Results for 'Mary Talbot'

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  1.  5
    La construction identitaire des éducateurs de jeunes enfants en alternance : ou comment l’usage du construit de reliance participe-t-il de la réorientation de leur projet professionnel en cours de formation?Marie-Christine Talbot - 2016 - Revue Phronesis 5 (1):4-15.
    Although the context, such as the social policies or the professional world in mutation, highlights the emergence of a new professional project for educators of young children during their training period, the process of professionalization and the identity building involved during the training period will be more especially studied, in relation to the practical experience gathered during the internships (Wittorski, 2009). This experience awakes in the subject a reflection and a situation of identity building through the encounter and the interactions (...)
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  2.  20
    Old age in byzantium.M. Alice-Mary Talbot - 1984 - Byzantinische Zeitschrift 77 (2).
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  3.  11
    Daniel Caner, Wandering, begging monks. Spiritual authority and the promotion of monasticism in late antiquity.Alice-Mary Talbot - 2005 - Byzantinische Zeitschrift 97 (1):197-198.
    Daniel Caner's monograph, a reworking of a University of California at Berkeley doctoral dissertation, maintains the high standards that we have come to expect from the series of books on Late Antiquity overseen by Peter Brown. His book provides a detailed examination, with meticulous documentation, of the phenomenon of wandering and begging monks that appeared in the late 4th and early 5th centuries, especially in the eastern Mediterranean region and North Africa, during the formative period of Christian monasticism. These monks (...)
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  4.  19
    Searching for Women on Mt. Athos: Insights from the Archives of the Holy Mountain.Alice-Mary Talbot - 2012 - Speculum 87 (4):995-1014.
    In contrast to their western medievalist counterparts, scholars of Byzantine studies are at a disadvantage with regard to surviving primary source materials. I cannot but regard with envy the documents available to my colleagues in the Academy who research the lands of western Europe: to mention a few random examples, the three thousand coroner's inquests analyzed by Barbara Hanawalt and used to inform her remarkably detailed picture of peasant life in fourteenth- and fifteenth-century England, the local customs accounts for the (...)
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  5. Relevance Theory.Mary Talbot - 1993 - In R. E. Asher & J. M. Y. Simpson (eds.), The Encyclopedia of Language and Linguistics. Pergamon.
  6.  17
    Siren Çelik, Manuel II Palaiologos (1350–1425): A Byzantine Emperor in a Time of Tumult. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021. Pp. xxiii, 446; black-and-white figures. $120. ISBN: 978-1-1088-3659-3. [REVIEW]Alice-Mary Talbot - 2022 - Speculum 97 (3):804-805.
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  7.  8
    What you see is what you get? Building confidence in ESG disclosures for sustainable finance through external assurance.Olivier Boiral, Marie-Christine Brotherton & David Talbot - forthcoming - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility.
    The main objective of this study is to understand the value of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) disclosure assurance in the context of the development of sustainable finance standards and laws. This study is based on an analysis of 188 comment letters submitted by such actors in the context of public consultations on the development of three new sustainable finance initiatives (the CFA Institute, the Financial Conduct Authority in the UK, and the New Zealand parliament). The study shows these actors' (...)
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  8.  7
    Book review: Rosalind Gill, gender and the media. Cambridge: Polity, 2007. VI + 291 pp. [REVIEW]Mary Talbot - 2008 - Discourse and Communication 2 (3):365-368.
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  9.  13
    Judith Herrin, Unrivalled Influence: Women and Empire in Byzantium. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2013. Pp. xix, 382; 9 black-and-white figures. $35. ISBN: 9780691153216. [REVIEW]Alice-Mary Talbot - 2014 - Speculum 89 (1):205-207.
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  10.  14
    Living ethics: a stance and its implications in health ethics.Eric Racine, Sophie Ji, Valérie Badro, Aline Bogossian, Claude Julie Bourque, Marie-Ève Bouthillier, Vanessa Chenel, Clara Dallaire, Hubert Doucet, Caroline Favron-Godbout, Marie-Chantal Fortin, Isabelle Ganache, Anne-Sophie Guernon, Marjorie Montreuil, Catherine Olivier, Ariane Quintal, Abdou Simon Senghor, Michèle Stanton-Jean, Joé T. Martineau, Andréanne Talbot & Nathalie Tremblay - 2024 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 27 (2):137-154.
    Moral or ethical questions are vital because they affect our daily lives: what is the best choice we can make, the best action to take in a given situation, and ultimately, the best way to live our lives? Health ethics has contributed to moving ethics toward a more experience-based and user-oriented theoretical and methodological stance but remains in our practice an incomplete lever for human development and flourishing. This context led us to envision and develop the stance of a “living (...)
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  11.  20
    Denis Sullivan, Elizabeth Fisher, and Stratis Papaioannou, eds., Byzantine Religious Culture: Studies in Honor of Alice-Mary Talbot. Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2012. Pp. xxxiv, 473; black-and-white and color figures. $243. ISBN: 978-90-04-21244-2. [REVIEW]Mary B. Cunningham - 2014 - Speculum 89 (2):548-550.
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  12.  33
    The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium.J. P. Kenney, Alexander P. Kazhdan, Alice-Mary Talbot, Anthony Cutler, Timothy E. Gregory & Nancy P. Sevcenko - 1993 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 113 (3):509.
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  13.  13
    Medicine. Humaine et veterinaire. A la fin du Moyen AgeGuy Beaujouan Yvonne Poulle-Drieux Jeanne-Marie Dureau-Lapeysonnie.C. H. Talbot - 1967 - Isis 58 (4):575-576.
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  14.  16
    Alice-Mary Talbot and Scott Fitzgerald Johnson, eds. and transs., Miracle Tales from Byzantium. (Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library 12.) Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2012. Pp. 480. $29.95. ISBN: 9780674059030. [REVIEW]James C. Skedros - 2013 - Speculum 88 (4):1173-1175.
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  15.  4
    Book review: Mary Talbot, Language and Gender. [REVIEW]Chit Cheung Matthew Sung - 2013 - Discourse Studies 15 (3):364-366.
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  16.  15
    Book review: Mary Talbot, media discourse: Representation and interaction. Edinburgh: Edinburgh university press, 2007, IX + 198 pp. [REVIEW]Song Guo - 2009 - Discourse and Communication 3 (4):453-454.
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  17.  7
    Book review: Mary Talbot, Language and Gender. [REVIEW]Songqing Li - 2012 - Discourse and Communication 6 (3):354-356.
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  18.  11
    Bernard de Clairvaux, Sermons variés, texte latin des S. Bernardi Opera par J. Leclercq, H. Rochais et Ch. H. Talbot, introduction et notes par F. Callerot. [REVIEW]Marie Pauliat - 2013 - Augustinianum 53 (2):564-567.
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  19.  12
    “Dear love, dear love”: Feminist pragmatism and the chicago female world of love and ritual.Mary Jo Deegan - 1996 - Gender and Society 10 (5):590-607.
    The history of women in sociology is explored here through the correspondence written by Sophonisba P. Breckinridge to Marion Talbot in the summer of 1936. Their loving letters reveal the ideas and practices of feminist pragmatism and the female world of love and ritual located in Chicago in the twentieth century. This world of professional women flourished around the social settlement Hull House and the University of Chicago during the founding years of sociology. Their lives and social thought challenge (...)
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  20.  30
    Mothers and Sons, Fathers and Daughters: The Byzantine Family of Michael Psellos.Anthony Kaldellis (ed.) - 2006 - University of Notre Dame Press.
    "Michael Psellos was the 'Cicero of Byzantium,' except that his interests were more wide-ranging than those of his Roman predecessor. In addition to being a politician, poet, and writer of letters, speeches, and treatises on philosophy and rhetoric, he was an innovative historian and a practical educator who interested himself in all aspects of learning, from mathematics and medicine to theurgy. Before now, only his 'Chronographia' has been at all well known. Anthony Kaldellis has done a great service in making (...)
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  21. Mathematics and reality.Mary Leng - 2010 - Bulletin of Symbolic Logic 17 (2):267-268.
     
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  22.  29
    Philosophos: Plato’s Missing Dialogue.Mary Louise Gill - 2012 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Plato famously promised to complement the Sophist and the Statesman with another work on a third sort of expert, the philosopher--but we do not have this final dialogue. Mary Louise Gill argues that Plato promised the Philosopher, but did not write it, in order to stimulate his audience and encourage his readers to work out, for themselves, the portrait it would have contained. The Sophist and Statesman are themselves members of a larger series starting with the Theaetetus, Plato's investigation (...)
  23. Knowledge, Mind and Reality: An Introduction by Early Twentieth-Century American Women Philosophers.Joel Katzav, Dorothy Rogers & Krist Vaesen (eds.) - 2023 - Cham: Springer.
    This book is the first volume featuring the work of American women philosophers in the first half of the twentieth century. It provides selected papers authored by Mary Whiton Calkins, Grace Andrus de Laguna, Grace Neal Dolson, Marjorie Glicksman Grene, Marjorie Silliman Harris, Thelma Zemo Lavine, Marie Collins Swabey, Ellen Bliss Talbot, Dorothy Walsh and Margaret Floy Washburn. The book also provides the historical and philosophical background to their work. The papers focus on the nature of philosophy, knowledge, (...)
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  24.  8
    Adding sense: context and interest in a grammar of multimodal meaning.Mary Kalantzis & Bill Cope (eds.) - 2020 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    Mary Kalantzis was from 2006 to 2016 Dean of the College of Education at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Bill Cope is a Professor in the College of Education at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. They are co-authors of multiple books including Making Sense: Reference, Agency, and Structure in a Grammar of Multimodal Meaning (Cambridge, forthcoming), New Learning: Elements of a Science of Education (Cambridge, 2008, 2012), Literacies (Cambridge 2012, 2016) and e-Learning Ecologies (2017).
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  25.  54
    The Other Philosophy Club: America's First Academic Women Philosophers.Dorothy Rogers - 2009 - Hypatia 24 (2):164--185.
    Recent research on women philosophers has led to more discussion of the merits of many previously forgotten women in the past several years. Yet due to the fact that a thinker’s significance and influence are historical phenomena, women remain relatively absent in “mainstream” discussions of philosophy. This paper focuses on several successful academic women in American philosophy and takes notice of how they succeeded in their own era. Special attention is given to three important academic women philosophers: Mary Whiton (...)
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  26.  26
    Michael Polanyi and His Generation: Origins of the Social Construction of Science.Mary Jo Nye - 2011 - London: University of Chicago Press.
    In _Michael Polanyi and His Generation_, Mary Jo Nye investigates the role that Michael Polanyi and several of his contemporaries played in the emergence of the social turn in the philosophy of science. This turn involved seeing science as a socially based enterprise that does not rely on empiricism and reason alone but on social communities, behavioral norms, and personal commitments. Nye argues that the roots of the social turn are to be found in the scientific culture and political (...)
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  27.  31
    The Myths We Live By.Mary Midgley - 2003 - New York: Routledge.
    Mary Midgley argues in her powerful new book that far from being the opposite of science, myth is a central part of it. In brilliant prose, she claims that myths are neither lies nor mere stories but a network of powerful symbols that suggest particular ways of interpreting the world.
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  28.  58
    An Ethic of Care: Feminist and Interdisciplinary Perspectives.Mary Jeanne Larrabee (ed.) - 1992 - Routledge.
    Published in 1982, Carol Gilligan's _In a Different Voice_ proposed a new model of moral reasoning based on care, arguing that it better described the moral life of women. ____An Ethic of Care__ is the first volume to bring together key contributions to the extensive debate engaging Gilligan's work. It provides the highlights of the often impassioned discussion of the ethic of care, drawing on the literature of the wide range of disciplines that have entered into the debate. _Contributors:_ Annette (...)
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  29.  12
    Are You an Illusion?Mary Midgley - 2014 - Routledge.
    Renowned philosopher Mary Midgley explores the remarkable gap that has opened up between our own understanding of our sense of our self and today's scientific orthodoxy that claims the self to be nothing more than an elaborate illusion. Bringing her formidable acuity and analytic skills to bear, she exposes some very odd claims and muddled thinking on the part of cognitive scientists and psychologists when it comes to talk about the self. Well-known philosophical problems in causality, subjectivity, empiricism, free (...)
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  30.  17
    Laws of freedom.Mary J. Gregor - 1963 - New York: Barnes & Noble.
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  31.  24
    Substance, Form and Psyche: An Aristotelean Metaphysics.Mary Louise Gill - 1993 - Noûs 27 (1):89-91.
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  32.  5
    Reading the Shape of Nature: Comparative Zoology at the Agassiz Museum.Mary P. Winsor - 1991 - University of Chicago Press.
    Reading the Shape of Nature vividly recounts the turbulent early history of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard and the contrasting careers of its founder Louis Agassiz and his son Alexander. Through the story of this institution and the individuals who formed it, Mary P. Winsor explores the conflicting forces that shaped systematics in the second half of the nineteenth century. Debates over the philosophical foundations of classification, details of taxonomic research, the young institution's financial struggles, and the (...)
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  33.  33
    Recognition memory for a rapid sequence of pictures.Mary C. Potter & Ellen I. Levy - 1969 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 81 (1):10.
  34.  16
    Agrammatism: A phonological deficit?Mary-Louise Kean - 1979 - Cognition 7 (1):69-83.
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  35.  76
    Wisdom, Information, and Wonder: What is Knowledge For?Mary Midgley - 1989 - New York: Routledge.
    InWisdom, Information and Wonder, Mary Midgley tackles the question at the root of our civilization: What is knowledge for?
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  36. The Philosophy of Set Theory.Mary Tiles - 1990 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 41 (4):575-578.
     
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  37.  47
    Ethical challenges experienced by clinical research nurses:: A qualitative study.Mary E. Larkin, Brian Beardslee, Enrico Cagliero, Catherine A. Griffith, Kerry Milaszewski, Marielle T. Mugford, Joanna M. Myerson, Wen Ni, Donna J. Perry, Sabune Winkler & Elizabeth R. Witte - 2019 - Nursing Ethics 26 (1):172-184.
    Background:Clinical investigation is a growing field employing increasing numbers of nurses. This has created a new specialty practice defined by aspects unique to nursing in a clinical research context: the objectives, setting, and nature of the nurse–participant relationship. The clinical research nurse role may give rise to feelings of ethical conflict between aspects of protocol implementation and the duty of patient advocacy, a primary nursing responsibility. Little is known about whether research nurses experience unique ethical challenges distinct from those experienced (...)
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  38.  56
    Body/politics: Women and the Discourses of Science.Mary Jacobus, Evelyn Fox Keller & Sally Shuttleworth - 1990 - Psychology Press.
  39.  20
    Commercial Biobanks and Genetic Research: Banking Without Checks?Mary R. Anderlik - 2003 - In Bartha Maria Knoppers (ed.), Populations and genetics: legal and socio-ethical perspectives. Boston: Martinus Nijhoff. pp. 345--373.
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  40. Australian Humanist of the year Geoffrey Robertson QC.Mary Bergin - 2014 - Australian Humanist, The 115:1.
    Bergin, Mary As an Australian it is a great honour to receive this award as Australian Humanist of the Year. It is often thought, mistakenly, that Humanism is somehow contrary to or opposed to religion, but of course it is not. It is simply a belief in rational and humane tolerance, and it holds that people should not be made miserable by cruel politicians or primitive moralists or superstitious beliefs. Humanists have succeeded to some considerable extent in the West (...)
     
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  41.  35
    Black and white and shades of gray: A portrait of the ethical professor.Mary Birch, Deni Elliott & Mary A. Trankel - 1999 - Ethics and Behavior 9 (3):243 – 261.
  42.  11
    Managing home nursing care: visibility, accountability and exclusion.Mary Ellen Purkis - 2001 - Nursing Inquiry 8 (3):141-150.
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  43. Debunking, supervenience, and Hume’s Principle.Mary Leng - 2019 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 49 (8):1083-1103.
    Debunking arguments against both moral and mathematical realism have been pressed, based on the claim that our moral and mathematical beliefs are insensitive to the moral/mathematical facts. In the mathematical case, I argue that the role of Hume’s Principle as a conceptual truth speaks against the debunkers’ claim that it is intelligible to imagine the facts about numbers being otherwise while our evolved responses remain the same. Analogously, I argue, the conceptual supervenience of the moral on the natural speaks presents (...)
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  44. Bachelard: Science and Objectivity.Mary Tiles - 1986 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 37 (4):529-531.
     
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  45.  71
    Confucian Ritual as Body Language of Self, Society, and Spirit.Mary I. Bockover - 2012 - Sophia 51 (2):177-194.
    This article explains how li 禮 or ‘ritual propriety’ is the ‘body language’ of ren 仁 or the authentic expression of our humanity. Li and ren are interdependent aspects of a larger creative human way (rendao 仁道) that can be conceptually distinguished as follows: li refers to the ritualized social form of appropriate conduct and ren to the more general, authentically human spirit this expresses. Li is the social instrument for self-cultivation and the vehicle of harmonious human interaction. More, li (...)
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  46. Confucianism and ethics in the western philosophical tradition I: Foundational concepts.Mary I. Bockover - 2010 - Philosophy Compass 5 (4):307-316.
    Confucianism conceives of persons as being necessarily interdependent, defining personhood in terms of the various roles one embodies and that are established by the relationships basic to one's life. By way of contrast, the Western philosophical tradition has predominantly defined persons in terms of intrinsic characteristics not thought to depend on others. This more strictly and explicitly individualistic concept of personhood contrasts with the Confucian idea that one becomes a person because of others; where one is never a person independently (...)
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  47.  54
    Does Absence Matter?Mary K. Shenk, Kathrine Starkweather, Howard C. Kress & Nurul Alam - 2013 - Human Nature 24 (1):76-110.
    This paper examines the effects of three different types of father absence on the timing of life history events among women in rural Bangladesh. Age at marriage and age at first birth are compared across women who experienced different father presence/absence conditions as children. Survival analyses show that daughters of fathers who divorced their mothers or deserted their families have consistently younger ages at marriage and first birth than other women. In contrast, daughters whose fathers were labor migrants have consistently (...)
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  48.  53
    Aquinas and the challenge of aristotelian magnanimity.Mary M. Keys - 2003 - History of Political Thought 24 (1):37-65.
    This article revisits the account of magnanimity offered by Thomas Aquinas, in his Commentary on the Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle and especially in his Summa Theologiae. Recent scholarship has viewed Aquinas' magnanimity as essentially Aristotle's, complemented by the addition of charity and humility to the classical moral horizon. By contrast, I read Aquinas as offering a subtle yet far-reaching critique of important aspects of Aristotelian magnanimity, a critique with roots in Aquinas' theology, yet also comprising a significant philosophic reappraisal of (...)
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  49.  24
    Biography as Cultural History of Science.Mary Terrall - 2006 - Isis 97 (2):306-313.
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  50.  18
    On the limits of the relation of disgust to judgments of immorality.Mary H. Kayyal, Joseph Pochedly, Alyssa McCarthy & James A. Russell - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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