Results for 'Patricia Zalamea Fajardo'

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  1.  11
    Alegorización de la Inmaculada Concepción: un ciclo de azulejos limeño y un sermón cusqueño.Andrea Lozano Vásquez & Patricia Zalamea Fajardo - 2021 - Co-herencia 18 (35):101-132.
    El presente artículo pretende mostrar que la formación clásica recibida en el Seminario de San Antonio Abad en el siglo xvii del Cuzco virreinal fue determinante en los procesos de alegorización que están en la base del proyecto intelectual del ciclo de azulejos de la capilla de la Inmaculada Concepción de la Catedral de Lima, concebido por Vasco de Contreras y Valverde, y del panegírico a la Inmaculada escrito por Espinosa Medrano en 1670. Su forma particular de alegorizar resulta ser (...)
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  2.  23
    .Patricia Smith - 2004 - Univ of Kansas Pr.
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  3.  29
    Abductive conditionals as a test case for inferentialism.Patricia Mirabile & Igor Douven - 2020 - Cognition 200 (C):104232.
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  4.  18
    How Intractability Spans the Cognitive and Evolutionary Levels of Explanation.Patricia Rich, Mark Blokpoel, Ronald de Haan & Iris van Rooij - 2020 - Topics in Cognitive Science 12 (4):1382-1402.
    This paper focuses on the cognitive/computational and evolutionary levels. It describes three proposals to make cognition computationally tractable, namely: Resource Rationality, the Adaptive Toolbox and Massive Modularity. While each of these proposals appeals to evolutionary considerations to dissolve the intractability of cognition, Rich, Blokpoel, de Haan, and van Rooij argue that, in each case, the intractability challenge is not resolved, but just relocated to the level of evolution.
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  5.  14
    Coleridge, Derrida, and the Anguish of Writing.Patricia S. Yaeger - 1983 - Substance 12 (2):89.
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  6.  23
    How Intractability Spans the Cognitive and Evolutionary Levels of Explanation.Patricia Rich, Mark Blokpoel, Ronald Haan & Iris Rooij - 2020 - Topics in Cognitive Science 12 (4):1382-1402.
    This paper focuses on the cognitive/computational and evolutionary levels. It describes three proposals to make cognition computationally tractable, namely: Resource Rationality, the Adaptive Toolbox and Massive Modularity. While each of these proposals appeals to evolutionary considerations to dissolve the intractability of cognition, Rich, Blokpoel, de Haan, and van Rooij argue that, in each case, the intractability challenge is not resolved, but just relocated to the level of evolution.
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  7.  11
    Is Practical Philosophy for Private Profit or Public Good?Patricia Shipley & Fernando Leal - 2002 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 9 (1):1-9.
    This paper takes a critical look at the rise of the practice of philosophy in the market place in late modernity. Two main forms of such practice are identified: the practice of Socratic Dialogue in small groups in organisations and one-to-one philosophical counselling of individual 'clients'. The relevance of professionalism for commercialised applied practical philosophy is discussed. Philosophical counsellors in particular may be at risk of engaging with vulnerable individuals who are in need of protection from practitioners who are not (...)
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  8.  24
    Is Practical Philosophy for Private Profit or Public Good?Patricia Shipley - 2000 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 7 (4):65-74.
    This paper takes a critical look at the rise of the practice of philosophy in the market place in late modernity. Two main forms of such practice are identified: the practice of Socratic Dialogue in small groups in organisations and one-to-one philosophical counselling of individual 'clients'. The relevance of professionalism for commercialised applied practical philosophy is discussed. Philosophical counsellors in particular may be at risk of engaging with vulnerable individuals who are in need of protection from practitioners who are not (...)
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  9.  41
    Empedocles on Sensation, Perception, and Thought.Patricia Curd - 2016 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 19 (1):38-57.
    Aristotle claims that Empedocles took perception and knowledge to be the same; Theophrastus follows Aristotle. The paper begins by examining why Aristotle and Theophrastus identify thought/knowing with perception in Empedocles. I maintain that the extant fragments do not support the assertion that Empedocles identifies or conflates sensation with thought or cognition. Indeed, the evidence of the texts shows that Empedocles is careful to distinguish them, and argues that to have genuine understanding one must not be misled into supposing that sense (...)
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  10.  59
    The Normative/Descriptive Distinction in Methodologies of Business Ethics.Patricia H. Werhane - 1994 - Business Ethics Quarterly 4 (2):175-180.
    Abstract:Most papers in this issue carefully analyze normative and empirical methodologies. I shall argue that (a) there is no purely empirical nor purely normative methodology; (b) some terms escape the division of the normative and descriptive. (c) Most importantly, dialogues such as this one point to a form of integration that allows us to reflect on what it is that each approach presupposes in its study of business ethics. Thus we have made progress in recognizing the importance of each methodology, (...)
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  11. Employment and Employee Rights.Patricia Werhane, Tara J. Radin & Norman E. Bowie - 2003 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    _Employment and Employee Rights_ addresses the issue of rights in the workplace. Although much of the literature in this field focuses on employee rights, this volume considers the issue from the perspective of both employees and employers. Considers the rights of both employees and employers. Discusses the moral and legal landscape and traditional assumptions about right in employment. Investigates arguments for guaranteeing rights, particularly for employees, which are derived from relational, developmental, and economic bases. Explores new dimensions of employment including (...)
     
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  12.  14
    Overcoming Descartes' representational view of the mind in nursing pedagogies, curricula and testing.Patricia Benner - 2022 - Nursing Philosophy 23 (4):e12411.
    Currently, Nursing Education draws on a commonly taken‐for‐granted folk psychology of a representational view of how the mind works and how human beings learn. Descartes' representational view of the mind strongly influences pedagogies, theories of learning, curricula, and approaches to testing nursing knowledge and more broadly in academia. A representational view of the mind holds that perception occurs in the mind only through representations in the mind through ideas, concepts, templates and schema. Situated, embodied, and socially embedded cognition is presented (...)
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  13.  28
    Justice and trust.Patricia H. Werhane - 1999 - Journal of Business Ethics 21 (2-3):237 - 249.
    With the demise of Marxism and socialism, the United States is becoming a model not merely for free enterprise, but also for employment practices worldwide. I believe that free enterprise is the least worst economic system, given the alternatives, a position I shall assume, but not defend, here. However, I shall argue, a successful free enterprise political economy does not entail mimicking US employment practices. I find even today in 1998, as I shall outline in more detail, these practices, when (...)
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  14.  81
    Business Ethics, Stakeholder Theory, and the Ethics of Healthcare Organizations.Patricia H. Werhane - 2000 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 9 (2):169-181.
    Until recently, business issues in healthcare organizations were relatively insulated from clinical issues, for several reasons. The hospital at earlier stages of its development operated on a combination of charitable and equitable premises, allowing for providing care to be separated from financial support. Physicians, who were primarily responsible for clinical care, constituted an independent power nexus within the hospital and were governed by their own professional codes of ethics. In exchange for a great deal of control over their conditions of (...)
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  15.  35
    Locke's moral philosophy.Patricia Sheridan - 2011 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  16.  12
    Michael Crotty and nursing phenomenology: criticism or critique?Patricia Barkway - 2001 - Nursing Inquiry 8 (3):191-195.
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  17. Locke and Catharine Trotter Cockburn.Patricia Sheridan - 2021 - In Jessica Gordon-Roth & Shelley Weinberg (eds.), The Lockean Mind. New York, NY: Routledge. pp. 27–32.
  18. Making room for options : moral reasons, imperfect duties, and choice.Patricia Greenspan - 2010 - In Ellen Frankel Paul, Fred Dycus Miller & Jeffrey Paul (eds.), Moral obligation. New York: Cambridge University Press.
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  19.  20
    Recovering Ethics After ‘Technics’: developing critical text on technology.Patricia B. Marck - 2000 - Nursing Ethics 7 (1):5-14.
    Much modern science and ethics debate is on high-profile problems such as animal organ transplantation, genetic engineering and fetal tissue research, in discourse that assumes technical tones. Other work, such as narrative ethics, expresses the failed promise of technology in the vivid detail of human experience. However, the essential nature of contemporary technology remains largely opaque to our present ethical lens on health care and on society. The limited controversies of modern science and ethics perpetuate ‘technics’, a technical, problem-solving mindset (...)
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  20.  54
    Formal organizations, economic freedom and moral agency.Patricia Hogue Werhane - 1980 - Journal of Value Inquiry 14 (1):43-50.
  21.  25
    Feinberg and the Failure to Act.Patricia Smith - 2005 - Legal Theory 11 (3):237-250.
  22.  12
    The Prevalence of Formal Risk Adjustment in Health Plan Purchasing.Patricia Seliger Keenan, Melinda J. Beeuwkes Buntin, Thomas G. McGuire & Joseph P. Newhouse - 2001 - Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing 38 (3):245-259.
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  23.  8
    La función ético-política de la autobiografía femenina renacentista: el caso del Libro de la vida de santa Teresa de Jesús.Patricia Fernández Martín - 2021 - Araucaria 23 (46).
    Con el objetivo de demostrar que el sistema de control masculino renacentista tenía grietas de las que algunas mujeres eran plenamente conscientes, efectuamos un análisis del teresiano Libro de la vida a partir de los principales conceptos de la antropología filosófica clásica, asumiendo que una de las herramientas femeninas de expansión política es la publicación de una autobiografía en la que se explica no sólo cómo es el mundo sino también cómo debería ser. Así, se defiende que este libro de (...)
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  24.  39
    Intercultural Reasoning: The Challenge for International Bioethics.Patricia Marshall, David C. Thomasma & Jurrit Bergsma - 1994 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 3 (3):321.
    The exportation of Western biomedicine throughout the world has not resulted in a systematic homogenization of scientific ideology but rather in the proliferation of many forms and practices of biomedicine. Similarly, in the last decade, bioethics has become increasingly an international enterprise. Although there may be consensus regarding the inherent value of ethical discourse as it relates to health and medical care, there are disagreements about the nature and parameters of medical morality. This lack of consensus exists because our beliefs (...)
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  25.  27
    Recovering Ethics After 'Technics': developing critical text on technolog.Patricia B. Marck - 2000 - Nursing Ethics 7 (1):5-14.
    Much modern science and ethics debate is on high-profile problems such as animal organ transplantation, genetic engineering and fetal tissue research, in discourse that assumes technical tones. Other work, such as narrative ethics, expresses the failed promise of technology in the vivid detail of human experience. However, the essential nature of contemporary technology remains largely opaque to our present ethical lens on health care and on society. The limited controversies of modern science and ethics perpetuate ‘technics’, a technical, problem-solving mindset (...)
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  26.  50
    Origin and necessity.Patricia Johnston - 1977 - Philosophical Studies 32 (4):413 - 418.
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  27. Two ethical issues in mergers and acquisitions.Patricia H. Werhane - 1988 - Journal of Business Ethics 7 (1-2):41 - 45.
    With the recent rash of mergers and friendly and unfriendly takeovers, two important issues have not received sufficient attention as questionable ethical practices. One has to do with the rights of employees affected in mergers and acquisitions and the second concerns the responsibilities of shareholders during these activities. Although employees are drastically affected by a merger or an acquisition because in almost every case a number of jobs are shifted or even eliminated, employees at all levels are usually the last (...)
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  28.  6
    Freedom and Responsibility.Patricia Greenspan - 2023 - The Harvard Review of Philosophy 30:109-120.
    Many authors treat freedom and responsibility as interchangeable and simply apply conclusions about responsibility to freedom. This paper argues that the two are distinct, thus allowing for a “semi-compatibilist” view, on which responsibility but not freedom (in the sense of freedom to do otherwise) is compatible with determinism. It thereby avoids the implausible features of recent compatibilist accounts of freedom without alternative possibilities—as if one could make oneself free just by accepting the limitations on one’s choice. In particular, the paper (...)
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  29.  16
    A few simple truths about your community IRB members.Patricia E. Bauer - 2000 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 23 (1):7-8.
  30.  20
    Genomics in Industry: issues of a bio-based economy.Patricia Osseweijer, Laurens Landeweerd & Robin Pierce - 2010 - Genomics, Society and Policy 6 (2):1-14.
    What value does genomics hold for industry? Ten years after the White House Press conference where the human genome sequence was first presented, we ask in which ways and to what extent the developments in genomics have been integrated into industry. This enables us to assess whether this integration has been as successful as expected, but also which unexpected developments in genomics advances have triggered additional benefits for industry. Genomics has contributed to the beginning of a global transition to a (...)
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  31.  27
    Imperialism, Race, and Therapeutics: The Legacy of Medicalizing the “Colonial Body”.Patricia Barton - 2008 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 36 (3):506-516.
    The era of high colonialism in South Asia coincided with the period when eugenics came to dominate much of the scientific discourse in Europe and America. Such attitudes were naturally transplanted into the colonial world where medical researchers helped to establish a pathological “difference” between Europeans in India and the colonial “Other,” thus creating a medical discourse dominated by racial segregated treatment regimes. With the growth of trans-national transfer of scientific knowledge, this colonial “research” began to underpin racially constructed medical (...)
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  32.  17
    Fraud in Science: How Much, How Serious?Patricia Woolf - 1981 - Hastings Center Report 11 (5):9-14.
  33.  22
    Principles and Practices for Corporate Responsibility.Patricia H. Werhane - 2010 - Business Ethics Quarterly 20 (4):695-701.
    The first issue of Business Ethics Quarterly was launched in 1991. At that time there were few general principles that could serve as guidelines for global business. However, since 1991 a plethora of such principles have been developed to serve as guidelines and evaluative mechanisms for global corporate responsibilities. But operationalizing these principles in practice has been a challenge for most transnational corporations and even for smaller, more local enterprises. This is because, in some cases, the principles ask too much (...)
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  34.  9
    A escrita compartilhada. Monteiro Lobato, Rãzinha e a Reforma da Natureza.Patricia Tavares Raffaini - 2018 - Childhood and Philosophy 14 (29).
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  35.  8
    The Forest Around the Fir Tree: Looking for Marcantonio Raimondi‘s Art.Patricia Emison - 2016 - Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 92 (2):1-24.
    Marcantonio Raimondis career is here considered as a record of a distinctively Renaissance hunger for imagery, on the part of the literate as well as the illiterate, a taste that did not demand autograph work and yet was very attentive to the decisions made by artists about which subjects to portray and how to present them. Marcantonios contribution is described less in terms of having made Raphaels work known widely, and more as having made engraving into an established art form: (...)
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  36.  5
    Eating God.Patricia Grosse - 2018 - Proceedings of the XXIII World Congress of Philosophy 21:17-21.
    In his biography on Augustine, Possidius writes: “His table was frugal and sparing, though indeed with the herbs and lentils he also had meats at times for the sake of his guests or for some of the weaker brethren”.1 Given the importance of friendship in Augustine’s life, it is not surprising that he ate meat for the sake of others and not for his own pleasures. However, Augustine spends much time in Book X of his Confessions obsessing over his delight (...)
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  37.  7
    Meanings of Death.Patricia S. Mann - 1998 - The Paideia Archive: Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 4:76-83.
    I examine the ways in which our cultural expectations with respect to death may be transformed by the legalization of assisted suicide. I suggest the inadequacy of the philosophical framework currently taken as the basis for discussing the advantages as well as the dangers of legalizing assisted suicide. I do not believe that individual autonomy is any sort of possibility for dying patients, regardless of the social policies that surround death in a society, insofar as our individual agency in this (...)
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  38.  6
    Towards a Postpatriarchal Family.Patricia S. Mann - 1998 - The Paideia Archive: Twentieth World Congress of Philosophy 42:105-112.
    Ours is a time of dramatic and confusing transformations in everyday life, many of them originating in the social enfranchisement of women that has occurred over the past twenty-five years. Sociologist Arlie Hochschild demonstrates a widespread phenomenon of work-family imbalance in our society, experienced by people in terms of a time bind, and a devaluation of familial relationships. As large numbers of women have moved into the workplace, familial relations of all sorts have been colonized by what Virginia Held critically (...)
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  39. Pirates, Kings and Reasons to Act: Moral Motivation and the Role of Sanctions in Locke’s Moral Theory.Patricia Sheridan - 2007 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 37 (1):35-48.
    Locke's moral theory consists of two explicit and distinct elements — a broadly rationalist theory of natural law and a hedonistic conception of moral good. The rationalist account, which we find most prominently in his early Essays on the Law of Nature, is generally taken to consist in three things. First, Locke holds that our moral rules are founded on universal, divine natural laws. Second, such moral laws are taken to be discoverable by reason. Third, by dint of their divine (...)
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  40.  14
    Pirates, Kings and Reasons to Act: Moral Motivation and the Role of Sanctions in Locke’s Moral Theory.Patricia Sheridan - 2007 - Canadian Journal of Philosophy 37 (1):35-48.
    Locke's moral theory consists of two explicit and distinct elements — a broadly rationalist theory of natural law and a hedonistic conception of moral good. The rationalist account, which we find most prominently in his early Essays on the Law of Nature, is generally taken to consist in three things. First, Locke holds that our moral rules are founded on universal, divine natural laws. Second, such moral laws are taken to be discoverable by reason. Third, by dint of their divine (...)
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  41.  17
    Stability of response hierarchies.Patricia Simpson & James F. Voss - 1967 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 75 (2):170.
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  42.  14
    Tragic thought: Romantic nationalism in the german tradition.Patricia Anne Simpson - 1993 - History of European Ideas 16 (1-3):331-336.
  43.  13
    Searching for a Statue of a Girl.Patricia Sloane - 1998 - Modern Schoolman 75 (3):237-250.
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  44.  24
    Ball throwing responses to photographically portrayed targets.Patricia Cain Smith & Olin W. Smith - 1961 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 62 (3):223.
  45.  44
    Rape and Equal Protection.Patricia Smith - 2004 - Hypatia 19 (2):152-157.
  46. Financing of medical services and medical ethics.Patricia Sohl - 1988 - In Gavin H. Mooney & Alistair McGuire (eds.), Medical ethics and economics in health care. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  47.  5
    Private Conversation, Public Meaning.Patricia Spacks - 1998 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 65.
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  48. Arendt, Republicanism and Patriarchalism.Patricia Springborg - 1989 - History of Political Thought 10 (3):499-523.
    Hannah Arendt's work belongs to a Germanic republican tradition post-dating the 19th century revival of Aristotle, marked by the publication of Bekker's 1831 definitive edition. Her immediate intellectual peers are Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche and Weber.
     
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  49. The role of distributional information in linguistic category formation.Patricia A. Reeder, Elissa L. Newport & Richard N. Aslin - 2009 - In N. A. Taatgen & H. van Rijn (eds.), Proceedings of the 31st Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society. pp. 2564--2569.
  50. Learning emotions and ethics.Patricia Greenspan - 2009 - In Peter Goldie (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Emotion. New York: Oxford University Press.
    Innate emotional bases of ethics have been proposed by authors in evolutionary psychology, following Darwin and his sources in eighteenth-century moral philosophy. Philosophers often tend to view such theories as irrelevant to, or even as tending to undermine, the project of moral philosophy. But the importance of emotions to early moral learning gives them a role to play in determining the content of morality. I argue, first, that research on neural circuits indicates that the basic elements or components of emotions (...)
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