Results for 'Christoph M. Kanzler'

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  1.  11
    Reliable and Valid Robotic Assessments of Hand Active and Passive Position Sense in Children With Unilateral Cerebral Palsy.Monika Zbytniewska-Mégret, Lisa Decraene, Lisa Mailleux, Lize Kleeren, Christoph M. Kanzler, Roger Gassert, Els Ortibus, Hilde Feys, Olivier Lambercy & Katrijn Klingels - 2022 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 16.
    Impaired hand proprioception can lead to difficulties in performing fine motor tasks, thereby affecting activities of daily living. The majority of children with unilateral cerebral palsy experience proprioceptive deficits, but accurately quantifying these deficits is challenging due to the lack of sensitive measurement methods. Robot-assisted assessments provide a promising alternative, however, there is a need for solutions that specifically target children and their needs. We propose two novel robotics-based assessments to sensitively evaluate active and passive position sense of the index (...)
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  2. Ectogestation and the Problem of Abortion.Christopher M. Stratman - 2020 - Philosophy and Technology 34 (4):683-700.
    Ectogestation involves the gestation of a fetus in an ex utero environment. The possibility of this technology raises a significant question for the abortion debate: Does a woman’s right to end her pregnancy entail that she has a right to the death of the fetus when ectogestation is possible? Some have argued that it does not Mathison & Davis. Others claim that, while a woman alone does not possess an individual right to the death of the fetus, the genetic parents (...)
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  3.  55
    Prosocial Citizens Without a Moral Compass? Examining the Relationship Between Machiavellianism and Unethical Pro-Organizational Behavior.Christopher M. Castille, John E. Buckner & Christian N. Thoroughgood - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 149 (4):919-930.
    Research in the organizational sciences has tended to portray prosocial behavior as an unqualified positive outcome that should be encouraged in organizations. However, only recently, have researchers begun to acknowledge prosocial behaviors that help maintain an organization’s positive image in ways that violate ethical norms. Recent scandals, including Volkswagen’s emissions scandal and Penn State’s child sex abuse scandal, point to the need for research on the individual factors and situational conditions that shape the emergence of these unethical pro-organizational behaviors. Drawing (...)
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  4.  35
    Sense of Place, Fast and Slow: The Potential Contributions of Affordance Theory to Sense of Place.Christopher M. Raymond, Marketta Kyttä & Richard Stedman - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8:285227.
    Over the past 40 years, the sense of place concept has been well-established across a range of applications and settings; however, most theoretical developments have ‘privileged the slow’. Evidence suggests that place attachments and place meanings are slow to evolve, sometimes not matching material or social reality (lag effects), and also tending to inhibit change. Here we present some key blind spots in sense of place scholarship and then suggest how a reconsideration of sense of place as ‘fast’ and ‘slow’ (...)
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  5. Rethinking Appropriateness of Actions in Environmental Decisions: Connecting Interest and Identity Negotiation with Plural Valuation.Christopher M. Raymond, Paul Hirsch, Bryan Norton, Andrew Scott & Mark S. Reed - 2023 - Environmental Values 32 (6):739-764.
    Issues of interest, identity and values intertwine in environmental conflicts, creating challenges that cannot generally be overcome using rationalities grounded in generalised argumentation and abstraction. To address the growing need to engage interests and identities along with plural values in the conservation of biodiversity and ecological systems, we introduce the concept of ‘appropriateness of actions’ and ground it in a relational understanding of environmental ethics. A determination of appropriateness for actions comes from combining outputs from value elicitation with those of (...)
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  6. Defending the Objective List Theory of Well‐Being.Christopher M. Rice - 2013 - Ratio 26 (2):196-211.
    The objective list theory of well-being holds that a plurality of basic objective goods directly benefit people. These can include goods such as loving relationships, meaningful knowledge, autonomy, achievement, and pleasure. The objective list theory is pluralistic (it does not identify an underlying feature shared by these goods) and objective (the basic goods benefit people independently of their reactive attitudes toward them). In this paper, I discuss the structure of this theory and show how it is supported by people's considered (...)
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  7.  28
    The rise of food banks and the challenge of matching food assistance with potential need: towards a spatially specific, rapid assessment approach.Christopher M. Bacon & Gregory A. Baker - 2017 - Agriculture and Human Values 34 (4):899-919.
    In the United States, food banks served an estimated 46 million people in 2015. A combination of government policy reforms and political economic trends contributed to the rising numbers of individuals relying on private food assistance in the US, the United Kingdom and other high-income countries. Although researchers frequently map urban food environments, this project is one of the first to map private food assistance and potential need at the census-tract scale. We utilize Geographic Information Systems, demographic data, and food (...)
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  8.  92
    Objective List Theories and Ill-Being.Christopher M. Rice - 2019 - Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 22 (5):1073-1085.
    What, if anything, directly detracts from well-being? Objective list theorists affirm basic goods such as knowledge, friendship, and achievement, but it is less clear what they should say about opposing bads. In this paper, I argue that false beliefs, unhealthy relationships, and failed projects are not basic bads and do not directly detract from well-being. They can have bad effects or elements, or block the realization of basic goods, but do not themselves carry negative weight with respect to well-being. This (...)
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  9.  23
    Eternal life and human happiness in heaven: philosophical problems, Thomistic solutions.Christopher M. Brown - 2021 - Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press.
    Considers four apparent problems of eternal life--is heaven a mystical or social reality, is it other-worldly or this-worldly, is it static or dynamic, is it boring?--and shows how the teachings of Thomas Aquinas support more satisfying solutions than many contemporary philosophical and theological approaches.
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  10.  91
    Reconsidering the ad hominem.Christopher M. Johnson - 2009 - Philosophy 84 (2):251-266.
    Ad hominem arguments are generally dismissed on the grounds that they are not attempts to engage in rational discourse, but are rather aimed at undermining argument by diverting attention from claims made to assessments of character of persons making claims. The manner of this dismissal however is based upon an unlikely paradigm of rationality: it is based upon the presumption that our intellectual capacities are not as limited as in fact they are, and do not vary as much as they (...)
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  11.  21
    Implicit Statistical Learning in Language Processing: Word Predictability is the Key.David B. Pisoni Christopher M. Conway, Althea Baurnschmidt, Sean Huang - 2010 - Cognition 114 (3):356.
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  12.  63
    Implicit statistical learning in language processing: Word predictability is the key☆.Christopher M. Conway, Althea Bauernschmidt, Sean S. Huang & David B. Pisoni - 2010 - Cognition 114 (3):356-371.
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  13.  51
    The Think Aloud Method in Descriptive Research.Christopher M. Aanstoos - 1983 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 14 (1-2):243-266.
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  14.  7
    Some Epigrams by Leonidas of Tarentum.Christopher M. Dawson - 1950 - American Journal of Philology 71 (3):271.
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  15.  6
    The Oxyrhynchus Papyri.Christopher M. Dawson, E. Lobel, E. P. Wegener, C. H. Roberts & H. I. Bell - 1952 - American Journal of Philology 73 (1):99.
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  16. Humanism and music.Christopher M. Driscoll - 2021 - In Anthony B. Pinn (ed.), The Oxford handbook of humanism. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
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  17.  27
    Hope Draped in Black: Race, Melancholy, and the Agony of Progress by Joseph R. Winters.Christopher M. Driscoll - 2019 - American Journal of Theology and Philosophy 40 (1):95-98.
    On November 4, 2008, during his concession speech to President-Elect Barack Obama, Senator John McCain transformed Obama's victory into his theodicy by claiming that the election "proved" that the country had progressed from its days organizing social life around racial exclusion. McCain's speech exemplifies a paradox of "American" progress: black bodies ascending to social heights previously prevented through a particularly pernicious brand of white American antiblack racism, upon whose backs U.S. global financial and military dominance was built, become evidence for (...)
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  18. The search for strange worlds : Deleuzian semiotics and Proust.Christopher M. Drohan - 2009 - In Mary Bryden & Margaret Topping (eds.), Beckett's Proust/Deleuze's Proust. New York: Palgrave MacMillan.
     
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  19.  40
    A Phenomenological Study of Thinking.Christopher M. Aanstoos - 1983 - Duquesne Studies in Phenomenological Psychology 4:244-256.
  20.  31
    On The Foundations Of Process Physics.Christopher M. Klinger - 2016 - In Timothy E. Eastman, Michael Epperson & David Ray Griffin (eds.), Physics and Speculative Philosophy: Potentiality in Modern Science. Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 143-176.
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  21.  45
    Robot life: simulation and participation in the study of evolution and social behavior.Christopher M. Kelty - 2018 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 40 (1):16.
    This paper explores the case of using robots to simulate evolution, in particular the case of Hamilton’s Law. The uses of robots raises several questions that this paper seeks to address. The first concerns the role of the robots in biological research: do they simulate something or do they participate in something? The second question concerns the physicality of the robots: what difference does embodiment make to the role of the robot in these experiments. Thirdly, how do life, embodiment and (...)
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  22.  58
    Chevlen, Eric, M.D., and Wesley J. Smith. Power over Pain: How to Get the Pain Control You Need.Christopher M. Saliga - 2002 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 2 (4):761-762.
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  23.  6
    Method as Identity: Manufacturing Distance in the Academic Study of Religion.Christopher M. Driscoll & Monica R. Miller - 2018 - Lexington Books.
    Method as Identity considers how social identity shapes methodological standpoints. With a refreshing hip hop sensibility, Miller and Driscoll reorient the contemporary academic study of religion toward recognition of the costs and benefits of manufacturing “critical” distance from our objects of study.
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  24.  38
    Merleau-Ponty: Space, Place, Architecture, written by Patricia M. Locke & Rachel McCann.Christopher M. Aanstoos - 2017 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 48 (1):145-148.
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  25.  12
    Explicability, psychoanalysis and the paranormal.Christopher M. Cherry - unknown
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  26.  8
    “Bound Tightly in the Pack”: Cloth and Care in I Never Promised You a Rose Garden.Christopher M. Rudeen - forthcoming - Journal of Medical Humanities:1-14.
    Talk therapy is, by definition, difficult, if not impossible, to represent materially. Whereas other scholars have sought to do so by referencing Sigmund Freud’s drawings or the setting of his consulting room, this article looks instead to the use of cloth in Joanne Greenberg’s 1964 semiautobiographical novel I Never Promised You a Rose Garden. The two main treatments given to protagonist Deborah Blau were therapy sessions with Dr. Clara Fried, based on Frieda Fromm-Reichmann, and the “cold pack,” in which the (...)
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  27.  59
    Formal Proper Parts through Strong Supplementation: A Reply to Bennett.Christopher M. P. Tomaszewski - 2016 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 54 (4):521-526.
    Kathrin Koslicki argues that ordinary material objects like tables and motorcycles have formal proper parts that structure the material proper parts. Karen Bennett rejects a key premise in Koslicki's argument according to which the material ingredient out of which a complex material object is made is a proper part of that object. Koslicki defends this premise with a principle motivated by its power to explain three important phenomena of material composition. But these phenomena can be equally well explained by a (...)
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  28.  7
    Conceiving Parenthood: American Protestantism and the Spirit of Reproduction by Amy Laura Hall.Christopher M. Saliga - 2008 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 8 (4):798-801.
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  29.  33
    A History of Esthetics.Christopher M. Lehner - 1954 - New Scholasticism 28 (2):205-208.
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  30.  11
    Expériences mystiques en terres non chrétiennes.Christopher M. Lehner - 1955 - New Scholasticism 29 (2):236-238.
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  31.  9
    Aquinas on the Individuation of Non-Living Substances.Christopher M. Brown - 2001 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 75:237-254.
    One important part of Aquinas’s theory of the nature of corruptible corporeal substances is his account of the individuation of such entities. In this paper, I examine an aspect of Aquinas’s account of individuation that has not received as much attention as some others, namely, how Aquinas applies his account of individuation specifically to cases involving non-living corporeal substances. I first offer an interpretation of a key passage in Aquinas’s corpus where he explains his theory of individuation. Second, I examine (...)
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  32. Artifacts, substances, and transubstantiation: Solving a puzzle for aquinas's views.Christopher M. Brown - 2007 - The Thomist 71 (1):89-112.
     
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  33.  32
    Michael Gorman. Aquinas on the Metaphysics of the Hypostatic Union.Christopher M. P. Tomaszewski - 2018 - Journal of Analytic Theology 6:793-798.
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  34.  35
    Theorizing command-and-commodify regulation: the case of species conservation banking in the United States.Christopher M. Rea - 2017 - Theory and Society 46 (1):21-56.
    State-directed but market-oriented forms of regulation, especially environmental examples like cap-and-trade and ecological offsetting, have proliferated in the past two decades, but sociologists have been slow to theorize these broad institutional shifts. This article offers a framework for explaining these processes of regulatory marketization. First, I argue that institutions of this sort are examples of what I call command-and-commodify regulation, a mode of regulation that distinctively hybridizes economic and authoritative dimensions of power. Second, I explain how and why one example (...)
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  35.  29
    Homophonic Translation and Disambiguation.Christopher M. Bache - 1980 - Journal of Critical Analysis 8 (2):35-43.
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  36.  37
    Paraphrase and Paraphrasing Metaphors.Christopher M. Bache - 1981 - Dialectica 35 (3):307-326.
    Summary: This essay rejects the widespread thesis that conceptually creative metaphors are unpara‐phrasable on grounds that it misconceives the nature and function of paraphrase. Encouraged by a deceptively parallel rejection of the positivist reducibility thesis by philosophers of science, defenders of the unparaphrasability thesis mistakenly equated paraphrase with literal translation and in so doing failed to appreciate paraphrase's critical role in the systematic exploitation of metaphor's creative potential. This essay attempts to recast the terms of the paraphrasability debate by separating (...)
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  37. The Principle of Sufficient Reason Defended: There Is No Conjunction of All Contingently True Propositions.Christopher M. P. Tomaszewski - 2016 - Philosophia 44 (1):267-274.
    Toward the end of his classic treatise An Essay on Free Will, Peter van Inwagen offers a modal argument against the Principle of Sufficient Reason which he argues shows that the principle “collapses all modal distinctions.” In this paper, a critical flaw in this argument is shown to lie in van Inwagen’s beginning assumption that there is such a thing as the conjunction of all contingently true propositions. This is shown to follow from Cantor’s theorem and a property of conjunction (...)
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  38.  51
    Souls, Ships, and Substances.Christopher M. Brown - 2007 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 81 (4):655-668.
    I do four things in responding to Patrick Toner’s incisive critique of my Aquinas and the Ship of Theseus (AST). First, I further motivate Aquinas’s position that Socrates exists in the post-mortem and ante-resurrection state by noting that Socrates’ situation is at least analogous to other states of affairs that would certainly count as atypical (although not impossible). Secondly, I offer a revised Thomistic account of artefact identity through time in light of Toner’s objections to Aquinas’srestrictive view. Unlike the restrictive (...)
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  39.  10
    Business as Mission Through the Lens of Development.Christopher M. Brown & David Bronkema - 2009 - Transformation: An International Journal of Holistic Mission Studies 26 (2):82-88.
    Coming out of mission efforts focused on evangelism, the rising Business as Mission movement stakes a claim to effective holistic mission by focusing on profit, evangelism, and development. Research indicates, however, that the development aspect of this `triple bottom line' is significantly weak. If, in fact, Business as Mission efforts were to incorporate the social and political dimensions of development, there would be great potential for a partnership with grassroots organizations to bring about deep-reaching social transformation.
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  40. Thomas Aquinas.Christopher M. Brown - 2017 - Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Thomas Aquinas St. Thomas Aquinas was a Dominican priest and Scriptural theologian. He took seriously the medieval maxim that “grace perfects and builds on nature; it does not set it aside or destroy it.” Therefore, insofar as Thomas thought about philosophy as the discipline that investigates what we can know naturally about God and … Continue reading Thomas Aquinas →.
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  41.  57
    Boghossian's Refutation of Relativism.Christopher M. Caldwell & Majid Amini - 2011 - International Journal for the Study of Skepticism 1 (2):79-103.
    In Fear of Knowledge, Paul Boghossian presents a series of arguments against epistemic relativism and constructivism, doctrines that he considers to have exerted an overly unjustified influence over the human and social sciences in the past two decades. In the presentation of his arguments, Boghossian charts out a terrain that closely identifies relativism with skepticism. Yet, the relationship between the two does not seem to be a simple matter of entailment or implication. The purpose of this paper is to clarify (...)
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  42.  20
    Intertextuality and the psychical model.Christopher M. Johnson - 1988 - Paragraph 11 (1):71-89.
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  43.  67
    Souls, Ships, and Substances.Christopher M. Brown - 2007 - American Catholic Philosophical Quarterly 81 (4):655-668.
    I do four things in responding to Patrick Toner’s incisive critique of my Aquinas and the Ship of Theseus (AST). First, I further motivate Aquinas’s position that Socrates exists in the post-mortem and ante-resurrection state by noting that Socrates’ situation is at least analogous to other states of affairs that would certainly count as atypical (although not impossible). Secondly, I offer a revised Thomistic account of artefact identity through time in light of Toner’s objections to Aquinas’srestrictive view. Unlike the restrictive (...)
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  44. The relation of chemistry to other fields of science: atomism, reductionism, and inversion of reduction.Christoph M. Liegener & Guiseppe Del Re - 1987 - Epistemologia 10 (2):269-284.
  45.  24
    Neurology, Neuroethics, and the Vegetative State.Christopher M. Mahar - 2012 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 12 (3):477-488.
    This paper examines neuroethics as a discipline in which ongoing formation and development in both ethics and medicine are shedding new light on the care of patients diagnosed as being in a vegetative state. From the perspective of the Catholic moral tradition, the author proposes that ethics and recent developments in functional neuroimaging form a complementary relationship that gives rise to an ethical imperative: because we can care for patients in a vegetative state, we should do so. This imperative for (...)
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  46.  36
    Preferential Option for the Poor and Critical Race Theory in Bioethics.Christopher M. Reilly - 2021 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 21 (4):647-665.
    The preferential option for the poor is a concept and set of ideas in Catholic social teaching that is highly relevant to bioethics scholarship and practice. The option for the poor is mentioned frequently in the bioethics literature but with little specification of its history and implications for ethical and theological analysis. This article examines the origins and implications of the preferential option; compares it to critical race theory, which dominates current debates about discrimination and oppression; and proposes a set (...)
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  47. Introductory essay : Communal agreement and objectivity.Christopher M. Leich & Steven H. Holtzman - 1981 - In Steven H. Holtzman & Christopher M. Leich (eds.), Wittgenstein: To Follow A Rule. Boston: Routledge.
     
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  48. Grace.Christopher M. Cullen - 2006 - In Bonaventure. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Bonaventure distinguishes three meanings for grace. First, in a general sense, it is the assistance freely and liberally granted by God to creatures performing any of their acts. Second, in a more proper sense, grace is a term usually reserved for the gift from God by which the human soul is perfected and transformed. Third, is the concept of created sense as the means of justification and of this justification involving a change in being.
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  49. The Creation of the World.Christopher M. Cullen - 2006 - In Bonaventure. New York: Oxford University Press.
    This chapter explores why Bonaventure explicitly includes creation as a distinct subject area in his division of theology and what theology adds to the understanding of creation. Bonaventure believes that theology reinforces our awareness of the nothingness of creation. Recalling this means that Bonaventure's doctrine of creation can be understood. In considering this doctrine, however, it is also important to keep in mind that Bonaventure believes creation ex nihilo can be known by reason alone.
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  50. The Doctrine of Anaolgy among the Thomists: A Debate Renewed.Christopher M. Cullen - 2014 - Nova et Vetera 12 (3).
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