Results for 'Elizabeth Kurtz Lynch'

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  1. John Wesley‘s editorial hand in Susanna Annesley Wesley‘s 1732 ‘Education’ letter.Elizabeth Kurtz Lynch - 2003 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 85 (2):195-208.
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  2.  14
    Diversity in IRB Membership: Views of IRB Chairpersons at U.S. Universities and Academic Medical Centers.Sydney Churchill, Emily A. Largent, Elizabeth Taggert & Holly Fernandez Lynch - 2022 - AJOB Empirical Bioethics 13 (4):237-250.
    Background Diversity in Institutional Review Board (IRB) membership is important for both intrinsic and instrumental reasons, including fairness, promoting trust, improving decision quality, and responding to systemic racism. Yet U.S. IRBs remain racially and ethnically homogeneous, even as gender diversity has improved. Little is known about IRB chairpersons’ perspectives on membership diversity and barriers to increasing it, as well as current institutional efforts to promote diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) within IRB membership.Methods We surveyed IRB chairpersons leading U.S. boards registered (...)
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  3.  47
    Folkbiology doesn't Come from Folkpsychology: Evidence from Yukatek Maya in Cross-Cultural Perspective.Scott Atran, Edilberto Ucan Ek', Paulo Sousa, Douglas Medin, Elizabeth Lynch & Valentina Vapnarsky - 2001 - Journal of Cognition and Culture 1 (1):3-42.
    Nearly all psychological research on basic cognitive processes of category formation and reasoning uses sample populations associated with large research institutions in technologically-advanced societies. Lopsided attention to a select participant pool risks biasing interpretation, no matter how large the sample or how statistically reliable the results. The experiments in this article address this limitation. Earlier research with urban-USA children suggests that biological concepts are thoroughly enmeshed with their notions of naive psychology, and strikingly human-centered. Thus, if children are to develop (...)
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  4.  23
    Inductive reasoning in folkbiological thought.John D. Coley, Douglas L. Medin, Julia Beth Proffitt, Elizabeth Lynch & Scott Atran - 1999 - In Douglas L. Medin & Scott Atran (eds.), Folkbiology. MIT Press. pp. 211-12.
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  5.  9
    D. C. Kurtz : Greek Vases: Lectures by J. D. Beazley. Pp. xxi + 128; 80 monochrome plates + frontispiece. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989. £40. [REVIEW]Elizabeth Moignard - 1990 - The Classical Review 40 (2):514-514.
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  6.  39
    D. C. Kurtz (ed.): Greek Vases: Lectures by J. D. Beazley. Pp. xxi + 128; 80 monochrome plates + frontispiece. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989. £40. [REVIEW]Elizabeth Moignard - 1990 - The Classical Review 40 (02):514-.
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  7.  38
    Science After the Practice Turn in the Philosophy, History, and Social Studies of Science.Lena Soler, Sjoerd Zwart, Michael Lynch & Vincent Israel-Jost (eds.) - 2014 - New York: Routledge.
    In the 1980s, philosophical, historical and social studies of science underwent a change which later evolved into a turn to practice. Analysts of science were asked to pay attention to scientific practices in meticulous detail and along multiple dimensions, including the material, social and psychological. Following this turn, the interest in scientific practices continued to increase and had an indelible influence in the various fields of science studies. No doubt, the practice turn changed our conceptions and approaches of science, but (...)
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  8.  76
    Initial knowledge: six suggestions.Elizabeth Spelke - 1994 - Cognition 50 (1-3):431-445.
    Although debates continue, studies of cognition in infancy suggest that knowledge begins to emerge early in life and constitutes part of humans' innate endowment. Early-developing knowledge appears to be both domain-specific and task-specific, it appears to capture fundamental constraints on ecologically important classes of entities in the child's environment, and it appears to remain central to the commonsense knowledge systems of adults.
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  9.  39
    Trauma Informed Ethics Consultation.Elizabeth Lanphier & Uchenna E. Anani - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (5):45-57.
    We argue for the addition of trauma informed awareness, training, and skill in clinical ethics consultation by proposing a novel framework for Trauma Informed Ethics Consultation (TIEC). This approach expands on the American Society for Bioethics and Humanities (ASBH) framework for, and key insights from feminist approaches to, ethics consultation, and the literature on trauma informed care (TIC). TIEC keeps ethics consultation in line with the provision of TIC in other clinical settings. Most crucially, TIEC (like TIC) is systematically sensitive (...)
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  10.  56
    Second-Hand Knowledge.Elizabeth Fricker - 2006 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 73 (3):592-618.
    We citizens of the 21st century live in a world where division of epistemic labour rules. Most of what we know we learned from the spoken or written word of others, and we depend in endless practical ways on the technological fruits of the dispersed knowledge of others—of which we often know almost nothing—in virtually every moment of our lives. Interest has been growing in recent years amongst philosophers, in the issues in epistemology raised by this fact. One issue concerns (...)
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  11.  89
    Regularity in semantic change.Elizabeth Closs Traugott - 2002 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Richard B. Dasher.
    This new and important study of semantic change examines how new meanings arise through language use, especially the various ways in which speakers and writers experiment with uses of words and constructions in the flow of strategic interaction with addressees. In the last few decades there has been growing interest in exploring systemicities in semantic change from a number of perspectives including theories of metaphor, pragmatic inferencing, and grammaticalization. Like earlier studies, these have for the most part been based on (...)
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  12.  28
    Patient‐Engaged Research: Choosing the “Right” Patients to Avoid Pitfalls.Emily A. Largent, Holly Fernandez Lynch & Matthew S. McCoy - 2018 - Hastings Center Report 48 (5):26-34.
    To ensure that the information resulting from research is relevant to patients, the Patient‐Centered Outcomes Research Institute eschews the “traditional health research” paradigm, in which investigators drive all aspects of research, in favor of one in which patients assume the role of research partner. If we accept the premise that patient engagement can offer fresh perspectives that shape research in valuable ways, then at least two important sets of questions present themselves. First, how are patients being engaged—and how should they (...)
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  13.  22
    Affective and calculative solidarity: The impact of individualism and neoliberal capitalism.Manolis Kalaitzake & Kathleen Lynch - 2020 - European Journal of Social Theory 23 (2):238-257.
    This article examines the ways in which the self-responsibilized individualism underpinning contemporary concepts of the ideal European citizen, on the one hand (Frericks, 2014), and the inequalities and anti-democratic politics that characterize contemporary neoliberal capitalism, on the other, are co-constituent elements in creating an antipathy to forms of solidarity that are affective as opposed to calculative. The active citizenship framework lacks a full appreciation of the interdependency of the human condition and is antithetical to universalistic, affectively-led forms of solidarity. The (...)
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  14.  79
    Relational Leadership for Sustainability: Building an Ethical Framework from the Moral Theory of ‘Ethics of Care’.Elizabeth Kurucz & Jessica Nicholson - 2019 - Journal of Business Ethics 156 (1):25-43.
    The practice of relational leadership is essential for dealing with the increasingly urgent and complex social, economic and environmental issues that characterize sustainability. Despite growing attention to both relational leadership and leadership for sustainability, an ethical understanding of both is limited. This is problematic as both sustainability and relational leadership are rife with moral implications. This paper conceptually explores how the moral theory of ‘ethics of care’ can help to illuminate the ethical dimensions of relational leadership for sustainability. In doing (...)
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  15.  34
    Paradoxes of knowledge.Elizabeth Hankins Wolgast - 1977 - Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
  16.  31
    The Physical and the Moral: Anthropology, Physiology, and Philosophical Medicine in France, 1750-1850.Elizabeth A. Williams - 1994 - Cambridge University Press.
    This book explores the tradition of the 'science of man' in French medicine of the era 1750-1850, focusing on controversies about the nature of the 'physical-moral' relation and their effects on the role of medicine in French society. Its chief purpose is to recover the history of a holistic tradition in French medicine that has been neglected because it lay outside the mainstream themes of modern medicine, which include experimental, reductionist, and localistic conceptions of health and disease. Professor Williams also (...)
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  17. The dispositional/categorical distinction.Elizabeth Prior - 1982 - Analysis 42 (2):93-6.
  18.  17
    Philosophy at 3:Am: Questions and Answers with 25 Top Philosophers.Richard Marshall (ed.) - 2014 - New York, NY: Oup Usa.
    Brian Lleiter : Leiter reports -- Jason Stanley : philosophy as the great naïveté -- Eric Schwitzgebel : the splintered skeptic -- Mark Rowlands : hour of the wolf -- Eric T. olson : the philosopher with no hands -- Craig Callender : time lord -- Kieran Setiya : what Anscombe intended and other puzzles -- Kit Fine : metaphysical kit -- Patricia Churchland : causal machines -- Valerie Tiberius : mostly elephant, ergo -- Peter Carruthers : mind reader -- (...)
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  19.  88
    ‘Saints and Heroes’.Elizabeth M. Pybus - 1982 - Philosophy 57 (220):193-199.
    In his article ‘Saints and Heroes’, Urmson argues that traditional moral theories allow at most for a threefold classification of actions in terms of their worth, and that they are therefore unsatisfactory. Since the conclusion of his argument has led to the widespread use of the term ‘acts of supererogation’, and since I do not believe that such acts exist, I propose to argue that the actions with which he is concerned not only can, but should, be contained within the (...)
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  20.  18
    Farewell to an Idea: Episodes from a History of ModernismModernism's History: A Study in Twentieth-Century Art.Elizabeth Mansfield, T. J. Clark & Bernard Smith - 2000 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 58 (4):411.
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  21.  26
    The Moral Weight of Preferences: Death, Sex, and Dementia.Elizabeth Lanphier & Shannon Fyfe - 2020 - American Journal of Bioethics 20 (8):76-78.
    Volume 20, Issue 8, August 2020, Page 76-78.
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  22.  12
    Argument structure and association preferences in Spanish and English complex NPs.Elizabeth Gilboy, Josep-MMaria Sopena, Charles Cliftrn & Lyn Frazier - 1995 - Cognition 54 (2):131-167.
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  23.  24
    Complicit Care: Health Care in Community.Elizabeth Lanphier - 2019 - Dissertation, Vanderbilt University
    We intuitively think and talk about health care as a human right. Moreover, we tend to talk about health in the language of basic rights or human rights without a clear sense of what such rights mean, let alone whose duty it is to fulfill them. Additionally, in the care ethics literature, we tend to think of a dividing line between care and justice. In this dissertation I aim to draw care and justice together in what I call care justice. (...)
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  24. The Metaphysics of Experience: A Companion to Whitehead’s Process and Reality.Elizabeth M. Kraus - 1979 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 44 (1):168-168.
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  25.  43
    Narrative Ethics and Intersectionality.Elizabeth Lanphier & Uchenna Anani - 2019 - American Journal of Bioethics 19 (2):29-31.
    This paper responds to a proposal for an intersectional approach to the clinical encounter between patient and medical provider. We agree that an intersectional framework offers new insights and information in the clinical encounter. Intersectionality involves awareness of the physician-patient dynamic, and understanding the various privileges and disadvantages of all parties involved, at a micro and macroscopic level. Yet, this analysis alone is insufficient to aid in the clinical encounter and risks harm. We worry about a clinician making assumptions about (...)
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  26.  40
    What's real in political philosophy?Elizabeth Frazer - 2010 - Contemporary Political Theory 9 (4):490-507.
  27.  23
    In need of remedy: US policy for compensating injured research participants.Elizabeth R. Pike - 2014 - Journal of Medical Ethics 40 (3):182-185.
    There is an emerging ethical consensus that injured research participants should receive medical care and compensation for their research-related injuries. This consensus is premised on notions of beneficence, distributive justice, compensatory justice and reciprocity. In response, countries around the world have implemented no-fault compensation systems to ensure that research participants are adequately protected in the event of injury. The United States, the world's leading sponsor of research, has chosen instead to rely on its legal system to provide injured research participants (...)
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  28.  46
    Equality and the Rights of Women.Elizabeth Wolgast - 1984 - Philosophical Review 93 (1):93-97.
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  29. Ockham and Wodeham on Divine Deception as a Skeptical Hypothesis.Elizabeth Karger - 2004 - Vivarium 42 (2):225-236.
  30.  34
    Sciences of appetite in the Enlightenment, 1750–1800.Elizabeth A. Williams - 2012 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 43 (2):392-404.
  31. The Metaphysics of Experience: A Companion to Whitehead’s Process and Reality.Elizabeth M. Kraus - 1979 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 16 (1):82-85.
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  32.  14
    : Reading the Book of Nature: How Eight Best Sellers Reconnected Christianity and the Sciences on the Eve of the Victorian Age.Elizabeth Yale - 2024 - Isis 115 (1):189-190.
  33.  69
    Marginalia, commonplaces, and correspondence: Scribal exchange in early modern science.Elizabeth Yale - 2011 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 42 (2):193-202.
    In recent years, historians of science have increasingly turned their attention to the “print culture” of early modern science. These studies have revealed that printing, as both a technology and a social and economic system, structured the forms and meanings of natural knowledge. Yet in early modern Europe, naturalists, including John Aubrey, John Evelyn, and John Ray, whose work is discussed in this paper, often shared and read scientific texts in manuscript either before or in lieu of printing. Scribal exchange, (...)
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  34. Architecture from the outside.Elizabeth Grosz & David Leatherbarrow - 2001 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 61 (1):81-84.
     
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  35. Preschool children's mapping of number words to nonsymbolic numerosities.Elizabeth Spelke - manuscript
    Five-year-old children categorized as skilled versus unskilled counters were given verbal estimation and number word comprehension tasks with numerosities 20 – 120. Skilled counters showed a linear relation between number words and nonsymbolic numerosities. Unskilled counters showed the same linear relation for smaller numbers to which they could count, but not for larger number words. Further tasks indicated that unskilled counters failed even to correctly order large number words differing by a 2 : 1 ratio, whereas they performed well on (...)
     
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  36.  8
    Requiring the Healer’s Art Curriculum to Promote Professional Identity Formation Among Medical Students.Elizabeth C. Lawrence, Martha L. Carvour, Christopher Camarata, Evangeline Andarsio & Michael W. Rabow - 2020 - Journal of Medical Humanities 41 (4):531-541.
    The Healer's Art curriculum is one of the best-known educational strategies to support medical student professional identity formation. HART has been widely used as an elective curriculum. We evaluated students’ experience with HART when the curriculum was required. All one hundred eleven members of the class of 2019 University of New Mexico School of Medicine students were required to enroll in HART. We surveyed the students before and after the course to assess its self-reported impact on key elements of professional (...)
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  37.  40
    The Role of the Environment in Eliciting Phantom-Like Sensations in Non-Amputees.Elizabeth Lewis, Donna M. Lloyd & Martin J. Farrell - 2012 - Frontiers in Psychology 3.
  38.  90
    Conceptual issues in Psychology.Elizabeth R. Valentine - 1982 - New York: Routledge.
    This comprehensive and up-to-date textbook gives a clear account of the different philosophical and theoretical approaches to psychology and discusses major philosophical questions such as free will and the relation between mind and body.
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  39.  16
    The Metaphysics of Experience: A Companion to Whitehead’s Process and Reality.Elizabeth M. Kraus - 1979 - New York: Fordham University Press. Edited by Alfred North Whitehead.
    The Metaphysics of Experience styles itself as "a Sherpa guide to Process and Reality, whose function is to assist the serious reader in grasping the meaning of the text and to prevent falls into misinterpretation." Although originally published in 1925, Process and Reality has perhaps even more relevance to the contemporary scene in physics, biology, psychology, and the social sciences than it had in the mid-twenties. Hence its internal difficulty, its quasi-inaccessibility, is all the more tragic, since, unlike most metaphysical (...)
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  40.  9
    Max Weber on Ethics and Politics.Elizabeth Frazer - 2006 - Journal of International Political Theory 2:19-37.
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  41.  34
    An Epistemic Defense of Democracy: David Estlund’s Democratic Authority.Elizabeth Anderson - 2008 - Episteme: A Journal of Social Epistemology 5 (1):129-139.
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  42.  30
    Rx for the Pharmaceutical Industry: Call Your Doctors.Elizabeth A. Kitsis - 2009 - Hastings Center Report 39 (4):18-21.
  43.  91
    Dupes of Patriarchy: Feminist Strong Substantive Autonomy's Epistemological Weaknesses.Elizabeth Sperry - 2013 - Hypatia 28 (4):887-904.
    Feminist strong substantive autonomy (FSSA), as presented by Natalie Stoljar and Anita Superson, pronounces judgment on the autonomy status of certain women living under oppression. These women act on deformed desires, Superson explains, and as deformed desires cannot be the agent's own, the women are heteronomous. Stoljar argues that some women's choices violate the Feminist Intuition; by acting on false and oppressive values, these women render themselves heteronomous. I argue against Stoljar and Superson on epistemological grounds. I present six different (...)
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  44.  19
    Anthropological Institutions in Nineteenth-Century France.Elizabeth Williams - 1985 - Isis 76:331-348.
  45. Empathy as a psychoanalytic mode of observation : between sentiment and science.Elizabeth Lunbeck - 2011 - In Lorraine Daston & Elizabeth Lunbeck (eds.), Histories of scientific observation. London: University of Chicago Press.
     
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  46.  46
    Spooks and spoofs: relations between psychical research and academic psychology in Britain in the inter-war period.Elizabeth R. Valentine - 2012 - History of the Human Sciences 25 (2):67-90.
    This article describes the relations between academic psychology and psychical research in Britain during the inter-war period, in the context of the fluid boundaries between mainstream psychology and both psychical research and popular psychology. Specifically, the involvement with Harry Price of six senior academic psychologists: William McDougall, William Brown, J. C. Flugel, Cyril Burt, C. Alec Mace and Francis Aveling, is described. Personal, metaphysical and socio-historical factors in their collaboration are discussed. It is suggested that the main reason for their (...)
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  47.  3
    The Limits of the Self: Immunology and Biological Identity.Elizabeth Vitanza (ed.) - 2012 - , US: Oup Usa.
    What counts as an individual in the living world? What does it mean for a living thing to remain the same through time, while constantly changing? Immunology answers these questions with its theory of "self" and "nonself" which has dominated the field since the 1940s. Thomas Pradeu argues that this theory is inadequate, because immune responses to self constituents and immune tolerance of foreign entities are the rule, not the exception.
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  48.  24
    Pure inductive logic with functions.Elizabeth Howarth & Jeffrey B. Paris - 2019 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 84 (4):1382-1402.
    We consider the version of Pure Inductive Logic which obtains for the language with equality and a single unary function symbol giving a complete characterization of the probability functions on this language which satisfy Constant Exchangeability.
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  49. Predictive Reaching for Occluded Objects by 6-Month-Old Infants.Elizabeth S. Spelke - unknown
    Infants were presented with an object that moved into reaching space on a path that was either continuously visible or interrupted by an occluder. Infants’ reaching was reduced sharply when an occluder was present, even though the occluder itself was out of reach and did not serve as a barrier to direct reaching for the object. We account for these findings and for the apparently contrasting findings of experiments using preferential looking methods to assess infants’ object representations, by proposing that (...)
     
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  50.  12
    Labor market gender inequality in minority groups.Elizabeth M. Almquist - 1987 - Gender and Society 1 (4):400-414.
    Women's small share of professional and managerial occupations compared with their share of the total labor force is examined for the 11 largest racial and ethnic minorities in the United States. Gender-related characteristics—women's labor force participation rates, marital status, and the sex ratio—influence women's share of the top jobs, as do class and ethnic variables such as place of birth, population size, and class of worker. Labor market gender inequality is greatest among the smaller, more affluent minorities, many of whom (...)
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