Results for 'Ralph G. Oriscello'

996 found
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  1.  2
    Compassionate physicians.Ralph G. Oriscello & Valerie Ramsberger - 2000 - Hastings Center Report 30 (6):4-4.
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  2.  2
    Compassionate Physicians.Ralph G. Oriscello & Valerie Ramsberger - 2000 - Hastings Center Report 30 (6):4.
  3.  42
    A preliminary model for the cross‐cultural analysis of altered states of consciousness.Ralph G. Locke & Edward F. Kelly - 1985 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 13 (1):3-55.
  4.  12
    Rhythmical clausulae in the Codex Theodosianus_ and the _Leges Novellae Ad Theodosianum Pertinentes.Ralph G. Hall & Steven M. Oberhelman - 1985 - Classical Quarterly 35 (01):201-.
    In two recent studies we have examined the prose rhythms in the clausulae of late imperial Latin authors. We found two clausular systems to be prevalent, the cursus and the cursus mixtus. The cursus involves the use of accentual rhythms and consists of three basic cadences: planus, tardus, and velox. The cursus mixtus has been defined by modern scholars as a type of prose rhythm in which the clausula is structured along both accentual and metrical lines, that is by the (...)
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  5. A Minister's Obstacles.Ralph G. Turnbull - 1946
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  6. The Seven Words from the Cross.Ralph G. Turnbull - 1956
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  7. History and Origins of Cryogenics.Ralph G. Scurlock & A. C. Van Helden - 1995 - Annals of Science 52 (1):98-98.
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  8.  17
    Internal clausulae in Late Latin Prose as Evidence for the Displacement of Metre by Word-Stress.Ralph G. Hall & Steven M. Oberhelman - 1986 - Classical Quarterly 36 (02):508-.
    In several recent studies we have developed precise statistical methodologies which have demonstrated that the cursus mixtus was the dominant rhythmical system for final clausulae in Latin prose from the third century a.d. to the fifth. The cursus mixtus consisted of four standard metrical forms derived from the richer variety of Cicero's Asiatic tradition – cretic-spondee, dicretic, cretic-tribrach and ditrochee –, which were structured according to three accentual patterns – planus, tardus and velox. The latter are differentiated by the number (...)
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  9. The Prophetic Voice in Protestant Christianity.Ralph G. Wilburn - 1956
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  10.  23
    The Legacy of the Liberal Spirit. Men and Movements in the Making of Modern Thought. [REVIEW]Ralph G. Ross - 1944 - Journal of Philosophy 41 (14):390-391.
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  11.  13
    The effects of naloxone on hoarding in the Syrian hamster.Micaela Urbano & Ralph G. Noble - 1981 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 18 (6):340-342.
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  12.  7
    A consideration of interacting pattern theories of feeling and emotion.Roger M. Bellows & Ralph G. Whisler - 1934 - Psychological Review 41 (3):236-245.
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  13.  23
    Mating and responsiveness to a nociceptive stimulus.Sara E. Cruz, Nancy L. Ostrowski & Ralph G. Noble - 1980 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 16 (1):55-56.
  14.  23
    A field ion microscope study of some tungsten-rhenium alloys.Brian Ralph & D. G. Brandon - 1963 - Philosophical Magazine 8 (90):919-934.
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  15.  43
    Abnormality, rationality, and sanity.Ralph Hertwig & Kirsten G. Volz - 2013 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 17 (11):547-549.
  16.  33
    Essays in Critical Realism.Ralph Barton Perry, Durant Drake, Arthur O. Lovejoy, James Bissett Pratt, Author K. Rogers, George Santayana, Roy Wood Sellars & G. A. Strong - 1921 - Philosophical Review 30 (4):393.
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  17.  11
    Field ion images from ordered Ni4Mo.B. G. Lefevre, H. Orenga & B. Ralph - 1968 - Philosophical Magazine 18 (156):1127-1141.
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  18. The Mind Bursary.Frank Cioffi Obscurantism, G. A. Equality, Keith Graham, Peter Carruthers, Cynthia MacDonald, Paul Snowden, Howard Robinson, David Over, Paul Guyer & Ralph Walker - 1990 - Mind 99:394.
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  19.  7
    Manuscript Invitation.Nils G. Holm & Ralph W. Hood - 2004 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 26 (1):225-225.
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  20.  13
    A field-ion microscope study of ion-implantation in iridium I. philosophy and preliminary considerations.G. P. O'Connor & B. Ralph - 1972 - Philosophical Magazine 26 (1):113-128.
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  21.  12
    A field-ion microscope study of ion-implantation in iridium II. results and discussion.G. P. O'Connor & B. Ralph - 1972 - Philosophical Magazine 26 (1):129-142.
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  22.  20
    Geisha in Rivalry; Nagai Kafū's UdekurabeGeisha in Rivalry; Nagai Kafu's Udekurabe.Edward G. Seidensticker, Kurt Meissner & Ralph Friedrich - 1963 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 83 (4):523.
  23.  14
    Effects of hypothermia on Pavlovian conditioning in the rabbit: II. Heart rate response.Lawrence G. Stava & Ralph B. Hupka - 1976 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 7 (3):246-248.
  24. Dictionary of Paul and His Letters.Gerald F. Hawthorne, Ralph P. Martin & Daniel G. Reid - 1993
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  25.  36
    Morals and money.Alvin G. Burstein, William A. Miller & Ralph Warren - 1984 - Journal of Medical Humanities 5 (1):41-53.
    The authors review the implication of the term “professional,” especially those dealing with the need for an ethic of trustworthiness and those dealing with the expectation of being paid for services. The erosive potential generated by these foci is explored, and circumstances which magnify or might ameliorate the potential described. The article concludes with a consideration of the relationship between professional ethics and world-view.
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  26. A Dictionary of Marxist Thought.Tom Bottomore, Laurence Harris, V. G. Kiernan & Ralph Miliband - 1985 - Science and Society 49 (4):484-486.
  27.  92
    Recommendations for Nanomedicine Human Subjects Research Oversight: An Evolutionary Approach for an Emerging Field.Leili Fatehi, Susan M. Wolf, Jeffrey McCullough, Ralph Hall, Frances Lawrenz, Jeffrey P. Kahn, Cortney Jones, Stephen A. Campbell, Rebecca S. Dresser, Arthur G. Erdman, Christy L. Haynes, Robert A. Hoerr, Linda F. Hogle, Moira A. Keane, George Khushf, Nancy M. P. King, Efrosini Kokkoli, Gary Marchant, Andrew D. Maynard, Martin Philbert, Gurumurthy Ramachandran, Ronald A. Siegel & Samuel Wickline - 2012 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (4):716-750.
    Nanomedicine is yielding new and improved treatments and diagnostics for a range of diseases and disorders. Nanomedicine applications incorporate materials and components with nanoscale dimensions where novel physiochemical properties emerge as a result of size-dependent phenomena and high surface-to-mass ratio. Nanotherapeutics and in vivo nanodiagnostics are a subset of nanomedicine products that enter the human body. These include drugs, biological products, implantable medical devices, and combination products that are designed to function in the body in ways unachievable at larger scales. (...)
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  28.  10
    The Civilization of the Renaissance in ItalyJacob Burckhardt S. G. C. Middlemore.Ralph E. Giesey - 1959 - Isis 50 (1):75-76.
  29.  16
    Experimental bosonsampling in a photonic circuit.Matthew A. Broome, Alessandro Fedrizzi, Saleh Rahimi-Keshari, Justin Dove, Scott Aaronson, Timothy C. Ralph & Andrew G. White - unknown
    The extended Church-Turing thesis posits that any computable function can be calculated efficiently by a probabilistic Turing machine. If this thesis held true, the global effort to build quantum computers might ultimately be unnecessary. The thesis would however be strongly contradicted by a physical device that efficiently performs a task believed to be intractable for classical computers. BosonSampling - the sampling from a distribution of n photons undergoing some linear-optical process - is a recently developed, and experimentally accessible example of (...)
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  30.  23
    Quantum mechanics based on position.Ralph H. Young - 1980 - Foundations of Physics 10 (1-2):33-56.
    The only observational quantity which quantum mechanics needs to address islocation. The typical primitive observation on a microsystem (e.g., photon) isdetection at alocation (e.g., by a photomultiplier “looking at” a grating). To analyze an experiment, (a) form a conceptual ensemble of replicas of it, (b) assign a wave function (in “position representation”) to its initial condition, (c) evolve the wave function by the Schrödinger equation (known, once and for all, as a function of the system's composition), (d) compute the probability (...)
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  31.  7
    Searching for the philosophers' stone: encounters with mystics, scientists, and healers.Ralph Metzner - 2018 - Rochester, Vermont: Park Street Press.
    A deeply personal account of the scientific, shamanic, and metaphysical encounters that led to the development of Metzner's psychological methods Recounts the author's meetings and friendships with Albert Hofmann, Alexander Shulgin, the McKenna brothers, Wilson Van Dusen, Myron Stolaroff, and Leo Zeff Details his lucid dream encounters with G. I. Gurdjieff, profoundly healing sessions with Hawaiian healer Morrnah Simeona, experiences with plant teachers iboga and ayahuasca, and ecological and mystical lessons learned from animal teachers Shares his involvement in the beginnings (...)
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  32.  12
    The philosophy of symbolic forms.Ernst Cassirer & Ralph Manheim - 2019 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Ernst Cassirer occupies a unique space in Twentieth-century philosophy. A great liberal humanist, his multi-faceted work spans the history of philosophy, the philosophy of science, intellectual history, aesthetics, epistemology, the study of language and myth, and more. The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms is Cassirer's most important work. It was first published in German in 1923, the third and final volume appearing in 1929. In it Cassirer presents a radical new philosophical worldview - at once rich, creative and controversial - of (...)
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  33.  53
    Long-term retention of perceptual-motor skills.R. B. Ammons, R. G. Farr, Edith Bloch, Eva Neumann, Mukul Dey, Ralph Marion & C. H. Ammons - 1958 - Journal of Experimental Psychology 55 (4):318.
  34.  5
    The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms: Volume 1: Language.Ralph Manheim (ed.) - 1955 - Yale University Press.
    The _Symbolic Forms_ has long been considered the greatest of Cassirer’s works. Into it he poured all the resources of his vast learning about language and myth, religion, art, and science—the various creative symbolizing activities and constructions through which man has expressed himself and given intelligible objective form to this experience. “These three volumes alone make an outstanding contribution to epistemology and to the human power of abstraction. It is rather as if ‘The Golden Bough’ had been written in philosophical (...)
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  35.  4
    The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms: Volume 3: The Phenomenology of Knowledge.Ralph Manheim (ed.) - 1965 - Yale University Press.
    The _Symbolic Forms_ has long been considered the greatest of Cassirer’s works. Into it he poured all the resources of his vast learning about language and myth, religion, art, and science—the various creative symbolizing activities and constructions through which man has expressed himself and given intelligible objective form to this experience. “These three volumes alone make an outstanding contribution to epistemology and to the human power of abstraction. It is rather as if ‘The Golden Bough’ had been written in philosophical (...)
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  36.  5
    The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms: Volume 2: Mythical Thought.Ralph Manheim (ed.) - 1955 - Yale University Press.
    The _Symbolic Forms_ has long been considered the greatest of Cassirer’s works. Into it he poured all the resources of his vast learning about language and myth, religion, art, and science—the various creative symbolizing activities and constructions through which man has expressed himself and given intelligible objective form to this experience. “These three volumes alone make an outstanding contribution to epistemology and to the human power of abstraction. It is rather as if ‘The Golden Bough’ had been written in philosophical (...)
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  37.  12
    An Ontology of Consciousness.Ralph D. Ellis - 1986 - Hingham, MA, USA: Kluwer Academic Publishers.
    The object of this study is to find a coherent theoretical approach to three problems which appear to interrelate in complex ways: (1) What is the ontological status of consciousness? (2) How can there be 'un conscious,' 'prereflective' or 'self-alienated' consciousness? And (3) Is there a 'self' or 'ego' formed by means of the interrelation of more elementary states of consciousness? The motivation for combining such a diversity of difficult questions is that we often learn more by looking at interrelations (...)
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  38.  74
    Three paradoxes of phenomenal consciousness: Bridging the explanatory gap.Ralph D. Ellis & Natika Newton - 1998 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 5 (4):419-42.
    Any physical explanation of consciousness seems to leave unresolved the ‘explanatory gap': Isn't it conceivable that all the elements in that explanation could occur, with the same information processing outcomes as in a conscious process, but in the absence of consciousness? E.g. any digital computational process could occur in the absence of consciousness. To resolve this dilemma, we propose a biological-process-oriented physiological- phenomenological characterization of consciousness that addresses three ‘paradoxical’ qualities seemingly incompatible with the empirical realm: The dual location of (...)
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  39.  44
    The Posthuman Future of Man: Anthropocentrism and the Other of Technology in Anglo-American Science Fiction.Ralph Pordzik - 2012 - Utopian Studies 23 (1):142-161.
    Novels and short stories written since the last decades of the nineteenth century and employing discourses of technology have contributed to shaping the idea of the “posthuman condition” in the West to such a degree that some critics already feel entitled to announce the Age of the Posthuman. This essay interrogates some of the embarrassingly quixotic proposals of posthumanism, taking H. G. Wells's Time Machine, William Gibson's Neuromancer, and Margaret Atwood's Oryx and Crake as paradigmatic texts exploring patterns of mutation, (...)
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  40.  8
    Review: H. G. Forder, J. A. Kalman, Implication in Equational Logic. [REVIEW]Ralph Seifert - 1971 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 36 (1):162-162.
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  41. Essays in jurisprudence in honor of Roscoe Pound.Ralph Abraham Newman (ed.) - 1962 - Indianapolis,: Bobbs-Merrill.
    The foundations of law. The digest title, De diversis regulis iuris antiqui, and the general principles of law, by P. Stein. Equity in Chinese customary law, by W. Y. Tsao. Prolegomena to the theory and history of Jewish law, by H. Cohn. Juridical evolution and equity, by J.P. Brutau. Reflections on the sources of the law, by P. Lepaulle. The true nature and province of jurisprudence from the viewpoint of Indian philosophy, by M.J. Sethna. On the functions and aims of (...)
     
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  42.  28
    Blackboards in the brain.Ralph-Axel Müller - 2006 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (1):81-81.
    Although van der Velde's de Kamps's (vdV&dK) attempt to put syntactic processing into a broader context of combinatorial cognition is promising, their coverage of neuroscientific evidence is disappointing. Neither their case against binding by temporal coherence nor their arguments against recurrent neural networks are compelling. As an alternative, vdV&dK propose a blackboard model that is based on the assumption of special processors (e.g., lexical versus grammatical), but evidence from the cognitive neuroscience of language, which is, overall, less than supportive of (...)
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  43.  4
    Bodinus polymeres: neue Studien zu Jean Bodins Spätwerk.Ralph Häfner (ed.) - 1999 - Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz.
    Vortrage, gehalten anlasslich eines Arbeitsgespraches vom 28.-29. Oktober 1996 in der Herzog August Bibliothek:G. Gawlick, Ciceros Bedeutung fur BodinT. Leinkauf, Absolute Einheit und unendliche Vermittlung im Denken Bodins. Philosophische Grundzuge seines DenkensA. Blair, The Foundations of Bodin's Natural PhilosophyF. Lestringant, Jean Bodin et le savoir cosmographique dans le "Theatre de la Nature universelle" et "l'Heptaplomeres"D. de. Courcelles, Pensee lullienne et "Colloquium Heptaplomeres"F. Griffel, Toleranzkonzepte im Islam und ihr Einfluss auf Jean Bodins "Colloquium Heptaplomeres"M. Leathers Kuntz, Nature, Law and Music in (...)
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  44.  11
    Kliment Timiryazev. S. P. Landau-Tylkina, G. G. Egorov.Ralph Colp Jr - 1991 - Isis 82 (2):386-387.
  45.  39
    The dance form of the eyes: what cognitive science can learn from art.Ralph D. Ellis - 1999 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 6 (6-7):6-7.
    Art perception offers action affordances for the self-generated movement of the eyes, the mind, and the emotions; thus some scenes are ’easy to look at', and evoke different kinds of moods depending on what kind of affordances they present for the eyes, the brain, and the action schemas that further the dynamical self-organizing patterns of activity toward which the organism tends, as reflected in its ongoing emotional life. Art can do this only because perception is active rather than passive, and (...)
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  46.  70
    Generating predictions from a dynamical systems emotion theory.Ralph D. Ellis - 2005 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (2):202-203.
    Lewis's dynamical systems emotion theory continues a tradition including Merleau-Ponty, von Bertallanfy, and Aristotle. Understandably for a young theory, Lewis's new predictions do not follow strictly from the theory; thus their failure would not disconfirm the theory, nor their success confirm it – especially given that other self-organizational approaches to emotion (e.g., those of Ellis and of Newton) may not be inconsistent with these same predictions.
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  47.  39
    The limited roles of unconscious computation and representation in self-organizational theories of mind.Ralph D. Ellis - 2002 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 25 (3):338-339.
    In addressing the shortcomings of computationalism, we should not throw the baby out with the bathwater. That consciousness is not merely an epiphenomenon with optional access to unconscious computations does not imply that unconscious computations, in the limited domain where they do occur (e.g., occipital transformations of visual data), cannot be reformulated in a way consistent with a self-organizational view.
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  48. A testable mind-brain theory.Ralph L. Smith - 1999 - Journal of Mind and Behavior 20 (4):421-436.
    Proceeding from the observation by Ryle that I cannot prepare myself for the next thought that I am going to think, I argue that conscious acts cannot control my bodily motions or thoughts. This position is not compatible with indeterminism. I also argue that consciousness represents the irreducible and multi-modal output of the behavioral control system sensors necessary for the control of human behavior demonstrated by Marken . My analysis supports one experimental result obtained by Libet, Gleason, Wright, and Pearl (...)
     
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  49.  22
    Ralph Niger—An Introduction to His Life and Works.G. B. Flahiff - 1940 - Mediaeval Studies 2 (1):104-126.
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  50.  83
    Grandparental investment: Past, present, and future.David A. Coall & Ralph Hertwig - 2010 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 33 (1):1-19.
    What motivates grandparents to their altruism? We review answers from evolutionary theory, sociology, and economics. Sometimes in direct conflict with each other, these accounts of grandparental investment exist side-by-side, with little or no theoretical integration. They all account for some of the data, and none account for all of it. We call for a more comprehensive theoretical framework of grandparental investment that addresses its proximate and ultimate causes, and its variability due to lineage, values, norms, institutions (e.g., inheritance laws), and (...)
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