Results for 'Kelly Carr'

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  1.  54
    The shape of human navigation: How environmental geometry is used in maintenance of spatial orientation.Jonathan W. Kelly, Timothy P. McNamara, Bobby Bodenheimer, Thomas H. Carr & John J. Rieser - 2008 - Cognition 109 (2):281-286.
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  2.  3
    A Conceptual Model of Engagement Profiles Throughout the Decades of Older Adulthood.Kelly Carr & Patti Weir - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  3.  13
    If You are Serious About Impact, Create a Personal Impact Development Plan.Kelly P. Gabriel & Herman Aguinis - 2022 - Business and Society 61 (4):818-826.
    To achieve impact, academics need to create personal impact development plans, focused on what and on whom to have an impact and the necessary competencies to do so. Profession and university leaders play a critical role in the successful implementation of such plans.
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  4.  17
    Desiring Disability Differently: Neoliberalism, Heterotopic Imagination and Intra-corporeal Reconfigurations.Kelly Fritsch - 2015 - Foucault Studies 19:43-66.
    Challenging the undesirability of disability is a shared responsibility that requires us to imagine disability differently. In order to imagine disability differently, we need to understand how the neoliberal hegemonic social imagination—key to processes that create good disabled and able-bodied neoliberal subjects—works to curtail who is perceived to have a desirable body. In order to desire disability differently, we must begin with marginal, heterotopic imaginations whereby disability is not something to overcome, but rather is part of a life worth living. (...)
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  5. The Gospel and the Sacred: Poetics of Violence in Mark.Robert G. Hamerton-Kelly - 1994
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  6. Pre-existence, Wisdom and the Son of Man.R. G. Hammerton-Kelly - 1973
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  7. Reason and violence in Girard's mimetic theory : the anthropology of the cross.Robert Hameton-Kelly - 2011 - In Wayne Cristaudo & Heung-Wah Wong (eds.), From Faith in Reason to Reason in Faith: Transformations in Philosophical Theology From the Eighteenth to Twentieth Centuries. Lanham: Upa.
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  8. Sacred Violence: Paul's Hermeneutic of the Cross.Robert G. Hamerton-Kelly - 1992
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  9.  8
    Utopia and Crisis.Kelly E. Happe - 2020 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 53 (3):272-278.
    ABSTRACT This essay thinks through the relationship between dystopia and utopia, in particular, how the constellation of past and present in radical demands amid state and economic violence is that which creates “crisis”—an estrangement from the present, a reclaiming of past insurgency, and the possibilities for other worlds.
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  10.  14
    What is History?Patrick Gardiner & Edward Hallett Carr - 1964 - Philosophical Review 73 (4):557.
  11.  17
    Sensory Re-weighting for Postural Control in Parkinson’s Disease.Kelly J. Feller, Robert J. Peterka & Fay B. Horak - 2019 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 13:437406.
    Postural instability in Parkinson’s disease (PD) is characterized by impaired postural responses to transient perturbations, increased postural sway in stance and difficulty transitioning between tasks. In addition, some studies suggest that loss of dopamine in the basal ganglia due to PD results in difficulty using proprioceptive information for motor control. Here, we quantify the ability of subjects with PD and age-matched control subjects to use and re-weight sensory information for postural control during steady-state conditions of continuous rotations of the stance (...)
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  12.  10
    Experience and Nature.H. Wildon Carr - 1926 - Philosophical Review 35 (1):64.
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  13.  13
    Exploring the range of reported dream lucidity.Remington Mallett, Michelle Carr, Martin Freegard, Karen Konkoly, Ceri Bradshaw & Michael Schredl - 2021 - Philosophy and the Mind Sciences 2:1-23.
    Dream lucidity, or being aware that one is dreaming while dreaming, is not an all-or-none phenomenon. Often, subjects report being some variant of “a little lucid” as opposed to completely or not at all. As recent neuroimaging work begins to elucidate the neural underpinnings of lucid experience, understanding subtle phenomenological variation within lucid dreams is essential. Here, we focus on the variability of lucid experience by asking participants to report their awareness of the dream on a 5-point Likert scale. Participants (...)
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  14. Making Sense of Education: An Introduction to the Philosophy and Theory of Education and Teaching.David Carr - 2005 - British Journal of Educational Studies 53 (1):105-110.
     
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  15.  31
    A Philosophical Education and Philosophical Investigations.Kelly Dean Jolley - 1999 - Modern Schoolman 76 (4):293-301.
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  16. Explorations of Plotinus' Philosophical Psychology.Kelly Dean Jolley - 1994 - Dissertation, The University of Rochester
    In the dissertation I explore three central issues in Plotinus' philosophical psychology: The fall of the soul, the relationships of soul and body, and the concept of the ego. ;Chapter 1 introduces the issues. Chapter 2 argues for a dual-aspect theory about the soul's fall. Chapter 3 characterizes the relationships between soul and body. Much of the chapter is devoted to distancing Plotinus' dualism from Cartesian dualism. The chapter ends with a discussion of Plotinus on perception. Chapter 4 investigates the (...)
     
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  17. James F. Peterman, Philosophy as Therapy: An Interpretation and Defense of Wittgenstein's Later Philosophical Project Reviewed by.Kelly Dean Jolley - 1993 - Philosophy in Review 13 (6):334-336.
     
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  18. God does not hurry.Kelly Johnson - 2009 - In D. Brent Laytham (ed.), God Does Not...: Entertain, Play "Matchmaker," Hurry, Demand Blood, Cure Every Illness. Brazos Press.
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  19.  19
    The End of Work: Theological Critiques of Capitalism – By John Hughes.Kelly Johnson - 2009 - Modern Theology 25 (3):521-523.
  20. Austin Athwart the Tradition.Kelly Jolley & Kelly Dean Jolley - 2017 - In Consuelo Preti (ed.), Some Main Problems of Moore Interpretation. New York: Routledge. pp. 229-239.
     
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  21.  1
    Response to Wilhoit’s Review of Kapic’s You’re Only Human.Kelly M. Kapic - 2022 - Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 15 (2):289-291.
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  22.  19
    Establishing first-person knowledge of madness: Must This Undertaking Elide our Differences?Jasna Russo - 2016 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 23 (3):237-240.
    It is encouraging that, in their commentaries, Sarah Carr and Timothy Kelly do not bring the discussion back to the conventional treatment of personal narratives in psychiatry and mental health, but rather take the ideas presented in my paper forward. We seem to agree about the need to disrupt the ultimate interpretative authority of the researcher. This is the point from which both commentaries depart, taking off in their own directions through the thorny questions of how—and indeed whether—any (...)
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  23.  44
    Skewed Vulnerabilities and Moral Corruption in Global Perspectives on Climate Engineering.Wylie Carr & Christopher J. Preston - 2017 - Environmental Values 26 (6):757-777.
    Ethicists and social scientists alike have advocated for the inclusion of vulnerable populations in research and decision-making on climate engineering. Unfortunately, there have been few efforts to do so. The research presented in this paper was designed to build knowledge about how vulnerable populations think about climate engineering. The goal of this manuscript is to bring the ethics literature on climate engineering into dialogue with emerging social science data documenting the perspectives of vulnerable populations. The results indicate some concerns among (...)
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  24.  31
    When dyads act in parallel, a sense of agency for the auditory consequences depends on the order of the actions.John A. Dewey & Thomas H. Carr - 2013 - Consciousness and Cognition 22 (1):155-166.
    The sense of agency is the perception of willfully causing something to happen. Wegner and Wheatley proposed three prerequisites for SA: temporal contiguity between an action and its effect, congruence between predicted and observed effects, and exclusivity . We investigated how temporal contiguity, congruence, and the order of two human agents’ actions influenced SA on a task where participants rated feelings of self-agency for producing a tone. SA decreased when tone onsets were delayed, supporting contiguity as important, but the order (...)
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  25. Husserl's Problematic Concept of the Life-World.David Carr - 1970 - American Philosophical Quarterly 7 (4):331 - 339.
  26. The Philosophy of Bergson.Bertrand Russell, H. Wildon Carr & Karin Costelloe - 1914 - Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 22 (3):18-20.
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  27.  15
    Conditions of radical care: a response to Asha Bhandary’s Freedom to Care.Kelly Gawel - 2022 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 25 (6):835-842.
    This article claims that Asha Bhandary’s theory of justice in Freedom to Care: Liberalism, Dependency Care, and Culture is right to stress the interdependency of justice and care in addressing structural oppressions, but wrong in upholding liberalism’s capacity for doing so. Against her procedural mechanism of education for caregiving skills in particular, I point to the critical and generative methods of social reproduction feminism and Transformative Justice as models of radical praxis in the collective work of politically centering and radically (...)
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  28.  21
    Varieties of Virtue Ethics.David Carr (ed.) - 2016 - London: Palgrave-Macmillan.
    This book explores recent developments in ethics of virtue. While acknowledging the Aristotelian roots of modern virtue ethics – with its emphasis on the moral importance of character – this collection recognizes that more recent accounts of virtue have been shaped by many other influences, such as Aquinas, Hume, Nietzsche, Hegel and Marx, Confucius and Lao-tzu. The authors also examine the bearing of virtue ethics on other disciplines such as psychology, sociology and theology, as well as attending to some wider (...)
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  29.  12
    Knowledge and Truth in Virtuous Deliberation.David Carr - 2020 - Philosophia 48 (4):1381-1396.
    The overall aim of this paper is to explore the role of knowledge and truth in the practical deliberation of candidate virtuous agents. To this end, the paper considers three criticisms of Julia Driver’s recent defence of the prospect of ‘virtues of ignorance’ or virtues for which knowledge may be considered unnecessary or untoward. While the present essay agrees with the general drift of Driver’s critics that we should reject such virtues construed as traits that deliberately embrace ignorance, it is (...)
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  30.  63
    Character in teaching.David Carr - 2007 - British Journal of Educational Studies 55 (4):369-389.
    Qualities of personal character would appear to play a significant role in the professional conduct of teachers. It is often said that we remember teachers as much for the kinds of people they were than for anything they may have taught us, and some kinds of professional expertise may best be understood as qualities of character After (roughly) distinguishing qualities of character from those of personality, the present paper draws on the resources of virtue ethics to try to make sense (...)
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  31.  9
    Recasting “Substantial Equivalence”:Transatlantic Governance of GM Food.Susan Carr, Joseph Murphy & Les Levidow - 2007 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 32 (1):26-64.
    When intense public controversy erupted around agricultural biotechnology in the late 1990s, critics found opportunities to challenge risk assessment criteria and test methods for genetically modified products. In relation to GM food, they criticized the concept of substantial equivalence, which European Union and United States regulators had adopted as the basis for a harmonized, science-based approach to risk assessment. Competing policy agendas framed scientific uncertainty in different ways. Substantial equivalence was contested and eventually recast to accommodate some criticisms. To explain (...)
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  32.  59
    What is climate change doing to us and for us?Paul H. Carr - 2018 - Zygon 53 (2):443-461.
    What are we doing to our climate? Emissions from fossil fuel burning have raised carbon dioxide concentrations 35 percent higher than in the past millions of years. This increase is warming our planet via the greenhouse effect. What is climate change doing to and for us? Dry regions are drier and wet ones wetter. Wildfires have increased threefold, hurricanes more violent, floods setting record heights, glaciers melting, and seas rising. Parts of Earth are increasingly uninhabitable. Climate change requires us to (...)
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  33. Thought and action in the art of dance.David Carr - 1987 - British Journal of Aesthetics 27 (4):345-357.
  34.  74
    Chancy accuracy and imprecise credence.Jennifer Carr - 2015 - Philosophical Perspectives 29 (1):67-81.
    Can we extend accuracy-based epistemic utility theory to imprecise credences? There's no obvious way of proceeding: some stipulations will be necessary for either (i) the notion of accuracy or (ii) the epistemic decision rule. With some prima facie plausible stipulations, imprecise credences are always required. With others, they’re always impermissible. Care is needed to reach the familiar evidential view of imprecise credence: that whether precise or imprecise credences are required depends on the character of one's evidence. I propose an epistemic (...)
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  35.  18
    Dream lucidity is associated with positive waking mood.Abigail Stocks, Michelle Carr, Remington Mallett, Karen Konkoly, Alisha Hicks, Megan Crawford, Michael Schredl & Ceri Bradshaw - 2020 - Consciousness and Cognition 83 (C):102971.
  36.  40
    Revisiting the liberal and vocational dimensions of university education.David Carr - 2009 - British Journal of Educational Studies 57 (1):1-17.
    The purposes of higher education in general and of university education in particular have long been subject to controversy. Whereas for some, the main role of universities is to provide professional and vocational education and training and their benefits are to be measured in terms of social or economic utility, their value for others is to be seen more in terms of the liberal development and promotion of certain intrinsically worthwhile qualities of mind and intellect. In this context, indeed, much (...)
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  37.  21
    Nursing Ethics in the Seventh-Day Adventist Religious Tradition.Elizabeth Johnston Taylor & Mark F. Carr - 2009 - Nursing Ethics 16 (6):707-718.
    Nurses’ religious beliefs influence their motivations and perspectives, including their practice of ethics in nursing care. When the impact of these beliefs is not recognized, great potential for unethical nursing care exists. Thus, this article examines how the theology of one religious tradition, Seventh-day Adventism (SDA), could affect nurses. An overview of SDA history and beliefs is presented, which explains why ‘medical missionary’ work is central to SDAs. Theological foundations that would permeate an SDA nurse’s view of the nursing metaparadigm (...)
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  38.  61
    The hard problem of intertheoretic comparisons.Jennifer Rose Carr - 2022 - Philosophical Studies 179 (4):1401-1427.
    Metanormativists hold that moral uncertainty can affect how we ought, in some morally authoritative sense, to act. Many metanormativists aim to generalize expected utility theory for normative uncertainty. Such accounts face the “easy problem of intertheoretic comparisons”: the worry that distinct theories’ assessments of choiceworthiness are incomparable. The easy problem may well be resolvable, but another problem looms: while some moral theories assign cardinal degrees of choiceworthiness, other theories’ choiceworthiness assignments are merely ordinal. Expected choiceworthiness over such theories is undefined. (...)
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  39.  31
    Can educational research be scientific?Wilfred Carr - 1983 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 17 (1):35–43.
    Wilfred Carr; Can Educational Research be Scientific?, Journal of Philosophy of Education, Volume 17, Issue 1, 30 May 2006, Pages 35–43, https://doi.org/10.1111.
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  40.  7
    Virtue and Knowledge.David Carr - 2016 - Philosophy 91 (3):375-390.
    In the Nicomachean Ethics Aristotle distinguishes fairly sharply between the practical deliberation of moral virtue and the epistemic reflection of theoretical or truth-focused enquiry. However, drawing on insights from Plato and Iris Murdoch, the present paper seeks a more robust epistemic foundation for virtuous deliberation as primarily grounded in clear or correct perception of the world and human association, character and conduct. While such perception may not be sufficient for moral virtue, it is here argued that it is necessary. Murdoch's (...)
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  41. A Computational Learning Semantics for Inductive Empirical Knowledge.Kevin T. Kelly - 2014 - In Alexandru Baltag & Sonja Smets (eds.), Johan van Benthem on Logic and Information Dynamics. Cham, Switzerland: Springer International Publishing. pp. 289-337.
    This chapter presents a new semantics for inductive empirical knowledge. The epistemic agent is represented concretely as a learner who processes new inputs through time and who forms new beliefs from those inputs by means of a concrete, computable learning program. The agent’s belief state is represented hyper-intensionally as a set of time-indexed sentences. Knowledge is interpreted as avoidance of error in the limit and as having converged to true belief from the present time onward. Familiar topics are re-examined within (...)
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  42.  94
    The integrity of a utilitarian.Spencer Carr - 1976 - Ethics 86 (3):241-246.
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  43.  17
    Love, Truth and Moral Judgement.David Carr - forthcoming - Philosophy:1-17.
    A famous section of 1 Corinthians and some influential passages in the work of Iris Murdoch seem to suppose a significant connection between the higher human love of agape and moral knowledge: that, perhaps, the former may provide access to the latter. Following some sceptical attention to this possibility, this paper turns to a more modest suggestion of Plato's Symposium that the ‘lower’ human love of eros might be a transitional stage to higher moral love or knowledge of the good. (...)
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  44. On the moral value of physical activity: Body and soul in Plato's account of virtue.David Carr - 2010 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 4 (1):3 – 15.
    It is arguable that some of the most profound and perennial issues and problems of philosophy concerning the nature of human agency, the role of reason and knowledge in such agency and the moral status and place of responsibility in human action and conduct receive their sharpest definition in Plato's specific discussion in the Republic of the human value of physical activities. From this viewpoint alone, Plato's exploration of this issue might be considered a locus classicus in the philosophy of (...)
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  45.  3
    The philosophy of Bergson.Bertrand Russell & Herbert Wildon Carr - 1914 - Folcroft, Pa.: Folcroft Library Editions. Edited by Herbert Wildon Carr.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work. This work is in the public domain (...)
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  46.  19
    The Uses of Literacy in Teacher Education.David Carr - 1997 - British Journal of Educational Studies 45 (1):53-68.
    Alasdair Maclntyre identifies two interconnected problems for present day thinking about the nature of educational provision. The first concerns the very possibility of general educatedness in the social and cultural circumstances of modernity; the second concerns the narrow and specialist route down which professional training has proceeded in contemporary post-industrial societies. This paper explores the implications of MacIntyre's views and argues for a radical reappraisal of current conceptions of teacher education and training.
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  47.  36
    The vices of naturalist neo‐Aristotelian virtue ethics.David Carr - 2023 - Philosophical Investigations 46 (4):414-429.
    While the modern revival of virtue ethics largely looks back to Aristotle, most, if not all, versions of this trend continue to be much indebted to and/or based upon specific mid‐twentieth‐century neo‐naturalist and descriptivist critiques of prevailing antinaturalist trends of that time: specifically, upon Anscombe's critique of the ethics of duty and utility and of the so‐called modern moral ought, and Geach's robust defence of the descriptive character of moral and other goodness. However, in the wake of further critical attention (...)
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  48. Transcendental and Empirical Subjectivity. The Self in the Transcendental Tradition.David Carr - 2003 - In Donn Welton (ed.), The New Husserl: A Critical Reader. Indiana University Press. pp. 181--198.
  49. A Phenomenological (Husserlian) Defense of Bergson’s “Idealistic Concession”.Michael Kelly - 2010 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 14 (2):399-415.
    When summarizing the findings of his 1896 Matter and Memory, Bergson claims: “That every reality has... a relation with consciousness—this is what we concede to idealism.” Yet Bergson’s 1896 text presents the theory of “pure perception,” which, since it accounts for perception according to the brain’s mechanical transmissions, apparently leaves no room for subjective consciousness. Bergson’s theory of pure perception would appear to render his idealistic concession absurd. In this paper, I attempt to defend Bergson’s idealistic concession. I argue that (...)
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  50.  24
    Natural Kind Realism and Dupré’s Promiscuous Realism.Daniel D. Carr - 2023 - Southwest Philosophy Review 39 (1):183-192.
    I contend that scientific realism and realism about natural kinds should be given separate treatment because a person could be a scientific realist in general without having key realist commitments about natural kinds. I utilize Chakravartty’s three dimensions of commitment for scientific realism to create three key conditions for realism regarding natural kinds in particular. I find that Dupré’s promiscuous realism fails at least one these conditions, and therefore, for the sake of terminological consistency and clarity, we should classify promiscuous (...)
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