Results for 'Jerry D. Leonard'

998 found
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  1. Corporate and Stakeholder Responsibility.Jerry D. Goodstein & Andrew C. Wicks - 2007 - Business Ethics Quarterly 17 (3):375-398.
    In this article we revisit the notion of stakeholder responsibility as a way to highlight the role that stakeholders have in creating anethical business context. We argue for modifying the prevailing focus on corporate responsibility to stakeholders, and giving more serious attention to the importance of stakeholder responsibility—to firms, and to other stakeholders who are part of the collective enterprise. We elaborate why stakeholder responsibility matters, and suggest how making stakeholder responsibility a central focus of academics and practitioners can redefine (...)
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  2. Moral Compromise and Personal Integrity: Exploring the Ethical Issues of Deciding Together in Organizations.Jerry D. Goodstein - 2000 - Business Ethics Quarterly 10 (4):805-819.
    Abstract:In this paper I explore the topic of moral compromise in institutional settings and highlight how moral compromise may affirm, rather than undermine, personal integrity. Central to this relationship between moral compromise and integrity is a view of the self that is responsive to multiple commitments and grounded in an ethic of responsibility. I elaborate a number of virtues that are related to this notion of the self and highlight how these virtues may support the development of individuals who are (...)
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  3.  19
    American Indian values and their impact on tribal economic development.Jerry D. Stubben - 1991 - Agriculture and Human Values 8 (3):53-62.
    This study uses 1990 data from seventy-three American Indian tribes to explore factors associated with the adoption of indi genous economic development plans on American Indian reservations. The analyses employing ordinary least squares analytical models posit that the existence of tribally owned and controlled businesses on or near the reservations and the presence of tribally owned farm and ranch operations are most critical in explaining the existence of such plans. A closer scrutiny of this result further suggests that the effect (...)
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  4.  31
    A Resonance Model for Revelation.Jerry D. Korsmeyer - 1976 - Process Studies 6 (3):195-196.
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  5. Faculty Workloads in Public Schools.Jerry D. Ford - 1979 - Journal of Thought 14 (1):15-16.
  6.  26
    Metaphysics and the Future of Theology. [REVIEW]Jerry D. Korsmeyer - 2010 - Process Studies 39 (1):199-202.
  7.  17
    The Making of American Liberal Theology. [REVIEW]Jerry D. Korsmeyer - 2007 - Process Studies 36 (1):133-137.
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  8.  18
    World without End: Christian Eschatology from a Process Perspective. [REVIEW]Jerry D. Korsmeyer - 2006 - Process Studies 35 (2):354-357.
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  9.  9
    World without End: Christian Eschatology from a Process Perspective. [REVIEW]Jerry D. Korsmeyer - 2006 - Process Studies 35 (2):354-357.
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  10. Infant feeding and the energy transition: A comparison between decarbonising breastmilk substitutes with renewable gas and achieving the global nutrition target for breastfeeding.Aoife Long, Kian Mintz-Woo, Hannah Daly, Maeve O'Connell, Beatrice Smyth & Jerry D. Murphy - 2021 - Journal of Cleaner Production 324:129280.
    Highlights: -/- • Breastfeeding and breastfeeding support can contribute to mitigating climate change. • Achieving global nutrition targets will save more emissions than fuel-switching. • Breastfeeding support programmes support a just transition. • This work can support the expansion of mitigation options in energy system models. -/- Abstract: -/- Renewable gas has been proposed as a solution to decarbonise industrial processes, specifically heat demand. As part of this effort, the breast-milk substitutes industry is proposing to use renewable gas as a (...)
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  11.  19
    Free operant single and double alternation in the albino rat: A demonstration.Mary Nell Travis-Neideffer, Jerry D. Neideffer & Stephen F. Davis - 1982 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 19 (5):287-290.
  12. Greek Poetry and Philosophy Studies in Honour of Leonard Woodbury.D. J. Conacher, Leonard Woodbury & Douglas E. Gerber - 1984
     
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  13.  16
    When will the editors start to edit?Leonard D. Goodstein - 1982 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 5 (2):212-213.
  14.  81
    Evolutionary Origins of Morality: Cross Disciplinary Perspectives.Leonard D. Katz (ed.) - 2000 - Imprint Academic.
    Four principal papers and a total of 43 peer commentaries on the evolutionary origins of morality. To what extent is human morality the outcome of a continuous development from motives, emotions and social behaviour found in nonhuman animals? Jerome Kagan, Hans Kummer, Peter Railton and others discuss the first principal paper by primatologists Jessica Flack and Frans de Waal. The second paper, by cultural anthropologist Christopher Boehm, synthesizes social science and biological evidence to support his theory of how our hominid (...)
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  15. Pleasure.Leonard D. Katz - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Pleasure, in the inclusive usages most important in moral psychology, ethical theory, and the studies of mind, includes all joy and gladness — all our feeling good, or happy. It is often contrasted with similarly inclusive pain, or suffering, which is similarly thought of as including all our feeling bad. Contemporary psychology similarly distinguishes between positive affect and negative affect.[1..
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  16.  86
    Extending the Horizon of Business Ethics: Restorative Justice and the Aftermath of Unethical Behavior.Jerry Goodstein & Kenneth D. Butterfield - 2010 - Business Ethics Quarterly 20 (3):453-480.
    ABSTRACT:We call for business ethics scholars to focus more attention on how individuals and organizations respond in the aftermath of unethical behavior. Insight into this issue is drawn from restorative justice, which moves beyond traditional approaches that emphasize retribution or rehabilitation to include restoring victims and other affected parties, reintegrating offenders, and facilitating moral repair in the workplace. We review relevant theoretical and empirical work in restorative justice and develop a conceptual model that highlights how this perspective can enhance theory (...)
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  17.  24
    Guest Editors’ Introduction Individual and Organizational Reintegration after Ethical or Legal Transgressions: Challenges and Opportunities.Jerry Goodstein, Kenneth D. Butterfield, Michael D. Pfarrer & Andrew C. Wicks - 2014 - Business Ethics Quarterly 24 (3):315-342.
    ABSTRACT:In this article we set the context for this special issue focusing on individual and organizational reintegration in the aftermath of transgressions that violate ethical and legal boundaries. Following a brief introduction to the topic we provide an overview of each of the four articles selected for this special issue. We then present a number of potentially fruitful empirical, theoretical, and normative directions management and ethics scholars might pursue in order to further advance this evolving literature.
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  18.  7
    Chemistry at the Royal Society of London in the eighteenth century-III(A)-metals.D. Leonard Trengove B. D. M. Sc Ph - 1965 - Annals of Science 21 (2):81-130.
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  19.  9
    Morale and Prestige Values in Municipal Employment.Leonard D. White - 1928 - International Journal of Ethics 39 (3):257.
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  20.  12
    Morale and Prestige Values in Municipal Employment.Leonard D. White - 1929 - International Journal of Ethics 39 (3):257-268.
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  21.  8
    Morale and prestige values in municipal employment.Leonard D. White - 1929 - International Journal of Ethics 39 (3):257-268.
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  22.  30
    The Federalists.Leonard D. White - 1949 - Philosophical Review 58 (6):631-631.
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  23.  17
    Foucault’s naturalism: The importance of scientific epistemology for the genealogical method.Leonard D’Cruz - forthcoming - Philosophy and Social Criticism.
    This article offers a novel reconstruction of Foucault’s methodology that emphasises his respect for the natural sciences. Foucault’s work has long been suspected of reducing knowledge to power, and thus collapsing into unconstrained relativism and methodological incoherence. These concerns are predicated on a misunderstanding of Foucault’s overall approach, which takes the form of a historico-critical project rather than a normative epistemology. However, Foucault does sometimes make normative epistemological judgements, especially about the human sciences. Furthermore, there are outstanding questions about what (...)
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  24.  22
    Analyse semiotique des textes: Introduction-Theorie-Pratique.Leonard Orr & Groupe D'Entrevernes - 1980 - Substance 9 (3):100.
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  25.  20
    Spacing and the retention of synonyms.Leonard D. Stern & Douglas L. Hintzman - 1979 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 13 (6):363-366.
  26.  79
    Opioid Bliss as the felt hedonic core of mammalian prosociality – and of consummatory pleasure more generally?Leonard D. Katz - 2005 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (3):356-356.
    Depue & Morrone-Strupinsky's (D&M-S's) language suggests that, unlike Kent Berridge, they may allow that the activity of a largely subcortical system, which is presumably often introspectively and cognitively inaccessible, constitutes affectively felt experience even when so. Such experience would then be phenomenally conscious without being reflexively conscious or cognitively access-conscious, to use distinctions formulated by the philosopher Ned Block.
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  27. Floors Without Foundations: Ignatieff and Rorty an Human Rights.Leonard D. G. Ferry - 2007 - Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 10 (1).
  28.  10
    “The Aesthetics of Dementia Care”: Some Final Thoughts from Tom Kitwood.Leonard D. Ferenz - 2000 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 11 (1):69-72.
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  29.  21
    The undesired selves of repressors.Leonard S. Newman, Tracy L. Caldwell & Thomas D. Griffin - 2008 - Cognition and Emotion 22 (4):709-719.
    People with a repressive coping style are highly motivated to defend themselves against self-concept threats. But what kinds of unfavourable personal characteristics are they most focused on avoiding? Weinberger (Citation1990) suggested that repressors are primarily concerned with seeing themselves (and having others see them) as calm, unemotional people who are not prone to experiencing negative affect. A content analysis of the actual (self-ascribed) and undesired attributes of 349 male and female college students, however, provided no support for that hypothesis. Instead, (...)
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  30.  75
    Dopamine and serotonin: Integrating current affective engagement with longer-term goals.Leonard D. Katz - 1999 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (3):527-527.
    Interpreting VTA dopamine activity as a facilitator of affective engagement fits Depue & Collins's agency dimension of extraverted personality and also Watson's and Tellegen's (1985) engagement dimension of state mood. Serotonin, by turning down the gain on dopaminergic affective engagement, would permit already prepotent responses or habits to prevail against the behavior-switching incentive-simulation-driven temptations of the moment facilitated by fickle VTA DA. Intelligent switching between openly responsive affective engagement and constraint by long-term plans, goals, or values presumably involves environment-sensitive balancing (...)
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  31.  34
    Toward good and evil. Evolutionary approaches to aspects of human morality.Leonard D. Katz - 2000 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 7 (1-2):1-2.
    Editorial Introduction to ‘Evolutionary Origins of Morality: Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives’. The four principal papers presented here, with interdisciplinary commentary discussion and their authors’ responses, represent contemporary approaches to an evolutionary understanding of morality -- of the origins from which, and the paths by which, aspects or components of human morality evolved and converged. Their authors come out of no single discipline or school, but represent rather a convergence of largely independent work in primate ethology, anthropology, evolutionary biology, and dynamic systems modelling (...)
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  32.  34
    The gradual evolution of enhanced control by plans: A view from below.Leonard D. Katz - 1993 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 16 (4):764-765.
  33.  20
    The rationality of cooperation.Leonard D. Katz - 1989 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 12 (4):710-711.
  34.  43
    Manuscript Referees for The Journal of Ethics: August 2005–July 2006.Justin D'Arms, Robert Francesscotti, I. Haji, Susan Hurley, Leonard Kahn, Brian Kierland, K. Lippert-Rasmussen, Douglas Portmore, Betsy Postow & Bernard Rollin - 2006 - The Journal of Ethics 10 (4):507.
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  35.  47
    On distinguishing phenomenal consciousness from the representational functions of mind.Leonard D. Katz - 1995 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 18 (2):258-259.
    One can share Block's aim of distinguishing “phenomenal” experience from cognitive function and agree with much in his views, yet hold that the inclusion of representational content within phenomenal content, if only in certain spatial cases, obscures this distinction. It may also exclude some modular theories, although it is interestingly suggestive of what may be the limits of the phenomenal penetration of the representational mind.
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  36.  12
    Emergence of community‐associated methicillin‐resistant Staphylococcus aureus infection among patients with end‐stage renal disease.Leonard B. Johnson, Anilrudh A. Venugopal, Joan Pawlak & Louis D. Saravolatz - 2006 - Emergence: Complexity and Organization 27 (10):1057-1062.
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  37.  39
    Hedonic arousal, memory, and motivation.Leonard D. Katz - 1982 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 5 (1):60-60.
  38.  47
    Manuscript Referees for The Journal of Ethics Volume 9: September 2004–June 2005.Justin D’Arms, Julia Driver, Anthony Ellis, Francisco Gonzales, George W. Harris, Aleksandar Jokic, Leonard Kahn, Phillip Montague, G. Di Muzio & Gerald Press - 2005 - The Journal of Ethics 9 (3):581.
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  39.  28
    Colin Koopman: "How We Became Our Data: A Genealogy of the Informational Person".Leonard D’Cruz - 2019 - Foucault Studies 27 (27):161-165.
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  40.  35
    Emotion, representation, and consciousness.Leonard D. Katz - 2000 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (2):204-205.
    Rolls's preliminary definitions of emotion and speculative restriction of consciousness, including emotional sentience, to humans, display behaviorist prejudice. Reinforcement and causation are not by themselves sufficient conceptual resources to define either emotion or the directedness of thought and motivated action. For any adequate definition of emotion or delimitation of consciousness, new physiology, such as Rolls is contributing to, and also the resources of other fields, will be required.
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  41.  54
    Love, Loss, and Hope Go Deeper than Language: Linguistic Semantics Has Only a Limited Role in the Interdisciplinary Study of Affect.Leonard D. Katz - 2009 - Emotion Review 1 (1):19-20.
    Human emotional experience is organized at multiple levels, only some of which are easily penetrable by or dependent on language. Affects connected with mammalian parental care seem involved in Anna Wierzbicka's example of the experience of Jesus in Gethsemane. However, such affects are not characterizable as she requires, using only NSM's short list of linguistic semantic universals. Following her methodology, even using an enriched NSM really exhaustive of linguistic semantic universals, may involve serious losses of cognitive opportunity. Specifically, it forecloses (...)
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  42.  21
    On begging the question when naturalizing norms.Leonard D. Katz - 1994 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 17 (1):21-22.
  43.  26
    Parting's sweet sorrow: A pain pathway for the social sentiments?Leonard D. Katz - 1982 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 5 (3):435-436.
  44. Differential effects of socioeconomic status on working and procedural memory systems.Julia A. Leonard, Allyson P. Mackey, Amy S. Finn & John D. E. Gabrieli - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  45. On a Discriminatory Problem Connected with the Works of Plato.D. R. Cox & Leonard Brandwood - 1959
     
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  46.  42
    Book Reviews Section 1.D. Bob Gowin, Jerry B. Burnell, Pat Keith, Jaw-Woei Chiou, Kermit J. Blank, George Willis, George Kincaid, Lawrence D. Klein, James A. Nathan, Houston M. Burnside, Daniel P. Hudin, Erwin H. Epstein, Ivan L. Barrientos, Darrell S. Willey, Mathew Zachariah, Robert H. Beck & Edward R. Beauchamp - 1973 - Educational Studies 4 (3):134-145.
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  47.  8
    The University and the Colleges of Education in Wales 1925-1978.Leonard G. Bewsher & D. Gerwyn Lewis - 1982 - British Journal of Educational Studies 30 (2):242.
  48.  12
    The phenomenal determination of retroaction and proaction: I. Interference within pairs of a single list.Leonard Brosgole, William G. Lederer & Kathleen D. Kozlowski - 1976 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 8 (3):205-207.
  49.  49
    Prudent Pugs: Do Purportedly Irrational Animals Have Reasons for Action?Leonard D. G. Ferry - 2013 - Heythrop Journal 54 (4):543-553.
  50. Why Don’t Physicians Use Ethics Consultation?L. Davies & Leonard D. Hudson - 1999 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 10 (2):116-125.
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