Results for 'Margaret Gray Towne'

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  1.  6
    The behavior of the human infant during the first thirty days of life.Margaret Gray Blanton - 1917 - Psychological Review 24 (6):456-483.
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  2. I can't breathe': covid-19 and The plague's tragedy of political and corporeal suffocation.Margaret E. Gray - 2023 - In Peg Brand Weiser (ed.), Camus's _The Plague_: Philosophical Perspectives. New York, US: Oxford University Press.
     
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  3.  6
    Freud, Proust and Lacan: Theory as Fiction.Margaret Gray-McDonald & Malcolm Bowie - 1989 - Substance 18 (1):89.
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  4.  5
    Farming alone? What’s up with the “C” in community supported agriculture.Antoinette Pole & Margaret Gray - 2013 - Agriculture and Human Values 30 (1):85-100.
    This study reconsiders the purported benefits of community found in Community Supported Agriculture (CSA). Using an online survey of members who belong to CSAs in New York, between November and December 2010, we assess members’ reasons for joining a CSA, and their perceptions of community within their CSA and beyond. A total of 565 CSA members responded to the survey. Results show an overwhelming majority of members joined their CSA for fresh, local, organic produce, while few respondents joined their CSA (...)
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  5.  14
    Food Chains, by Sanjay RawalFood Chains. Directed by Sanjay Rawal. New York: Screen Media Films, 2014.Margaret Gray - 2015 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 8 (2):266-271.
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  6.  3
    Food Chains, by Sanjay Rawal.Margaret Gray - 2015 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 8 (2):266-271.
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  7.  4
    Postmodern Proust.Rebecca Karoff & Margaret E. Gray - 1993 - Substance 22 (2/3):353.
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  8.  4
    Dateline Cape Town.Eve Horwitz-Gray - 1999 - Logos 10 (2):106-110.
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  9.  3
    Margaret Gray: Labor and the locavore: the making of a comprehensive food ethic: University of California Press, Berkley, California, 2013, 225 pp, ISBN: 978-0-520-27669-7.Russell C. Hedberg - 2015 - Agriculture and Human Values 32 (1):159-160.
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  10.  8
    Privacy and Confidentiality Issues in Primary Care: views of advanced practice nurses and their patients.Terry Deshefy-Longhi, Jane Karpe Dixon, Douglas Olsen & Margaret Grey - 2004 - Nursing Ethics 11 (4):378-393.
    Various aspects of the concepts of privacy and confidentiality are discussed in relation to health care information in primary health care settings. In addition, findings are presented from patient and nurse practitioner focus groups held to elicit concerns that these two groups have in relation to privacy and confidentiality in their respective primary care settings. The focus groups were held prior to the implementation of the Health Insurance Portability and Accessibility Act in the USA. Implications for advanced practice registered nurses (...)
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  11.  10
    Enlightenment Thought: An Anthology of Sources.Margaret L. King - 2019 - Hackett Publishing Company.
    "Margaret L. King has put together a highly representative selection of readings from most of the more significant—but by no means the most obvious—texts by the authors who made up the movement we have come to call the 'Enlightenment.' They range across much of Europe and the Americas, and from the early seventeenth century until the end of the eighteenth. In the originality of the choice of texts, in its range and depth, this collection offers both wide coverage and (...)
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  12.  14
    ‘Use Them At Our Pleasure’: Spinoza on Animal Ethics.John Grey - 2013 - History of Philosophy Quarterly 30 (4):367-388.
    Although Spinoza disagrees with Descartes's claim that animals are mindless, he holds that we may nevertheless treat them as we please because their natures are different from human nature. Margaret Wilson has questioned the validity of Spinoza's argument, since it is not clear why differences in nature should imply differences in ethical status. In this paper, I propose a new interpretation of Spinoza's argument that responds to Wilson's challenge. We have ethical commitments to other humans only because we share (...)
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  13.  33
    Thinking posthuman with mud: and children of the Anthropocene.Margaret Somerville & Sarah J. Powell - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 51 (8):829-840.
    This article addresses the problem of writing the posthuman in educational research. Confronted by our own failures as educational researchers within posthuman and new materialist approaches, it seeks a more radical opening to Lather and St Pierre’s question: ‘If we give up “human” as separate from non-human, how do we exist? … Are we willing to take on this question that is so hard to think but that might enable different lives?’ We do this to enable different lives for the (...)
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  14.  8
    The Piety of Thinking: Essays by Martin Heidegger (review).J. Glenn Gray - 1980 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 18 (2):242-244.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:242 HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY asks questions like these: What is there in favor of calling green a primary color, and not a blend of blue and yellow? (1, 6) or, Why can something be transparent green but not transparent white? (1, 19). The effect of such questions is to force us to realize that our concept of color is more complex than we might have realized, or would want (...)
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  15.  4
    Stellar Spectral Classification.Richard O. Gray & Christopher J. Corbally - 2009 - Princeton University Press.
    Written by leading experts in the field, Stellar Spectral Classification is the only book to comprehensively discuss both the foundations and most up-to-date techniques of MK and other spectral classification systems. Definitive and encyclopedic, the book introduces the astrophysics of spectroscopy, reviews the entire field of stellar astronomy, and shows how the well-tested methods of spectral classification are a powerful discovery tool for graduate students and researchers working in astronomy and astrophysics. The book begins with a historical survey, followed by (...)
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  16.  91
    Early Modern Women on Metaphysics ed. by Emily Thomas. [REVIEW]John Grey - 2019 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 57 (1):167-168.
    Insofar as historians of philosophy aim to get the story right, it is now widely recognized that they must reckon with works of early modern women philosophers—oft-neglected philosophers who read, and were read by, canonical luminaries such as Descartes and Leibniz. Thomas’s volume collects thirteen new contributions to the scholarship on the metaphysics of such authors: Mary Astell, Elisabeth of Bohemia, Margaret Cavendish, Catharine Trotter Cockburn, Émilie Du Châtelet, Bathsua Makin, Damaris Masham, and Anna Maria van Schurman. Cavendish, Conway, (...)
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  17. Heritable Genome Editing in a Global Context: National and International Policy Challenges.Achim Rosemann, Adam Balen, Brigitte Nerlich, Christine Hauskeller, Margaret Sleeboom-Faulkner, Sarah Hartley, Xinqing Zhang & Nick Lee - 2019 - Hastings Center Report 49 (3):30-42.
    A central problem for the international governance of heritable germline gene editing is that there are important differences in attitudes and values as well as ethical and health care considerations around the world. These differences are reflected in a complicated and diverse regulatory landscape. Several publications have discussed whether reproductive uses would be legally permissible in individual countries and whether clinical applications could emerge in the context of regulatory gaps and gray areas. Systematic comparative studies that explore issues related (...)
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  18.  9
    The ethics of community-based research with people who use drugs: results of a scoping review.Rusty Souleymanov, Dario Kuzmanović, Zack Marshall, Ayden I. Scheim, Mikiki Mikiki, Catherine Worthington & Margaret Millson - 2016 - BMC Medical Ethics 17 (1):25.
    BackgroundDrug user networks and community-based organizations advocate for greater, meaningful involvement of people with lived experience of drug use in research, programs and services, and policy initiatives. Community-based approaches to research provide an opportunity to engage people who use drugs in all stages of the research process. Conducting community-based participatory research with people who use drugs has its own ethical challenges that are not necessarily acknowledged or supported by institutional ethics review boards. We conducted a scoping review to identify ethical (...)
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  19.  12
    1914: Grey and Peace or War [review of Margaret MacMillan, The War That Ended Peace: the Road to 1914 ].Kenneth Blackwell - 2013 - Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies 33 (2):186-186.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:186 Reviews 1914: GREY AND PEACE OR WAR Kenneth Blackwell Margaret MacMillan. The War That Ended Peace: the Road to 1914. Toronto: Allen Lane, 2013. Pp. xxxv, 739. isbn: 978 0 670 06404 5. c$38.00 (hb). ith the advent of the centenary of wwi, and of Russsell’s criticisms of Sir Edward Grey in his minutely historical “The Policy of the Entente” (1915; in Papers 13) for Britain’s participation (...)
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  20.  5
    Book Review : WALSH, Margaret, HERE'S HOPING: Heath Town, Wolverhampton and the Hope Community (Urban Theology Unit, Sheffield. New City Special 8. [REVIEW]Mary O'Gorman - 1993 - Feminist Theology 1 (2):132-133.
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  21.  5
    'Carrying the Water': The Work of the Women's Desk of the National Council of Churches for Kenya, Assessed in Response to Recent Articles in Feminist Theology by Mario Aguilar, Margaret Birkett and Mary Grey.Susanne Garnett - 1995 - Feminist Theology 4 (10):49-56.
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  22.  2
    Straw Men and Diamond Dogs.K. Sutherland - 2003 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 10 (2):86-94.
    John Gray, Professor of European Thought at the London School of Economics and the author of the book under review should not be confused with the John Gray who thinks that men are from Mars and women from Venus. Our man is a political philosopher, best known for a string of books on liberalism and a lot less sanguine about the prospects for humanity than his New Age namesake. In fact, perhaps on account of his earlieRAffection for (...) Thatcher, he concludes: ' Humanity does not exist. There are only humans . . .' . If Gray's reclassification of homo sapiens as homo rapiens and his ecological pessimism are right, humans are unlikely to be around for much longer either. John Gray, Straw Dogs: Thoughts on Humans and Other animals, London: Granta Publications, 2002, ?12.99, ISBN 1862075123. (shrink)
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  23. "For They Do Not Agree In Nature With Us": Spinoza on the Lower Animals.Margaret D. Wilson - 1999 - In Rocco J. Gennaro & Charles Huenemann (eds.), New essays on the rationalists. New York: Oxford University Press.
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  24.  10
    The Testimony of Sense: Empiricism and the Essay from Hume to Hazlitt by Tim Milnes (review).Margaret Watkins - 2024 - Hume Studies 49 (1):175-180.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Testimony of Sense: Empiricism and the Essay from Hume to Hazlitt by Tim MilnesMargaret WatkinsTim Milnes. The Testimony of Sense: Empiricism and the Essay from Hume to Hazlitt. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019. Pp. viii + 278. Hardback. ISBN: 9780198812739. $91.00.In his brief autobiography, “My Own Life,” Hume reports that “almost all [his] life has been spent in literary pursuits and occupations” (E-MOL: xxxi). This is one (...)
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  25.  1
    Leibniz' doctrine of necessary truth.Margaret Dauler Wilson - 1990 - New York: Garland.
  26. Better Conversations for Better Informed Consent: Talking with Surgical Patients.Margaret L. Schwarze, Robert M. Arnold, Justin T. Clapp & Jacqueline M. Kruser - 2024 - Hastings Center Report 54 (3):11-14.
    For more than sixty years, surgeons have used bioethical strategies to promote patient self‐determination, many of these now collectively described as “informed consent.” Yet the core framework—understanding, risks, benefits, and alternatives—fails to support patients in deliberation about treatment. We find that surgeons translate this framework into an overly complicated technical explanation of disease and treatment and an overly simplified narrative that surgery will “fix” the problem. They omit critical information about the goals and downsides of surgery and present untenable options (...)
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  27. Naturalizing, Normativity, and Using What “We” Know in Ethics.Margaret Urban Walker - 2000 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Supplementary Volume 26:75-101.
    The provenance of “naturalized epistemology,” so called, is too recent for the hand of Quine not to be still heavily upon it. But like its older relative, “naturalism,” it is an idea rich enough to be coveted, and protean enough to be claimed, by diverse comers with different things in mind. While Quine's version of naturalized epistemology of science inevitably furnishes the backdrop for current discussion of naturalizing moral epistemology, it is important to pause over what “naturalized epistemology” can and (...)
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  28. Six Views of Embodied Cognition.Margaret Wilson - 2002 - Psychonomic Bulletin and Review 9 (4):625--636.
  29.  2
    CHAPTER 13. Superadded Properties: The Limits of Mechanism in Locke.Margaret Dauler Wilson - 1999 - In Ideas and Mechanism: Essays on Early Modern Philosophy. Princeton University Press. pp. 196-208.
  30.  5
    Moral epistemology.Margaret Urban Walker - 1998 - In Alison M. Jaggar & Iris Marion Young (eds.), A companion to feminist philosophy. Malden, Mass.: Blackwell. pp. 361–371.
    Moral epistemology investigates sources and patterns of moral understanding. Its questions include: To what extent does morality consist in or depend on knowledge, and of what kind(s)? What makes possible moral knowledge, and how is such knowledge grounded or justified? What is the relation between philosophical claims about morality and the moral understanding any of us has, that is, what has ethics – the philosophical representation of morality – to do with morality itself? Feminist moral epistemology asks how social divisions (...)
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  31.  2
    For They Do not Agree in Nature With Us.Margaret D. Wilson - 1999 - In Rocco J. Gennaro & Charles Huenemann (eds.), New essays on the rationalists. New York: Oxford University Press.
    The claim that Spinoza has a conception of animal mentality and consciousness that is superior to Descartes's is criticized. It is also argued that Spinoza fails to provide a coherent way of establishing what he considers to be our morally unconstrained “rights” with regard to brutes. Despite Spinoza's claim that brutes “feel,” i.e., are capable of sentience, his view that we are nonetheless entitled to treat animals in any way convenient to us is criticized. Questions are also raised as to (...)
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  32.  8
    Reconstructing Reality: Models, Mathematics, and Simulations.Margaret Morrison - 2014 - New York, US: Oup Usa.
    The book examines issues related to the way modeling and simulation enable us to reconstruct aspects of the world we are investigating. It also investigates the processes by which we extract concrete knowledge from those reconstructions and how that knowledge is legitimated.
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  33.  4
    Notice. Eustathios of Thessaloniki, the capture of Thessaloniki, a translation with introduction and commentary.Margaret Mullett - 1997 - The Classical Review 47 (1):201-202.
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  34.  9
    Moral Understandings: A Feminist Study in Ethics.Margaret Urban Walker - 1997 - New York, US: Routledge.
    First published in 1998. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
  35.  23
    B Flach! B Flach!Myroslav Laiuk & Ali Kinsella - 2023 - Common Knowledge 29 (1):1-20.
    Don't tell terrible stories—everyone here has enough of their own. Everyone here has a whole bloody sack of terrible stories, and at the bottom of the sack is a hammer the narrator uses to pound you on the skull the instant you dare not believe your ears. Or to pound you when you do believe. Not long ago I saw a tomboyish girl on Khreshchatyk Street demand money of an elderly woman, threatening to bite her and infect her with syphilis. (...)
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  36.  13
    The Patient as Victim and Vector: Ethics and Infectious Disease.Margaret Battin - 2009 - Oxford University Press.
    'The Patient as Victim and Vector' is jointly written by four authors at the University of Utah with expertise in bioethics health law, and both clinical practice and public health policy concerning infectious disease.
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  37.  12
    Possible Gods.Margaret D. Wilson - 1979 - Review of Metaphysics 32 (4):717-733.
    At least some of these commentators have then, rather naturally, taken a step which it will be the business of this essay to criticize. They have suggested that Leibniz’s "counter-part theory" can be understood as providing an interpretation of counter-factuals and certain forms of modal discourse within his system. For example, Mondadori writes.
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  38. Artificial Intelligence and Natural Man.Margaret A. Boden - 1979 - Philosophy 54 (207):130-132.
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  39. Artificial Intelligence and Natural Man.Margaret A. Boden - 1978 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 29 (4):394-395.
     
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  40.  2
    One phenomenon, many models: Inconsistency and complementarity.Margaret Morrison - 2011 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 42 (2):342-351.
  41. Artificial Intelligence and Natural Man.Margaret Boden - 1980 - Synthese 43 (3):433-451.
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  42.  3
    Law unlimited.Margaret Davies - 2017 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Theoretical variables : an overview -- Limited and unlimited law -- Legal materialism and social existence -- A new legal materialism -- Inner and outer space -- Scales of law -- Subjects and perspective -- Imagining law -- Pathfinding -- Conclusion.
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  43. Politics as Culture: Hannah Arendt and the Public Realm.Margaret Canovan - 1985 - History of Political Thought 6 (3):617.
  44.  7
    Models as Mediating Instruments.Margaret Morrison & Mary S. Morgan - 1999 - In Mary S. Morgan & Margaret Morrison (eds.), Models as Mediators: Perspectives on Natural and Social Science. Cambridge University Press.
    Morrison and Morgan argue for a view of models as 'mediating instruments' whose role in scientific theorising goes beyond applying theory. Models are partially independent of both theories and the world. This autonomy allows for a unified account of their role as instruments that allow for exploration of both theories and the world.
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  45. Unifying Scientific Theories. Physical Concepts and Mathematical Structures.Margaret Morrison - 2001 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 63 (2):430-431.
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  46.  9
    Diotima's ghost: The uncertain place of feminist philosophy in professional philosophy.Margaret Urban Walker - 2005 - Hypatia 20 (3):153-165.
  47. Unifying Scientific Theories: Physical Concepts and Mathematical Structures.Margaret Morrison - 2001 - Philosophical Quarterly 51 (204):405-408.
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  48.  5
    The mind club: who thinks, what feels, and why it matters.Daniel M. Wegner & Kurt James Gray - 2016 - New York, New York: Viking Press. Edited by Kurt James Gray.
    From dogs to gods, the science of understanding mysterious minds--including your own. Nothing seems more real than the minds of other people. When you consider what your boss is thinking or whether your spouse is happy, you are admitting them into the "mind club." It's easy to assume other humans can think and feel, but what about a cow, a computer, a corporation? What kinds of mind do they have? Daniel M. Wegner and Kurt Gray are award-winning psychologists who (...)
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  49.  8
    Religion and Society among the Coorgs of South India.Margaret Clark & M. N. Srinivas - 1954 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 74 (2):109.
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  50.  14
    Narrating and naturalizing civil society and citizenship theory: The place of political culture and the public sphere.Margaret R. Somers - 1995 - Sociological Theory 13 (3):229-274.
    The English translation of Habermas's The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere converges with the revival of the "political culture concept" in the social sciences. Surprisingly, Habermas's account of the Western bourgeois public sphere has much in common with the original political culture concept associated with Parsonian modernization theory in the 1950s and 1960s. In both cases, the concept of political culture is used in a way that is neither political nor cultural. Explaining this peculiarity is the central problem addressed (...)
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