Results for 'Patrícia Aranovich'

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  1.  6
    Ghiribizzi ao soderini.Patrícia Aranovich - 2015 - Cadernos Espinosanos 32:267.
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  2.  29
    Di Fortuna e Dell´Occasione 1 , di Niccolò Machiavelli.Patricia Fountoura Aranovich - 2011 - Cadernos de Ética E Filosofia Política 18:231-247.
  3.  28
    Di Fortuna e a Fortuna em Maquiavel.Patricia Fountoura Aranovich - 2011 - Cadernos de Ética E Filosofia Política 18:221-230.
    The text aims to examine the concept of Fortune in Machiavelli. The analysis will be carried out from the poems Di Fortuna and Dell´Occasione, the letter to Giovan Battista Soderini, the Canto VII of Hell, by Dante, and passages that make references to the concept of Fortune in The Prince. The poem Di Fortuna will be divided into eight parts in order to exam and present the Fortune’s concept.
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  4.  10
    A trajetória de uma filósofa: Maria das Graças de Souza.Jacira de Freitas & Patrícia Fontoura Aranovich - 2023 - Discurso 53 (1).
    O percurso acadêmico da Profa. Dra. Maria das Graças de Souza é aqui apresentado sob duas formulações que se entrelaçam: uma discussão sobre seus textos teóricos e a apresentação de suas atividades, no decorrer da carreira acadêmica. A primeira parte, intitulada: “O percurso intelectual: a articulação entre História, Política e ação política”, escrita por Jacira de Freitas, discute as ideias essenciais da produção teórica da filósofa, e defende a hipótese de que nela se reflete um pensamento que articula a História, (...)
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  5.  64
    The Language of Thought.Patricia Smith Churchland - 1975 - Noûs 14 (1):120-124.
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  6. Getting smart: feminist research and pedagogy with/in the postmodern.Patricia Lather - 1991 - New York: Routledge.
    The ways in which knowledge relates to power have been much discussed in radical education theory. New emphasis on the role of gender and the growing debate about subjectivity have deepened the discussion, while making it more complex. In Getting Smart , Patti Lather makes use of her unique integration of feminism and postmodernism into critical education theory to address some of the most vital questions facing education researchers and teachers.
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  7.  46
    Kant.Patricia Kitcher, Philip Kitcher & Ralph C. S. Walker - 1980 - Philosophical Review 89 (2):282.
  8.  23
    .Patricia Smith - 2004 - Univ of Kansas Pr.
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  9.  60
    From covariation to causation: A causal power theory.Patricia W. Cheng - 1997 - Psychological Review 104 (2):367-405.
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  10.  42
    Consciousness: The transmutation of a concept.Patricia Smith Churchland - 1983 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 64 (January):80-95.
  11. On the alleged backward referral of experience and its relevance to the mind-body problem.Patricia Smith Churchland - 1981 - Philosophy of Science 48 (June):165-81.
    A remarkable hypothesis has recently been advanced by Libet and promoted by Eccles which claims that there is standardly a backwards referral of conscious experiences in time, and that this constitutes empirical evidence for the failure of identity of brain states and mental states. Libet's neurophysiological data are critically examined and are found insufficient to support the hypothesis. Additionally, it is argued that even if there is a temporal displacement phenomenon to be explained, a neurophysiological explanation is most likely.
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  12.  46
    On the natural selection of reasoning theories.Patricia W. Cheng & Keith J. Holyoak - 1989 - Cognition 33 (3):285-313.
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  13. The timing of sensations: Reply to Libet.Patricia Smith Churchland - 1981 - Philosophy of Science 48 (3):492-7.
  14.  83
    A Kantian Argument for the Formula of Humanity.Patricia Kitcher - 2017 - Kant Studien 108 (2):218-246.
    Name der Zeitschrift: Kant-Studien Jahrgang: 108 Heft: 2 Seiten: 218-246.
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  15. What Is a Maxim?Patricia Kitcher - 2003 - Philosophical Topics 31 (1-2):215-243.
  16. Emotional strategies and rationality.Patricia Greenspan - 2000 - Ethics 110 (3):469-487.
  17.  50
    From Folk Psychology to Cognitive Science: The Case against Belief.Patricia Smith Churchland - 1985 - Philosophical Review 94 (3):418.
  18.  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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  19. Causes versus enabling conditions.Patricia W. Cheng & Laura R. Novick - 1991 - Cognition 40 (1-2):83-120.
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  20. Kant's argument for the categorical imperative.Patricia Kitcher - 2004 - Noûs 38 (4):555-584.
  21.  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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  22. 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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  23.  20
    Understanding the First Paralogism: A Friendly Disagreement.Patricia Kitcher - forthcoming - Kantian Review:1-10.
    My comments focus on Proops’s treatment of the Paralogisms. I agree with many aspects of his discussion, including his views about the project of Rational Psychology and his analyses of how, exactly, the arguments of the Paralogisms are defective in form, but I disagree with his interpretation of the First Paralogism. I argue that the source of confusion that Kant diagnoses is not the grammatical distribution of ‘I’ as singular, but the fact that the I-representation is both empty and necessary (...)
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  24. Can neurobiology teach us anything about consciousness?Patricia S. Churchland - 1994 - Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association 67 (4):23-40.
  25.  18
    What is Necessary and What is Contingent in Kant’s Empirical Self?Patricia Kitcher - 2024 - Sententiae 43 (1):8-17.
    How does Kant understand the representation of an empirical self? For Kant, the sources of the representation must be both a priori and a posteriori. Several scholars claim that the a priori part of the ‘self’ representation is supplied by the category of ‘substance,’ either a regular substance (Andrew Chignell), a minimal substance (Karl Ameriks) or a substance analog (Katharina Kraus). However, Kant opens the Paralogisms chapter by announcing that there is a thirteenth ‘transcendental’ concept or category: “We now come (...)
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  26. The Problem with Manipulation.Patricia Greenspan - 2003 - American Philosophical Quarterly 40 (2):155-64.
    There is a well-known scene from The Adventures of Tom Sawyer that illustrates what might be considered benign manipulation: Tom has the job of whitewashing a fence but would rather spend the time with friends. By feigning enthusiasm for the job he manages to get his friends to hang around and do it for him. They even pay to do it - with various little items that he later trades for..
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  27.  17
    In Pursuit of Eudaimonia: How Virtue Ethics Captures the Self-Understandings and Roles of Corporate Directors.Patricia Grant, Surendra Arjoon & Peter McGhee - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 153 (2):389-406.
    A recent special issue in the Journal of Business Ethics gathered together a variety of papers addressing the challenges of putting virtue ethics into practice :563–565, 2013). The editors prefaced their outline of the various papers with the assertion that exploring the practical dimension of virtue ethics can help business leaders discover their proper place in working for a better world, as individuals and within the family, the business community and society in general :563–565, 2013). Scholars are yet to explore (...)
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  28. Behavior control and freedom of action.Patricia S. Greenspan - 1978 - Philosophical Review 87 (April):225-40.
  29.  7
    The Limits of Expression: Language, Literature, Mind.Patricia Kolaiti - 2019 - Cambridge University Press.
    Taking as its starting point what is sometimes called 'the prison house of language' - the widespread feeling that language falls terribly short when it comes to articulating the rich and disparate contents of the human mental tapestry - this book sets out a radically new view of the interplay between language, literature and mind. Shifting the focus from the literary text itself to literature as a case of human agency, it reconsiders a wide range of interdisciplinary issues including the (...)
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  30. The Impact of Neuroscience on Philosophy.Patricia Smith Churchland - unknown
    Philosophy, in its traditional guise, addresses questions where experimental science has not yet nailed down plausible explanatory theories. Thus, the ancient Greeks pondered the nature of life, the sun, and tides, but also how we learn and make decisions. The history of science can be seen as a gradual process whereby speculative philosophy cedes intellectual space to increasingly wellgrounded experimental disciplines—first astronomy, but followed by physics, chemistry, geology, biology, archaeology, and more recently, ethology, psychology, and neuroscience. Science now encompasses plausible (...)
     
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  31.  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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  32.  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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  33.  35
    Locke's moral philosophy.Patricia Sheridan - 2011 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
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  34.  12
    Michael Crotty and nursing phenomenology: criticism or critique?Patricia Barkway - 2001 - Nursing Inquiry 8 (3):191-195.
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  35.  67
    Frege's reduction.Patricia A. Blanchette - 1994 - History and Philosophy of Logic 15 (1):85-103.
    This paper defends the view that Frege’s reduction of arithmetic to logic would, if successful, have shown that arithmetical knowledge is analytic in essentially Kant’s sense. It is argued, as against Paul Benacerraf, that Frege’s apparent acceptance of multiple reductions is compatible with this epistemological thesis. The importance of this defense is that (a) it clarifies the role of proof, definition, and analysis in Frege’s logicist works; and (b) it demonstrates that the Fregean style of reduction is a valuable tool (...)
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  36.  34
    Workplace Spirituality and Business Ethics: Insights from an Eastern Spiritual Tradition.Patricia Doyle Corner - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 85 (3):377-389.
    The author extends theory on the relationship between workplace spirituality and business ethics by integrating the "yamas" from yoga, a venerable Eastern spiritual tradition, with existing literature. The yamas are five practices for harmonizing and deepening social connections that can be applied in the workplace. A theoretical framework is developed and two sets of propositions are forwarded. One set emanates from the yamas and another one conjectures relationships between spirituality and business ethics surfaced by the application of these spiritual practices (...)
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  37. Practical Reasons and Moral 'Ought'.Patricia Greenspan - 2007 - In Russell Schafer-Landau (ed.), Oxford Studies in Metaethics, vol. II. pp. 172-194.
    Morality is a source of reasons for action, what philosophers call practical reasons. Kantians say that it ‘gives’ reasons to everyone. We can even think of moral requirements as amounting to particularly strong or stringent reasons, in an effort to demystify deontological views like Kant’s, with its insistence on inescapable or ‘binding’ moral requirements or ‘oughts.’¹ When we say that someone morally ought not to harm others, perhaps all we are saying is that he has a certain kind of reason (...)
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  38.  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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  39. 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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  40.  2
    Neural representation and neural computation.Patricia S. Churchland & Terrence J. Sejnowski - 1989 - In L. Nadel (ed.), Neural Connections, Mental Computations. MIT Press. pp. 343-382.
  41.  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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  42.  75
    Précis of Kant's Thinker.Patricia Kitcher - 2013 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 87 (1):200-212.
  43. 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.
  44.  27
    A complementary processes account of the development of childhood amnesia and a personal past.Patricia J. Bauer - 2015 - Psychological Review 122 (2):204-231.
  45.  19
    Explaining Freedom in Thought and Action.Patricia Kitcher - 2018 - In Violetta L. Waibel, Margit Ruffing & David Wagner (eds.), Natur und Freiheit. Akten des XII. Internationalen Kant-Kongresses. De Gruyter. pp. 185-208.
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  46. Some group matters: Intersectionality, situated standpoints, and Black feminist thought.Patricia Hill Collins - 2003 - In Tommy Lee Lott & John P. Pittman (eds.), A Companion to African-American Philosophy. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
  47.  21
    Shared Value Through Inner Knowledge Creation.Patricia Doyle Corner & Kathryn Pavlovich - 2016 - Journal of Business Ethics 135 (3):543-555.
    The notion of shared value presents business with a challenge: to generate social benefit and profit simultaneously. This challenge involves resolving tensions/paradoxes inherent when integrating the apparent contradictory elements of social and economic values. Unfortunately, resolving such tensions is difficult due to the habitual, automatic nature of sensemaking. This paper offers a mechanism whereby individuals can, over time, begin to overcome habitual sensemaking and potentially resolve tensions inherent in shared value. The mechanism is labeled inner knowledge creation. IKC is described (...)
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  48.  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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  49.  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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  50.  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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