Results for 'Gregory A. Raymond'

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  1.  51
    You don't say: Figurative language and thought.Gregory A. Bryant & Raymond W. Gibbs - 2002 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (6):678-679.
    Carruthers has proposed a novel and quite interesting hypothesis for the role of language in conceptual integration, but his treatment does not acknowledge work in cognitive science on metaphor and analogy that reveals how diverse knowledge structures are integrated. We claim that this body of research provides clear evidence that cross-domain conceptual connections cannot be driven by syntactic processes alone.
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  2.  16
    Building Peace: Ethics and Postwar Settlements An Ethic for Enemies: Forgiveness in Politics, Donald W. Shriver, Jr. , 284 pp., $27.50 cloth. Nurturing Peace: Why Peace Settlements Succeed or Fail, Fen Osler Hampson , 287 pp., $32.95 cloth; $19.95 paper. [REVIEW]Gregory A. Raymond - 1997 - Ethics and International Affairs 11:307-309.
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  3.  32
    Striving for optimal relevance when answering questions.Raymond W. Gibbs & Gregory A. Bryant - 2008 - Cognition 106 (1):345-369.
    When people are asked “Do you have the time?” they can answer in a variety of ways, such as “It is almost 3”, “Yeah, it is quarter past two”, or more precisely as in “It is now 1:43”. We present the results of four experiments that examined people’s real-life answers to questions about the time. Our hypothesis, following previous research findings, was that people strive to make their answers optimally relevant for the addressee, which in many cases allows people to (...)
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  4. A study of Locke's theory of knowledge.Raymond Gregory - 1919 - Wilmington, Ohio: [Ohio State University?].
     
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  5. Raymond Bradley, The Nature of All Being: A Study of Wittgenstein's Modal Atomism Reviewed by.Gregory Landini - 1993 - Philosophy in Review 13 (6):283-285.
     
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  6.  50
    A World Without Why by Raymond Geuss.Gregory R. Smulewicz-Zucker - 2016 - Journal of Nietzsche Studies 47 (1):174-177.
    Especially in recent works, Raymond Geuss has expressed an unabashedly bleak view of the practice of philosophy and what we can expect to gain from it. In his latest collection of essays, A World Without Why, Geuss continues to write in this vein. Although he characteristically addresses an impressive variety of topics, the book is held together by a general engagement with the question of authority and by Geuss’s ongoing effort to philosophize outside the bounds of contemporary philosophy. Indeed, (...)
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  7. Developing the Silver Economy and Related Government Resources for Seniors: A Position Paper.Maristella Agosti, Moira Allan, Ágnes Bene, Kathryn L. Braun, Luigi Campanella, Marek Chałas, Cheah Tuck Wing, Dragan Čišić, George Christodoulou, Elísio Manuel de Sousa Costa, Lucija Čok, Jožica Dorniž, Aleksandar Erceg, Marzanna Farnicka, Anna Grabowska, Jože Gričar, Anne-Marie Guillemard, An Hermans, Helen Hirsh Spence, Jan Hively, Paul Irving, Loredana Ivan, Miha Ješe, Isaac Kabelenga, Andrzej Klimczuk, Jasna Kolar Macur, Annigje Kruytbosch, Dušan Luin, Heinrich C. Mayr, Magen Mhaka-Mutepfa, Marian Niedźwiedziński, Gyula Ocskay, Christine O’Kelly, Nancy Papalexandri, Ermira Pirdeni, Tine Radinja, Anja Rebolj, Gregory M. Sadlek, Raymond Saner, Lichia Saner-Yiu, Bernhard Schrefler, Ana Joao Sepúlveda, Giuseppe Stellin, Dušan Šoltés, Adolf Šostar, Paul Timmers, Bojan Tomšič, Ljubomir Trajkovski, Bogusława Urbaniak, Peter Wintlev-Jensen & Valerie Wood-Gaiger - manuscript
    The precarious rights of senior citizens, especially those who are highly educated and who are expected to counsel and guide the younger generations, has stimulated the creation internationally of advocacy associations and opinion leader groups. The strength of these groups, however, varies from country to country. In some countries, they are supported and are the focus of intense interest; in others, they are practically ignored. For this is reason we believe that the creation of a network of all these associations (...)
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  8.  41
    A Distorting Mirror: Educational Trajectory After College Sexual Assault.Claire Raymond & Sarah Corse - 2018 - Feminist Studies 44 (2):464.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:464 Feminist Studies 44, no. 2. © 2018 by Feminist Studies, Inc. Claire Raymond and Sarah Corse A Distorting Mirror: Educational Trajectory After College Sexual Assault This article focuses on the broad and specific impacts of college sexual assault on student-survivors’ academic performance, academic trajectory, and their sense of self in relation to the university community. We frame this study with, and relate our findings to, the historic (...)
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  9.  28
    Why Historicity Still Matters: Raymond Brown and the Infancy Narratives.Gregory W. Dawes - 2011 - Pacifica 19:156-176.
    The infancy narratives of Matthew and Luke pose in an acute form the question of the historical value of the Gospels. Raymond Brown suggests that redaction criticism can bypass this question by spelling out the theological message intended by the evangelists. But his own exegesis suggests this is to misunderstand the genre of this literature. Brown’s indifference to historicity would be justified only if the evangelists were writing something resembling allegory, a form of narrative in which the literal sense (...)
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  10.  2
    Horizontal Chemistry.Michelle DiMeo, Andrew Gregory, Frank A. J. L. James & Viviane Quirke - forthcoming - British Journal for the History of Science:1-11.
    In 1976 Raymond Williams commented, ‘Culture is one of the two or three most complicated words in the English language.’ Such implied difficulty has not prevented Bloomsbury Academic, since the 2000s, from publishing around forty series of their well-produced and generously illustrated Cultural Histories, with, according to their website, a further fifty in progress. Each series contains six volumes, each book covering, in theory, the same chronological period (antiquity, the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, the age of empire (...)
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  11.  9
    Recognizing Verbal Irony in Spontaneous Speech.Gregory A. Bryant & Jean E. Fox Tree - 2002 - Metaphor and Symbol 17 (2):99-119.
    We explored the differential impact of auditory information and written contextual information on the recognition of verbal irony in spontaneous speech. Based on relevance theory, we predicted that speakers would provide acoustic disambiguation cues when speaking in situations that lack other sources of information, such as a visual channel. We further predicted that listeners would use this information, in addition to context, when interpreting the utterances. People were presented with spontaneously produced ironic and nonironic utterances from radio talk shows in (...)
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  12. Toward a Non-Reductive Naturalism: Combining the Insights of Husserl and Dewey.Gregory A. Trotter - 2016 - William James Studies 12 (1):19-35.
    This paper examines the status of naturalism in the philosophies of Edmund Husserl and John Dewey. Despite the many points of overlap and agreement between Husserl’s and Dewey’s philosophical projects, there remains one glaring difference, namely, the place and status of naturalism in their approaches. For Husserl, naturalism is an enemy to be vanquished. For Dewey, naturalism is the only method that can put philosophy back in touch with the concerns of human beings. This paper will demonstrate the remarkable similarities (...)
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  13.  31
    Evolved computers with culture. Commentary: From computers to cultivation: reconceptualizing evolutionary psychology.Gregory A. Bryant - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  14.  17
    Conditioning as a function of the time between conditioned and unconditioned stimuli.Gregory A. Kimble - 1947 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 37 (1):1.
  15.  37
    How many systems make a global array?Gregory A. Burton - 2001 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 24 (2):216-217.
    Stoffregen & Bardy suggest that the global array provides the specification that is lacking when senses are considered in isolation. This seems to beg the question of the minimum number of senses in a global array. Individuals with sensory loss manage with fewer senses, and humans manage with fewer than electric fish; so specification, if it exists, cannot require all possible senses.
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  16.  44
    Individual differences in imagery and the psychophysiology of emotion.Gregory A. Miller, Daniel N. Levin, Michael J. Kozak, Edwin W. Cook, Alvin McLean & Peter J. Lang - 1987 - Cognition and Emotion 1 (4):367-390.
  17.  26
    Strawson’s Metaphysical Grammar.Gregory A. Ross - 1974 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 12 (3):371-390.
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  18.  17
    The Evolution of Human Vocal Emotion.Gregory A. Bryant - 2020 - Emotion Review 13 (1):25-33.
    Vocal affect is a subcomponent of emotion programs that coordinate a variety of physiological and psychological systems. Emotional vocalizations comprise a suite of vocal behaviors shaped by evolution to solve adaptive social communication problems. The acoustic forms of vocal emotions are often explicable with reference to the communicative functions they serve. An adaptationist approach to vocal emotions requires that we distinguish between evolved signals and byproduct cues, and understand vocal affect as a collection of multiple strategic communicative systems subject to (...)
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  19.  9
    The Senecan Aesthetic: A Performance History by Helen Slaney.Gregory A. Staley - 2017 - American Journal of Philology 138 (3):568-571.
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  20.  5
    Rethinking Ibn ʻArabi.Gregory A. Lipton - 2018 - New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press.
    The thirteenth century mystic Ibn ʻArabi was the foremost Sufi theorist of the premodern era. For more than a century, Western scholars and esotericists have heralded his universalism, arguing that he saw all contemporaneous religions as equally valid. In Rethinking Ibn ʻArabi, Gregory Lipton calls this image into question and throws into relief how Ibn ʻArabi's discourse is inseparably intertwined with the absolutist vision of his own religious milieu-- that is, the triumphant claim that Islam fulfilled, superseded, and therefore (...)
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  21.  22
    Cultivating care and connection: Preparing the soil for a just and sustainable society.Gregory A. Smith - 2004 - Educational Studies 36 (1).
  22. John Panteleimon Manoussakis, God After Metaphysics: A Theological Aesthetic Reviewed by.Gregory A. Walter - 2009 - Philosophy in Review 29 (1):43-45.
     
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  23.  20
    Reminiscence in motor learning as a function of length of interpolated rest.Gregory A. Kimble & Betty R. Horenstein - 1948 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 38 (3):239.
  24.  13
    A further analysis of the variables in cyclical motor learning.Gregory A. Kimble - 1949 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 39 (3):332.
  25.  28
    A new formula for behaviorism.Gregory A. Kimble - 1994 - Psychological Review 101 (2):254-258.
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  26.  52
    The problem of volition.Gregory A. Kimble & Lawrence C. Perlmuter - 1970 - Psychological Review 77 (5):361-84.
  27.  19
    A Cruciform Response to Terrorism.Gregory A. Boyd - 2016 - Philosophia Christi 18 (1):119-127.
    Jesus instructs us to “love,” “pray for,” and “do good” to enemies, going so far as to make this response to enemies the criterion for being considered “children of your Father in heaven”. Jesus based this instruction on the character of the Father, not on the character of our enemies, which means his instruction allows for no exceptions. In this essay I flesh out the implications of this for a Christian response to terrorism, arguing that this response should look radically (...)
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  28.  17
    Behavior strength as a function of the intensity of the hunger drive.Gregory A. Kimble - 1951 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 41 (5):341.
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  29.  23
    Signals and cues of social groups.Gregory A. Bryant & Constance M. Bainbridge - 2022 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 45:e100.
    A crucial factor in how we perceive social groups involves the signals and cues emitted by them. Groups signal various properties of their constitution through coordinated behaviors across sensory modalities, influencing receivers' judgments of the group and subsequent interactions. We argue that group communication is a necessary component of a comprehensive computational theory of social groups.
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  30. John Powell Clayton, Religions, Reasons and Gods: Essays in Cross-Cultural Philosophy of Religion Reviewed by.Gregory A. Walter - 2008 - Philosophy in Review 28 (4):251-253.
     
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  31.  18
    Transfer of work inhibition in motor learning.Gregory A. Kimble - 1952 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 43 (5):391.
  32.  20
    An experimental test of a two-factor theory of inhibition.Gregory A. Kimble - 1949 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 39 (1):15.
  33.  18
    Tales of a magnetic planet: Ronald T. Merrill: Our magnetic earth: The science of geomagnetism. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 2010, 272pp, $25.00 HB, $17.00 PB.Gregory A. Good - 2013 - Metascience 23 (2):327-329.
    This book joins a small number of efforts in the last decade to present the complex scientific issues of geomagnetism to a broader, semi-technical audience. The author approaches this goal more closely than most scientists and science writers. He specifically eschews mathematical equations knowing that even one equation leads some readers to give up trying. He offers instead a mix of description and story-telling, the former directed at phenomena and procedures, the latter drawn mostly from personal experience.As Merrill notes, his (...)
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  34. Myth and the Classical Tradition.Gregory A. Staley - 2005 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 98 (2).
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  35.  7
    Philip North Lockhart (1928-2011).Gregory A. Staley - 2011 - Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 104 (4):503-503.
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  36.  40
    The Assembly of Geophysics: Scientific Disciplines as Frameworks of Consensus.Gregory A. Good - 2000 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 31 (3):259-292.
    What makes any investigative field a scientific discipline? This article argues that disciplines are ever-changing frameworks within which scientific activity is organised. Moreover, disciplinarity is not a yes or no proposition: scientific activities may achieve degrees of identity development. Degree of consensus is the key, and consensus on many questions (conceptual, methodological, institutional, and social) varies among sciences. Lastly, disciplinary development is non-teleological. Disciplines pass through no regular stages on their way from immature to mature status, designations articulated within the (...)
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  37. Verbal irony in the wild.Gregory A. Bryant - 2011 - Pragmatics and Cognition 19 (2):291-309.
    Verbal irony constitutes a rough class of indirect intentional communication involving a complex interaction of language-specific and communication-general phenomena. Conversationalists use verbal irony in conjunction with paralinguistic signals such as speech prosody. Researchers examining acoustic features of speech communication usually focus on how prosodic information relates to the surface structure of utterances, and often ignore prosodic phenomena associated with implied meaning. In the case of verbal irony, there exists some debate concerning how these prosodic features manifest themselves in conversation. A (...)
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  38.  48
    The Fantastic Structure of Freedom: Sartre, Freud, and Lacan.Gregory A. Trotter - 2019 - Dissertation, Marquette University
    This dissertation reassesses the complex philosophical relationship between Sartre and psychoanalysis. Most scholarship on this topic focuses on Sartre’s criticisms of the unconscious as anathema both to his conception of the human psyche as devoid of any hidden depths or mental compartments and, correlatively, his account of human freedom. Many philosophers conclude that there is little common ground between Sartrean existentialism and psychoanalytic theory. I argue, on the contrary, that by shifting the emphasis from concerns about the nature of the (...)
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  39.  9
    Between Data, Mathematical Analysis and Physical Theory: Research on Earth’s Magnetism in the 19th Century.Gregory A. Good - 2008 - Centaurus 50 (3):290-304.
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  40.  4
    Portraits of Pioneers in Psychology.Gregory A. Kimble, Michael Wertheimer & Charlotte White (eds.) - 1991 - Psychology Press.
    This book presents a series of informal biographies about major figures in the history of psychology. A unique combination of expertise and human appeal, the volume places the contributions of each pioneer in a new and fascinating perspective. For instance, several of the authors use the novel approach of having the pioneers return to the present day to reflect back on their work as it relates to the here and now. Revisions of speeches given in a popular series of invited (...)
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  41. Nicholas Adams, Habermas and Theology Reviewed by.Gregory A. Walter - 2007 - Philosophy in Review 27 (4):235-237.
     
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  42. Portraits of Pioneers in Psychology: Volume Iv.Gregory A. Kimble & Michael Wertheimer (eds.) - 2000 - Psychology Press.
    This fourth book in the series continues the tradition of the popular earlier volumes by offering lively and entertaining information about some of contemporary psychology's most illustrious ancestors. The 21 chapters, many of them written by today's most visible and eminent authors, concentrate on the lives and achievements of major psychologists from a variety of areas. Created for undergraduate and graduate courses in the history of psychology, the variety of pioneers represented provide enough flexibility to also use it as a (...)
     
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  43. Portraits of Pioneers in Psychology: Volume V.Gregory A. Kimble & Michael Wertheimer (eds.) - 2003 - Psychology Press.
    This book offers glimpses into the personal and scholarly lives of 20 giants in the history of psychology. As in the earlier volumes, prominent scholars were invited to prepare chapters on a pioneer who had made important contributions in their own area of expertise. Some of the psychologists described may be the teachers of the instructors who will be the users of this book, potentially providing a personal connection of the pioneers to the students. A special section provides brief portraits (...)
     
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  44.  6
    What You Can't Learn from Cartoons.Gregory A. Clark - 2010-09-24 - In Fritz Allhoff & Nathan Kowalsky (eds.), Hunting Philosophy for Everyone. Wiley‐Blackwell. pp. 56–66.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Warning: Plot Spoiler! Mediums: The Seen and the Felt Competing Messages: “Man was in the Forest” vs. “There is Another” Challenging Bambi Bambi's Counter‐Charge Re‐gifting Bambi Notes.
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  45.  55
    The Debate between Grunbaum and Ricoeur: The Hermeneutic Conception of Psychoanalysis and the Drive for Scientific Legitimacy.Gregory A. Trotter - 2016 - Études Ricoeuriennes / Ricoeur Studies 7 (1):103-119.
    Paul Ricœur’s hermeneutic approach to psychoanalysis stresses the interpretation of meanings revealed via the narratives woven through the discursive exchanges between analyst and analysand. Despite the tremendous influence Ricœur’s interpretation enjoyed both in philosophy and in psychoanalysis, his approach has been subject to severe criticism by Adolf Grünbaum who argues that Freud modeled psychoanalysis on the natural sciences, and therefore it should be judged according to natural scientific standards. I argue that Grünbaum incorrectly downplays the importance of speech and language (...)
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  46.  15
    Mediating associations.Gregory A. Kimble - 1968 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 76 (2p1):263.
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  47.  16
    The Independence of Control Structures in Programmable Numberings of the Partial Recursive Functions.Gregory A. Riccardi - 1982 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 28 (20‐21):285-296.
  48.  26
    The Independence of Control Structures in Programmable Numberings of the Partial Recursive Functions.Gregory A. Riccardi - 1982 - Mathematical Logic Quarterly 28 (20-21):285-296.
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  49. Grounds for Grammar.Gregory A. Ross - 1977 - Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 13 (2):153-155.
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  50. Peirce, Strawson, and the Quest for Categories.Gregory A. Ross - 1970 - Dissertation, State University of New York at Buffalo
     
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