Results for 'Curtis L. Wesley Ii'

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  1.  6
    The Great Escape: The Unaddressed Ethical Issue of Investor Responsibility for Corporate Malfeasance.Curtis L. Wesley Ii & Hermann Achidi Ndofor - 2013 - Business Ethics Quarterly 23 (3):443-475.
    ABSTRACT:Corporate governance scholarship focuses on executive malfeasance, specifically its antecedents and consequences. Academic efforts primarily focus on prevention while practitioners are often left to hold firms and executives (including directors) accountable through a variety of sanctions. Even so, executive malfeasance still occurs even in the face of the vast resources used to monitor, control, and penalize firms and executives. In this paper, we posit equity markets do not adequately penalize firms for inaccurate earnings reports. Using a sample of 129 firms (...)
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  2.  20
    The Great Escape: The Unaddressed Ethical Issue of Investor Responsibility for Corporate Malfeasance.Curtis L. Wesley Ii & Hermann Achidi Ndofor - 2013 - Business Ethics Quarterly 23 (3):443-475.
    ABSTRACT:Corporate governance scholarship focuses on executive malfeasance, specifically its antecedents and consequences. Academic efforts primarily focus on prevention while practitioners are often left to hold firms and executives (including directors) accountable through a variety of sanctions. Even so, executive malfeasance still occurs even in the face of the vast resources used to monitor, control, and penalize firms and executives. In this paper, we posit equity markets do not adequately penalize firms for inaccurate earnings reports. Using a sample of 129 firms (...)
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  3.  12
    Do the Right Thing: The Imprinting of Deonance at the Upper Echelons.Curtis L. Wesley, Gregory W. Martin, Darryl B. Rice & Connor J. Lubojacky - 2021 - Journal of Business Ethics 180 (1):187-213.
    This study expands the application of deonance theory into organizations’ upper echelons by examining how CEOs imprinted with a sense of duty can influence managerial decision-making. We hypothesize an imprint of bounded autonomy, an ought-force that constrains their decision-making and understanding of behavioral freedom, influences duty-bound CEOs to self-report errors in past financial reporting. We test deonance theory propositions of instrumentality for behavioral expansion, namely loss avoidance and gain attainment, related to institutional ownership concentration and CEO equity ownership. We use (...)
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  4.  16
    The Great Escape.Curtis L. Wesley & Hermann Achidi Ndofor - 2013 - Business Ethics Quarterly 23 (3):443-475.
    Corporate governance scholarship focuses on executive malfeasance, specifically its antecedents and consequences. Academic efforts primarily focus on prevention while practitioners are often left to hold firms and executives (including directors) accountable through a variety of sanctions. Even so, executive malfea­sance still occurs even in the face of the vast resources used to monitor, control, and penalize firms and executives. In this paper, we posit equity markets do not adequately penalize firms for inaccurate earnings reports. Using a sample of 129 firms (...)
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  5.  9
    Gilson o racjonalności wiary chrześcijańskiej / Gilson on the Rationality of Christian Belief.Curtis L. Hancock - 2013 - Studia Gilsoniana 2:131–143.
    The underlying skepticism of ancient Greek culture made it unreceptive of philosophy. It was the Catholic Church that embraced philosophy. Still, Étienne Gilson reminds us in Reason and Revelation in the Middle Ages that some early Christians rejected philosophy. Their rejection was based on fideism: the view that faith alone provides knowledge. Philosophy is unnecessary and dangerous, fideists argue, because (1) anything known by reason can be better known by faith, and (2) reason, on account of the sin of pride, (...)
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  6.  7
    Gilson on the Rationality of Christian Belief.Curtis L. Hancock - 2012 - Studia Gilsoniana 1:29–44.
    The underlying skepticism of ancient Greek culture made it unreceptive of philosophy. It was the Catholic Church that embraced philosophy. Still, Étienne Gilson reminds us in Reason and Revelation in the Middle Ages that some early Christians rejected philosophy. Their rejection was based on fideism: the view that faith alone provides knowledge. Philosophy is unnecessary and dangerous, fideists argue, because (1) anything known by reason can be better known by faith, and (2) reason, on account of the sin of pride, (...)
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  7.  79
    What Is an Antique?Benjamin L. Curtis & Darrin Baines - 2016 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 74 (1):75-86.
    Antiques are undoubtedly objects worthy of aesthetic appreciation, but do they have a distinctive aesthetic value in virtue of being antiques? In this article we give an account of what it is to be an antique that gives the thesis that they do have a distinctive aesthetic value a chance of being true and suggests what that distinctive value consists in. After introducing our topic in Section I, in Section II we develop and defend the Adjectival Thesis: the thesis that (...)
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  8.  6
    La philosophie et l'art : de nouveaux paysages pour l'esthétique.Curtis Carter - 2012 - Diogène 1:119-142.
    Part I of this essay will examine how the interplay between philosophy and art over the past century is reflected in the aesthetic theories of four leading Twentieth century aestheticians: Walter Benjamin, Merleau-Ponty, Gilles Deleuze, Arthur Danto. The philosophers’ theories are linked to the developments in art most directly related to their respective approaches to problems in aesthetics. Part II will explore selected non-philosophical social and technological developments that are in the process of altering the course of contemporary art today. (...)
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  9.  20
    Arthur R. Danto (1924-2013) As Remembered by Curtis L. Carter.Curtis L. Carter - 2013 - IAA Newsletter 43.
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  10.  33
    Body Consciousness: A Philosophy of Mindfulness and Somaesthetics.Curtis L. Carter - 2008 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 66 (4):419-422.
  11.  4
    Hans L. Martensen on Self-Consciousness, Mysticism, and Freedom.Curtis L. Thompson - 2021 - Kierkegaard Studies Yearbook 26 (1):371-404.
    This article examines three early writings of Hans L. Martensen, Søren Kierkegaard’s teacher and the target of his criticisms. The writings focus respectively on self-consciousness, mysticism, and freedom. They each make important claims about religion, and together they disclose the young Martensen’s systematic understanding of the epistemological, mystical, and moral-ethical dimensions of human experience as shaped by the representations of Christian faith and life. The analysis reveals an agile thinker, whose creative philosophical and theological ideas are the product of imaginative (...)
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  12.  14
    America's Past Master: Thomas Sully Honored in a Major Exhibit at Milwaukee Art Museum.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
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  13.  13
    Carlos Luna: Cuban Artist at the Crossroads.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
    Carlos Luna: Cuban Artist at the Crossroads is an essay appearing in the exhibition catalogue Pablo Picasso Ceramics, Carlos Luna Paintings for the exhibit of the same title installed at the Museum of Art/Fort Lauderdale from October 2, 2008 through February 23, 2009.
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  14.  9
    Dunn, Robert Ellis [encyclopedia entry].Curtis L. Carter - unknown
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  15.  6
    Objects and Objectives of Contemporary Art.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
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  16.  4
    IRBs and Randomized Clinical Trials.Curtis L. Meinert - 1998 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 20 (2/3):9.
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  17.  10
    God, World, and Freedom.Curtis L. Thompson - 2021 - The Owl of Minerva 52 (1):89-115.
    The second volume of Hegel’s Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion emphasizes the pulsating particularities that distinguish the religions of history from one another. This volume discloses Hegel’s philosophical theology to be an open system whose concepts, as Jon Stewart points out, are no mere abstractions but principles concretely instantiated in the real world. This article first reviews key analytical notions used in investigating religions, with the notion of freedom being the most important. Next are examined two models of the (...)
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  18.  10
    A Measured Pace: Toward a Philosophical Understanding of Dance.Curtis L. Carter - 1999 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 57 (4):481-482.
  19.  1
    Dancing in God in an Accelerating Secular World: Resonating with Kierkegaard’s Critical Philosophical Theology.Curtis L. Thompson - 2024 - Philosophies 9 (3):88.
    This essay seeks to scrutinize Kierkegaard’s critical philosophical theology. The intent is to demonstrate how his religious thought, especially on God’s relation to the world and to the human being, can contribute to generating a cogent response to the challenges presented by our accelerating secular world. Apart from the narrative on the Dane’s passionate reflections, I employ two other narratives to facilitate this inquiry into Kierkegaard. The first of these facilitating narratives comes from highlighting the work on the concept of (...)
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  20.  7
    JON STEWART: An Introduction to Hegel’s Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion: The Issue of Religious Content in the Enlightenment and Romanticism.Curtis L. Thompson - 2023 - Filozofia 78 (9):796-799.
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  21.  5
    Unsettled boundaries: philosophy, art, ethics east/west.Curtis L. Carter (ed.) - 2017 - Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Marquette University Press.
    For readers looking for insights into key issues linking current Eastern and Western views on the arts, aesthetics, and philosophy, Unsettled Boundaries offers fresh and insightful perspectives on current issues as seen by leading Chinese and Western scholars. Represented in the volume are previously unpublished essays of Nöel Carroll, Garry Hagberg, Richard Shusterman, and Jason Wirth alongside writings of Chinese peers Gao Jianping, Peng Feng, Liu Yuedi, Wang Chunchen and Cheng Xiangzhan. The essays in this volume draw attention to evolving (...)
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  22.  4
    Freedom, Virtue, and the Common Good.Curtis L. Hancock & Anthony O. Simon (eds.) - 1995
    Inspired by the recovery of natural law and virtue ethics in recent ethical discourse, certain members of the American Maritain Association have written essays to stimulate this recovery further. Their efforts are assembled in this volume, Freedom, Virtue, and the Common Good. Writing under the influence of Jacques Maritain and Yves R. Simon, they herein examine the requirements of a satisfactory natural law and virtue ethics, broadly understood as a moral philosophy giving primacy to character-formation and to the development of (...)
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  23.  42
    The One and the Many.Curtis L. Hancock - 2015 - Review of Metaphysics 69 (2):233-259.
    If contemporary philosophers of science could transcend the skepticism that seems to have become obligatory in modern epistemologies, they could restore a comprehensive vision of science that would be a boon to science and scientific education. Science is not mere knowledge. Science is knowledge of something that is necessary and universal because its causes are understood. This was Aristotle’s conception of science (epistēmē), a conception which includes knowledge of substances and the first ontological principles of things. St. Thomas Aquinas refined (...)
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  24.  18
    Transcendental Sophistry.Curtis L. Hancock - 1999 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 1999 (115):190-192.
    Something has gone seriously wrong with contemporary philosophy. Philosophy today has become a catalogue of competing alternative theories, each striving for internal consistency, but unable to accomplish anything more. Somehow, however, philosophy matters. When philosophy ails, so do all the other disciplines. They all depend on philosophy to demarcate and justify the various orders of knowledge. If philosophy can offer no justification for truth claims, there are only the words of those who enjoy status, credentials and power. In Cartesian Nightmare, (...)
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  25.  1
    Shapers of Kierkegaard's Danish Church.Curtis L. Thompson - 2015 - In Jon Stewart (ed.), A Companion to Kierkegaard. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 193–205.
    This chapter describes the Danish church, with the focus centered primarily on its life during the years 1835 to 1855 when Søren Kierkegaard was productive. The beginnings of the church up to 1835 are briskly examined, and then contributions of Jacob Peter Mynster, Nicolai Frederik Severin Grundtvig, and Hans Lassen Martensen are delineated. These three figures have been chosen because of their importance both for the Danish church and for Kierkegaard. The chapter ends with a few comments on some creative (...)
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  26.  34
    The end of religion in Hegel and Kierkegaard.Curtis L. Thompson - 1994 - Sophia 33 (2):10-20.
    The paper was read at a symposium in Eastern International Meeting of the American Academcy of Religion, Alfred, N.Y. April 16–17, 1993.
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  27.  2
    Toward Prospective Registration of Clinical Trials.Curtis L. Meinert - 1988 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 10 (2):6.
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  28.  11
    On Criticism by carroll, noël.Curtis L. Carter - 2009 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 67 (4):421-423.
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  29.  33
    Aristotle and the Metaphysics.Curtis L. Hancock - 2008 - International Philosophical Quarterly 48 (4):557-559.
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  30.  12
    Effects of degree of category separation on semantic concept identification.Curtis L. Taylor & Robert C. Haygood - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 76 (3p1):356.
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  31.  39
    A Prophetic Seer Potentiating Us in the Present.Curtis L. Thompson - 2007 - Zygon 42 (4):1009-1013.
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  32.  12
    Following the Cultured Public's Chosen One.Curtis L. Thompson - 2008 - Denmark: Søren Kierkegaard Research Centre, Copenhagen University.
    This volume examines the Kierkegaard-Martensen relationship, establishing ways in which the speculative theologian Martensen was a source for Kierkegaards thought. Kierkegaard's relationship with Martensen was multidimensional and volatile.
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  33. Justification within the limits of anthropology alone: Augustine and Kierkegaard on freedom and grace.Curtis L. Thompson - 2017 - In Paffenroth Kim, Doody John & Russell Helene Tallon (eds.), Augustine and Kierkegaard. Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books.
     
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  34.  27
    The Problem of God in Modern Thought.Curtis L. Thompson - 2002 - Tradition and Discovery 29 (3):52-55.
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  35.  4
    Faith and the Life of the Intellect.Curtis L. Hancock & Brendan Sweetman (eds.) - 2003 - Catholic University of America Press.
    Many of the contributions offer personal reflections on those events and experiences that helped shape their response to the general issue of faith seeking understanding."--BOOK JACKET.
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  36.  35
    Rene Descartes’ Regulae: The Power and Poverty of Method.Curtis L. Hancock - 2008 - International Philosophical Quarterly 48 (3):399-401.
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  37.  13
    Fashion is Freedom": Milwaukee Art Museum's '50 Years of Ebony Fashion.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
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  38.  12
    Reginald Baylor, Milwaukee Artist.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
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  39.  14
    The State of Dance in Education: Past and Present.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
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  40.  20
    Video Art: Cultural Transformations.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
    In the 1960s, there were efforts to move broadcast television in the direction of the experimental video art by altering television's conventional format. Fred Barzyk, in his role as a producer and director at WGBH-TV in Boston, was uniquely positioned to act as a link between television and experimental video artists who normally would not have had access to the technology available at a major broadcast facility. As the leading innovator in the beginnings of video art, the Korean American Nam (...)
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  41.  5
    Peter Redpath’s Philosophy of History.Curtis L. Hancock - 2016 - Studia Gilsoniana 5 (1):55-93.
    Peter Redpath is a distinguished historian of philosophy. He believes that the best way to acquire a philosophical education is through the study of philosophy’s history. Because he is convinced that ideas have consequences, he holds that the history of philosophy illuminates important events in history. Philosophy is a necessary condition for sound education, which, in turn, is a necessary condition for cultural and political leadership. Hence, the way educators and leaders shape culture reflects the effects of philosophy on culture. (...)
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  42.  36
    Aesthetics, Video Art and Television.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
    The author reviews two symposia: 'The Video Arts: Demonstration and Discussion', The American Society for Aesthetics, New York City, 28 Oct. 1978, and 'The Aestheticians Look at Television', National Association of Education Broadcasters, Washington, D.C., 30 Oct. 1978. He also presents an evaluation of the current state of video art in terms of philosophical aesthetics. Furthermore, he attempts to make a clear distinction between television and video art. The differences cited include corporate studio efforts vs efforts of individual artists, commercial (...)
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  43.  12
    Comment.Curtis L. Carter - 1984 - Proceedings of the Hegel Society of America 7:185-193.
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  44.  17
    Contemporary Ink Paintings.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
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  45.  12
    Janet Zweig's Pedestrian Drama: New Public Art on East Wisconsin Avenue.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
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  46.  9
    Li Song: The Decay of the Sublime.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
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  47.  12
    Richard Lippold: Space as a Metaphor for the Spiritual in Art.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
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  48.  37
    Symbol and Function in Contemporary Architecture.Curtis L. Carter - 2008 - Proceedings of the Xxii World Congress of Philosophy 1:15-25.
    The focus here will be on the tension between architecture’s symbolic role and its function as a space to house and present art. ‘Symbolic’ refers both to a building as an aesthetic or sculptural form and secondly to its role in expressing civic identity. ‘Function’ refers to the intended purpose or practical use apart from its role as a form of art. As an art form, it serves important symbolic purposes; its practical purposes are linked to serving individual and community (...)
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  49.  1
    Salvador Dali; 1904; Madonna of Port Lligat; 1949.Curtis L. Carter - unknown
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  50.  14
    Anti-Abortionist at Large: How to Argue Intelligently About Abortion and Live to Tell About It.Curtis L. Hancock - 2004 - Philosophia Christi 6 (2):366-368.
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