Results for 'Thomas Hugh Jameson'

981 found
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  1. Francis Bacon: criticism and the modern world.Thomas Hugh Jameson - 1954 - New York: F. A. Praeger.
     
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  2.  65
    Shame, Masculinity, and the Death of Thomas Becket.Hugh M. Thomas - 2012 - Speculum 87 (4):1050-1088.
    On the day before Christmas, 1170, Robert de Broc, member of a family of royal servants that had taken up King Henry II's fierce opposition to Thomas Becket, seized a horse bringing goods to the archbishop and cut off its tail. The next day, Archbishop Thomas noted this incident after his Christmas sermon when renewing his excommunication of Robert and several others, and he discussed it again four days later in his initial meeting with the men who would (...)
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  3.  25
    Clarifications on mass media campaigns promoting organ donation: a response to Rady, McGregor, & Verheijde (2012).Susan E. Morgan & Thomas Hugh Feeley - 2013 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 16 (4):865-868.
    The current paper provides readers some clarifications on the nature and goals of mass media campaigns designed to promote organ donation. These clarifications were necessitated by an earlier essay by Rady et al. (Med Health Care Philos 15:229–241, 2012) who present erroneous claims that media promotion campaigns in this health context represent propaganda that seek to misrepresent the transplantation process. Information is also provided on the nature and relative power of media campaigns in organ donation promotion.
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  4.  68
    Stefan Burkhardt and Thomas Foerster, eds., Norman Tradition and Transcultural Heritage: Exchange of Cultures in the “Norman” Peripheries of Medieval Europe. Farnham, Surrey, UK, and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2013. Pp. vi, 305. $134.95. ISBN: 978-1-4094-6330-6.Keith J. Stringer and Andrew Jotischky, eds., Norman Expansion: Connections, Continuities, and Contrasts. Farnham, Surrey, UK, and Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2013. Pp. xiv, 261; 10 black-and-white figures. $119.95. ISBN: 978-1-4094-4838-9. [REVIEW]Hugh M. Thomas - 2015 - Speculum 90 (2):514-516.
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  5.  11
    [Book review] armed truce, the beginnings of the cold war, 1945-46. [REVIEW]Hugh Thomas - 1989 - Science and Society 53:371-374.
  6.  10
    Lars Kjær, The Medieval Gift and the Classical Tradition: Ideals and Performance of Generosity in Medieval England, 1100–1300. (Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought 114.) Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019. Pp. ix, 225. $99.99. ISBN: 978-1-1084-2402-8. [REVIEW]Hugh M. Thomas - 2022 - Speculum 97 (3):852-853.
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  7.  7
    Sally Harvey, Domesday: Book of Judgement. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 2014. Pp. xxi, 335; 8 black-and-white figures and 1 table. $55. ISBN: 978-0-19-966978-3. [REVIEW]Hugh M. Thomas - 2017 - Speculum 92 (1):259-261.
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  8.  24
    Food and Everyday Life.Thomas M. Conroy, J. Nikol Beckham, Hui-tun Chuang, Matthew Day, Stephanie Greene, Joanna Henryks, Stacy M. Jameson, Marianne LeGreco, David Livert, Irina D. Mihalache, Roblyn Rawlins, Zachary Schrank, Klara Seddon, Amy Singer, Derek B. Shaw & Bethaney Turner (eds.) - 2014 - Lexington Books.
    This book is a qualitative, interpretive, phenomenological, and interdisciplinary, examination of food and food practices and their meanings in the modern world. Each chapter thematically focuses upon a particular food practice and on some key details of the examined practice, or on the practice’s social and cultural impact.
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  9. The Varieties of Darwinism: Explanation, Logic, and Worldview.Hugh Desmond, André Ariew, Philippe Huneman & Thomas A. C. Reydon - manuscript
    Ever since its inception, the theory of evolution has been reified into an “-ism”: Darwinism. While biologists today tend to shy away from the term in their research, the term is still actively used in the broader academic and societal contexts. What exactly is Darwinism, and how precisely are its various uses and abuses related to the scientific theory of evolution? Some call for limiting the meaning of the term “Darwinism” to its scientific context; others call for its abolition; yet (...)
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  10.  78
    The Social Construction of Technological Systems: New Directions in Sociology and History of Technology (25th Anniversary Edition with new preface).Wiebe E. Bijker, Thomas P. Hughes & Trevor Pinch (eds.) - 1987 - MIT Press.
  11.  35
    “Personal Knowledge” in Medicine and the Epistemic Shortcomings of Scientism.Hugh Marshall McHugh & Simon Thomas Walker - 2015 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 12 (4):577-585.
    In this paper, we outline a framework for understanding the different kinds of knowledge required for medical practice and use this framework to show how scientism undermines aspects of this knowledge. The framework is based on Michael Polanyi’s claim that knowledge is primarily the product of the contemplations and convictions of persons and yet at the same time carries a sense of universality because it grasps at reality. Building on Polanyi’s ideas, we propose that knowledge can be described along two (...)
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  12. History of Japanese Education and Present Educational System.Hugh Llewellyn Keenleyside & A. F. Thomas - 1937 - Hokuseido Press G. Allen.
     
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  13.  6
    The Role of Implicit and Explicit Beliefs in Grave‐Good Practices: Evidence for Intuitive Afterlife Reasoning.Thomas Swan, Jesse Bering, Ruth Hughes & Jamin Halberstadt - 2023 - Cognitive Science 47 (4):e13263.
    The practice of burying objects with the dead is often claimed as some of the earliest evidence for religion, on the assumption that such “grave goods” were intended for the decedents’ use in the afterlife. However, this assumption is largely speculative, as the underlying motivations for grave‐good practices across time and place remain little understood. In the present work, we asked if explicit and implicit religious beliefs (particularly those concerning the continuity of personal consciousness after death) motivate contemporary grave‐good practices. (...)
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  14.  33
    Continental philosophy in America.Hugh J. Silverman, John Sallis & Thomas M. Seebohm (eds.) - 1983 - Pittsburgh, PA: Duquesne University Press.
  15.  18
    Coding modality vs. input modality in hypermnesia: Is a rose a rose a rose?Matthew Hugh Erdelyi, Shira Finkelstein, Nadeanne Herrel, Bruce Miller & Jane Thomas - 1976 - Cognition 4 (4):311-319.
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  16.  26
    MEG responses over right inferior frontal gyrus during stop-signal task performance.Hughes Matthew, Woods William, Thomas Neil, Michie Patricia & Rossell Susan - 2015 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 9.
  17.  13
    Putting ‘Emotional Intelligences’ in Their Place: Introducing the Integrated Model of Affect-Related Individual Differences.David J. Hughes & Thomas Rhys Evans - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  18.  9
    Variations in orientation of etch pits on graphite surfaces.J. M. Thomas, E. E. Glenda Hughes & B. R. Williams - 1963 - Philosophical Magazine 8 (93):1513-1518.
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  19. Lexicalisation and the Origin of the Human Mind.Thomas J. Hughes & J. T. M. Miller - 2014 - Biosemiotics 7 (1):11-27.
    This paper will discuss the origin of the human mind, and the qualitative discontinuity between human and animal cognition. We locate the source of this discontinuity within the language faculty, and thus take the origin of the mind to depend on the origin of the language faculty. We will look at one such proposal put forward by Hauser et al. (Science 298:1569-1579, 2002), which takes the evolution of a Merge trait (recursion) to solely explain the differences between human and animal (...)
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  20.  15
    Comment: Trait EI Moderates the Relationship Between Ability EI and Emotion Regulation.David J. Hughes & Thomas Rhys Evans - 2016 - Emotion Review 8 (4):331-332.
    Mestre, MacCann, Guil, and Roberts propose a model that suggests emotion regulation provides the mechanism through which ability emotional intelligence influences important outcomes. We argue that important nuance in our understanding of people’s choice of emotion regulation strategy can be gained by incorporating personality constructs such as trait emotional intelligence within this model.
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  21. Is Political Obligation Necessary for Obedience? Hobbes on Hostility, War and Obligation.Thomas M. Hughes - 2012 - Teoria Politica 2:77-99.
    Contemporary debates on obedience and consent, such as those between Thomas Senor and A. John Simmons, suggest that either political obligation must exist as a concept or there must be natural duty of justice accessible to us through reason. Without one or the other, de facto political institutions would lack the requisite moral framework to engage in legitimate coercion. This essay suggests that both are unnecessary in order to provide a conceptual framework in which obedience to coercive political institutions (...)
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  22.  12
    The Papers of Thomas A. Edison. Volume I: The Making of an Inventor, February 1847-June 1873. Reese V. Jenkins.Thomas P. Hughes - 1990 - Isis 81 (4):790-791.
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  23.  19
    Possible words: generativity, instantiation, and individuation.Thomas J. Hughes - 2023 - Synthese 202 (6):1-27.
    Words come into existence through a number of distinct processes including naming, semantic shifts, morphological productivity, and compounding. In accounting for the instantiation and individuation of word-types, two diachronic proposals termed Originalism and History are considered, which view word-types as emerging through a tokening act after which they are subsequently distinguished from others on the basis of having a unique event-like origin. In the following paper I elucidate two central tenets of Originalism and History, which I name essentialism and propagation. (...)
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  24.  17
    Model Builders and Instrument Makers.Thomas P. Hughes - 1988 - Science in Context 2 (1):59-75.
    The ArgumentMany inventors, engineers, and scientists think in verbal images. Elmer Sperry (1860–1930), a noted American inventor, was able to “operate” in his mind's eye the machines he was developing. For inventors, engineers, and experimental scientists, visualization is often followed by construction of a physical model of the invention, which can be an experimental apparatus. The model, or apparatus, is then tested in increasingly complex environments and changes are made in the physical artifact until it is ready to be used. (...)
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  25.  25
    Einstein, Inventors, and Invention.Thomas P. Hughes - 1993 - Science in Context 6 (1):25-42.
    The ArgumentAlbert Einstein had more than a passing and trivial involvement with patents and inventions. The historian seeking to fathom Einstein's thought processes would be ill-advised to pass lightly over his years at the Swiss Federal Patent office (1902–1909) and to consider his professional advice-giving about patents and his patenting of his inventions as merely peripheral to his core concerns and cognitive style. Years of reading patents and visualizing the machines, devices, and electromagnetic phenomena described in them is a formative (...)
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  26.  53
    Linguistic intuitions and the faculty of language: Samuel Schindler, Anna Drożdżowicz, and Karen Brøcker (eds): Linguistic intuitions: Evidence and method. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020, 302pp, £65 HB.Thomas J. Hughes - 2021 - Metascience 31 (1):117-120.
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  27.  7
    Shaped Technology: An Afterword.Thomas Hughes - 1995 - Science in Context 8 (2):451-455.
    The informative and engaging essays in the foregoing collection suggest several interesting concepts that deserve further research and reflection. Over the past decade, the “social construction of technology” has become a concept often explored by historians (Bijker, Hughes, and Pinch 1987). Even though it has performed the useful function of discrediting technological determinism, the concept suggests too narrow a set of influences that shape technology. Two other concept, “nature-shaped technology” and “culture-shaped technology,” convey the character of technology more effectively. To (...)
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  28.  90
    Gandhi’s Devotional Political Thought.Stuart Gray & Thomas M. Hughes - 2015 - Philosophy East and West 65 (2):375-400.
    The political thought of Mohandas K. Gandhi has been increasingly used as a paradigmatic example of hybrid political thought that developed out of a cross-cultural dialogue of eastern and western influences. With a novel unpacking of this hybridity, this article focuses on the conceptual influences that Gandhi explicitly stressed in his autobiography and other writings, particularly the works of Leo Tolstoy and the Bhagavad Gītā. This new tracing of influence in the development of Gandhi’s thought alters the substantive thrust of (...)
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  29.  3
    Acceptance.Thomas P. Hughes - 1991 - Science, Technology and Human Values 16 (3):387-389.
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  30.  13
    America as Second Creation.Thomas P. Hughes - 2006 - Minerva 44 (2):219-222.
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  31.  21
    A Short History of Technology: From the Earliest Times to A. D. 1900. T. K. Derry, Trevor I. Williams.Thomas P. Hughes - 1963 - Isis 54 (3):417-418.
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  32. A Systems-Ordered World.Thomas P. Hughes - 2005 - In M. Gorman, R. Tweney, D. Gooding & A. Kincannon (eds.), Scientific and Technological Thinking. Erlbaum. pp. 277.
     
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  33.  13
    Bottled Energy: Electrical Engineering and the Evolution of Chemical Energy Storage. Richard H. Schallenberg.Thomas P. Hughes - 1983 - Isis 74 (3):437-438.
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  34.  11
    Collaborative provision quality assurance isn’t just red tape ….Claire Hughes & Helen Thomas - 2017 - Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education 21 (1):20-25.
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  35.  36
    Deixis, demonstratives, and definite descriptions.Thomas J. Hughes - 2020 - Thought: A Journal of Philosophy 9 (4):285-297.
    Definite articles and demonstratives share many features in common including a related etymology and a number of parallel communicative functions. The following paper is concerned with developing a novel proposal on how to distinguish the two types of expression. First, crosslinguistic evidence is presented to argue that demonstratives contain locational markers that are employed in deictic uses to force contrastive focus and accentuate an intended referent against a contextual background. Conversely, definite articles lack such markers. Demonstratives are thus more likely (...)
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  36. Grammar, Ambiguity, and Definite Descriptions.Thomas J. Hughes - 2015 - Dissertation, Durham University
  37.  16
    Loyola and the Educational System of the Jesuits.Series of the Great Educators.Thomas Hughes & Nicholas Murray Butler - 1892 - Philosophical Review 1 (5):564-565.
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  38.  10
    Letters to the Editor.Thomas Hughes & John Hendry - 1990 - Isis 81:75-76.
  39.  11
    Letters to the Editor.Thomas P. Hughes & John Henry - 1990 - Isis 81 (1):75-76.
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  40.  19
    On the Ambiguity in Definite Descriptions.Thomas J. Hughes - 2014 - In Piotr Stalmaszczyk (ed.), Philosophy of Language and Linguistics: The Legacy of Frege, Russell, and Wittgenstein. De Gruyter. pp. 99-114.
  41. Spiritualism and Common Sense, by R.T.H.Thomas Hughes - 1868
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  42. The Economy of Thought.Thomas Hughes - 1875
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  43. The Human Will: Its Functions and Freedom.Thomas Hughes - 1867
     
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  44.  8
    The Ideal Theory of Berkeley, and the Real World.Thomas Hughes - 2013 - Theclassics.Us.
    This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1865 edition. Excerpt:... PART II. BERKELEY'S PHILOSOPHY: SECTION XIV. Bishop Berkeley is best known by the system of idealism developed by him. This theory is unfolded in two works, called "The Principles of Human Knowledge/' and "Three Dialogues between Hylas and Philonous."t If it were not for this system, the (...)
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  45.  67
    The Mystified Ms. Dowd.Thomas M. Hughes - 2012 - The Chesterton Review 38 (1/2):337-340.
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  46.  5
    The new psychology and religious experience.Thomas Hywel Hughes - 1933 - London,: G. Allen & Unwin.
    Cover -- Half Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Original Title -- Original Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- INTRODUCTION -- PART I -- CHAPTER I. THE BASAL ASSUMPTIONS OF THE NEW PSYCHOLOGY -- A. BEHAVIOURISM -- B. PSYCHOANALYSIS -- PART II -- CHAPTER II. PROJECTION AND THE REALITY OF GOD -- CHAPTER III. THE INSTINCTS AND THE RELIGIOUS LIFE -- A. RELIGION AND THE INSTINCT OF SEX -- B. -- C. -- CHAPTER IV. THE RELIGIOUS CONSCIOUSNESS AND EXPERIENCE -- (...)
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  47.  9
    Turning Points in Western Technology: A Study of Technology, Science, and History. D. S. L. Cardwell.Thomas Parke Hughes - 1974 - Isis 65 (1):108-110.
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  48.  7
    The Pursuit of Power: Technology, Armed Force, and Society since A.D. 1000. William H. McNeill.Thomas P. Hughes - 1984 - Isis 75 (1):225-227.
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  49. Working Paper 6.Frederick Gearing, Thomas Carroll, Letta Richter, Patricia Grogan-Hurlick, Allen Smith, Wayne Hughes, Allan B. Tindall, Walter Precourt & Sigrid Topfer - 1979 - In Frederick O. Gearing & Lucinda Sangree (eds.), Toward a Cultural Theory of Education and Schooling. Mouton.
     
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  50.  19
    The predictive validity of typical and maximal personality measures in self-reports and peer reports.Robert C. Klesges, Hugh Mcginley, Gregory J. Jurkovic & Thomas J. Morgan - 1979 - Bulletin of the Psychonomic Society 13 (6):401-404.
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