society, and the various influences of the social world on the existential reality of the individual.Without trying to invalidate these social (...)
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  21.  25
    Beyond the absent body—A phenomenological contribution to the understanding of body awareness in health and illness.Helena Dahlberg - 2019 - Nursing Philosophy 20 (2):e12235.
    Starting from a phenomenological understanding of the body, this article discusses the understanding of body awareness in health and illness. I question the common way to understand our relationship to our bodies in terms of subjective and objective perspectives on it, and furthermore, how this opposition has been used in the phenomenological literature to outline an understanding of health and illness as states where the body stays unnoticed versus resurfaces to our attention as dysfunctional. Using examples from an ongoing interview (...)
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  22. 'The individual in the world-the world in the individual': towards a human science phenomenology that includes the social world.Karin Dahlberg - 2006 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology: Methodology: Special Edition 6:p - 1.
    Human science researchers tend to be targeted for critique on the grounds that their approach is too individualistic to take due cognisance of societal and political influences. What is accordingly advocated is that the phenomenological and so-called romantic theories should be abandoned in favour of analytic or continental theories that have as their main focus the system, the group, the society, and the various influences of the social world on the existential reality of the individual.
     
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  23.  21
    Ethical and value issues in international agricultural research.Kenneth A. Dahlberg - 1988 - Agriculture and Human Values 5 (1-2):101-111.
    Agricultural research raises fundamental ethical and value questions going beyond those in other fields both because of its public funding and because its results have significant impacts on habitats and other species. Questions about the sustainability of modern agriculture, which are shared with other sectors, require us to examine alternative visions and structures. These can be seen to range from status quo preserving ideologies to change-oriented utopias. It is argued that at the national level current ideologies—which include positivistic approaches and (...)
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  24.  60
    Philosophical Piety in Response to Euthyphro’s Hubris.Will Britt - 2018 - Ancient Philosophy 38 (2):265-287.
    Through a close reading of Plato’s Euthyphro, I reopen an old question: what would it look like to think piously? Although the dialogue itself is aporetic with regard to the definition of piety as such, I show that a specifically philosophical piety emerges: namely, the capacity to deal well with sameness and difference. A look at central features of the dialogues that provide the Euthyphro’s dramatic context confirms this claim.
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  25.  23
    Responsible Learning About Risks Arising from Emerging Biotechnologies.Lotte Asveld & Britte Bouchaut - 2021 - Science and Engineering Ethics 27 (2):1-20.
    Genetic engineering techniques (e.g., CRISPR-Cas) have led to an increase in biotechnological developments, possibly leading to uncertain risks. The European Union aims to anticipate these by embedding the Precautionary Principle in its regulation for risk management. This principle revolves around taking preventive action in the face of uncertainty and provides guidelines to take precautionary measures when dealing with important values such as health or environmental safety. However, when dealing with ‘new’ technologies, it can be hard for risk managers to estimate (...)
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  26.  43
    Scientific Forensics: How the Office of Research Integrity can Assist Institutional Investigations of Research Misconduct During Oversight Review.John E. Dahlberg & Nancy M. Davidian - 2010 - Science and Engineering Ethics 16 (4):713-735.
    The Division of Investigative Oversight within the U.S. Office of Research Integrity (ORI) is responsible for conducting oversight review of institutional inquiries and investigations of possible research misconduct. It is also responsible for determining whether Public Health Service findings of research misconduct are warranted. Although ORI findings rely primarily on the scope and quality of the institution’s analyses and determinations, ORI often has been able to strengthen the original findings by employing a variety of analytical methods, often computer based. Although (...)
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  27.  56
    Distinct Effects of Lexical and Semantic Competition during Picture Naming in Younger Adults, Older Adults, and People with Aphasia.Allison E. Britt, Casey Ferrara & Daniel Mirman - 2016 - Frontiers in Psychology 7.
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  28.  46
    Beyond Quality in Early Childhood Education and Care: Languages of Evaluation.Gunilla Dahlberg - 1999 - Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge. Edited by Peter Moss & Alan R. Pence.
    What this book is about -- Theoretical perspectives : modernity and postmodernity, power and ethics -- Constructing early childhood institution : what do we think it is? -- Constructing the early childhood institution : what do we think they are for? -- Beyond the discourse of quality to the discourse of meaning making -- The stockholm project : constructing a pedagogy that speaks in the voice of the child, the pedagogue and the parent -- Pedagogical documentation : a practice for (...)
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  29.  3
    Redefining Development Priorities: Genetic Diversity and Agroecodevelopment.Kenneth A. Dahlberg - 1987 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 7 (3-4):367-382.
    Recent research on genetic and biological diversity suggests that they underlie, and are the source of renewable resources--which are themselves more fundamental than non-renewable resources. If this is the case, then our understandings of the "limits to growth" debate will need modification and current approaches to development--in both the industrial countries and in the Third World--will need reconceptualization. A major part of this will involve a reversal of roles and priorities for agricultural and industrial development. Also, more sustainable/regenerative types of (...)
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  30.  20
    ‘In retrospect’: Object Lessons forum.Britt Rusert, Kinohi Nishikawa & Kadji Amin - 2023 - Feminist Theory 24 (2):301-308.
    Our contribution takes shape as reflections on Object Lessons (Wiegman, 2012) from the perspective of three scholars of race, gender and sexuality who were also graduate students of Robyn Wiegman in the mid-2000s at Duke University. All three of us took Introduction to Feminist Theory with her and all three of us received graduate certificates in Feminist Studies. Our educational and career trajectories also share this similarity: we received PhDs in the disciplines (English, Comparative Literature and French), but went on (...)
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  31. Introducing Cinematic Humanism: A Solution to the Problem of Cinematic Cognitivism.Britt Harrison - 2019 - Croatian Journal of Philosophy 19 (2):331-349.
    A Cinematic Humanist approach to film is committed inter alia to the following tenet: Some fiction films illuminate the human condition thereby enriching our understanding of ourselves, each other and our world. As such, Cinematic Humanism might reasonably be regarded as an example of what one might call ‘Cinematic Cognitivism’. This assumption would, however, be mistaken. For Cinematic Humanism is an alternative, indeed a corrective, to Cinematic Cognitivism. Motivating the need for such a corrective is a genuine scepticism about the (...)
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  32.  72
    Views on Dignity of Elderly Nursing Home Residents.Lise-Lotte Franklin, Britt-Marie Ternestedt & Lennart Nordenfelt - 2006 - Nursing Ethics 13 (2):130-146.
    Discussion about a dignified death has almost exclusively been applied to palliative care and people dying of cancer. As populations are getting older in the western world and living with chronic illnesses affecting their everyday lives, it is relevant to broaden the definition of palliative care to include other groups of people. The aim of the study was to explore the views on dignity at the end of life of 12 elderly people living in two nursing homes in Sweden. A (...)
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  33.  28
    Criteria of frustration.S. H. Britt & S. Q. Janus - 1940 - Psychological Review 47 (5):451-470.
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  34.  7
    Enlightenment in an Age of Destruction: Intellectuals, World Disorder, and the Politics of Empire.Christopher Britt, Paul Fenn & Eduardo Subirats - 2018 - Cham: Springer Verlag. Edited by Paul Fenn & Eduardo Subirats.
    This book is about the ways in which modern enlightenment, rather than liberating humanity from tyranny, has subjected us to new servitude imposed by systems of mass manipulation, electronic vigilance, compulsive consumerism, and the horrors of a seemingly unending global war on terror. The main intellectual aims of this title are the following: the analysis of spectacle, the criticism of providential enlightenment, and the examination of positive dialectics. The spectacle, in this case, is the apotheosis of the culture industries, a (...)
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  35.  24
    John Haugeland: Dasein Disclosed : Harvard University Press, 2013, 336 pp, $49.95 , ISBN: 0674072111.William Britt - 2014 - Continental Philosophy Review 47 (3):465-472.
    Three years after John Haugeland’s passing, we are privileged to take up the manuscript he labored over but was not granted the time to finish. That manuscript, from which this book as a whole gets its title, has been carefully edited for continuity by Joseph Rouse, who also provides us with plenty of context for making sense of it. Rouse’s lengthy Editor’s Introduction outlines the central peculiarities of Haugeland’s reading of Martin Heidegger and argues for the relevance of that reading (...)
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  36.  51
    Sameness and Difference in the Piety of Thought.Will Britt - 2020 - Sophia 59 (2):285-309.
    The paper works out an account of the piety proper to philosophical thought. The investigation proceeds as a critical interpretation of three enigmatic claims made by Martin Heidegger about ‘the piety of thinking,’ but the paper is not simply exegetical; the interpretive work is constantly in service of an attempt to think through the phenomenon independently. Plato’s Euthyphro and Nietzsche’s critique of scientific piety both hover in the background of Heidegger’s pronouncements, and they are given special attention here. Through the (...)
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  37.  10
    The learning-remembering process. A reply to Professor Cason.S. H. Britt - 1937 - Psychological Review 44 (6):462-469.
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  38.  14
    Theories of retroactive inhibition.S. H. Britt - 1936 - Psychological Review 43 (3):207-216.
  39. The Road to Newman's Clarity.John Britt - 1990 - Paideusis: Journal of the Canadian Philosophy of Education Society 3 (2):36-42.
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  40. Lifeworld phenomenology for caring and health care research.Karin Dahlberg - 2011 - In Gill Thomson, Fiona Dykes & Soo Downe (eds.), Qualitative Research in Midwifery and Childbirth Phenomenological Approaches. Routledge.
     
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  41.  39
    Human science research as the embodiment of openness: Swimming upstream in a technological culture.Karin Dahlberg & Steen Halling - 2001 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 32 (1):12-21.
    The principle of openness is central to human science approaches to research where the researcher becomes closely involved with the phenomenon under study. This article addresses both the practical and theoretical challenges that confront the researcher who seeks to be open. It also clarifies the meaning of the concept of openness and considers its relationship to the ideal of objectivity. Openness, it is argued, is neither an enduring state nor a trait but requires an ongoing struggle and has different forms (...)
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  42.  25
    Grassroots Marketing in a Global Era: More Lessons from BiDil.Britt M. Rusert & Charmaine D. M. Royal - 2011 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 39 (1):79-90.
    BiDil, a heart failure drug for African Americans, emerged five years ago as the first FDA approved drug targeted at a specific racial group. While critical scholarship and the popular media have meticulously detailed the history of BiDil from its inauspicious beginnings as a generic combination drug for the general population to its dramatic resuscitation as a racial medicine, the enthusiastic support shown by some African American interest groups has been too little understood, as has their argument that BiDil was (...)
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  43.  15
    Grassroots Marketing in a Global Era: More Lessons from BiDil.Britt M. Rusert & Charmaine D. M. Royal - 2011 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 39 (1):79-90.
    Since the first phase of the formal effort to sequence the human genome, geneticists, social scientists and other scholars of race and ethnicity have warned that new genetic technologies and knowledge could have negative social effects, from biologizing racial and ethnic categories to the emergence of dangerous forms of genetic discrimination. Early on in the Human Genome Project, population geneticists like Luigi Luca Cavalli-Sforza enthusiastically advocated for the collection of DNA samples from global indigenous populations in order to track the (...)
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  44.  2
    : The Matter of Black Living: The Aesthetic Experiment of Racial Data, 1880–1930.Britt Rusert - 2023 - Critical Inquiry 49 (3):502-503.
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  45.  8
    The value content of agricultural technologies and their effect on rural regions and farmers.Kenneth A. Dahlberg - 1989 - Journal of Agricultural Ethics 2 (2):87-96.
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  46. Review of Alexis Gibbs 'Seeing Education on Film: A Conceptual Aesthetics'.Britt Harrison - 2020 - Journal of the Philosophy of Education.
  47.  13
    On the Fortieth Anniversary of Borom Sarret , on Ousmane Sembene's 1963 Film.Andrea Dahlberg - 2003 - Film-Philosophy 7 (1).
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  48.  1
    The Earth, Not Space, Is Our Last Frontier.Kenneth A. Dahlberg - 1986 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 6 (4):337-338.
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  49.  11
    To Use a Method Without Being Ruled by It: Learning Supported by Drama in the Integration of Theory with Healthcare Practice.Karin Dahlberg & Margaretha Ekebergh - 2008 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 8 (sup1):1-20.
    The study reported in this paper focused on nursing students’ learning and, in particular, their integration of caring science in theory and practice. An educational model incorporating educational drama was developed for implementation in three different teaching contexts within the nursing and midwifery study programmes at a Swedish college. A central aim was to understand the dynamics of educational drama in the healthcare context and its impact on learning and teaching. Using a phenomenological approach, seventeen students and six teachers were (...)
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  50.  23
    The value content of agricultural technologies and their effect on rural regions and farmers.Kenneth A. Dahlberg - 1989 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 2 (2):87-96.
    The premise of this article is that technologies are not neutral in terms of their design objectives, their scale, and the fact that they reflect the physical and social environments in which they have developed. Specific agricultural technologies, the midwestern plow, the California tomato harvester, and various biotechnologies, are evaluated in these terms and shown to have generally predictable impacts upon rural regions and farmers. Finally, the article examines a series of major threats such as climate change that require the (...)
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