Results for 'knowledge from the periphery'

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  1.  16
    Knowledge from the global South is in the global South.Seye Abimbola - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (5):337-338.
    In social systems or spaces, distance between the centre and the periphery breeds epistemic injustice. There are growing accounts of epistemic injustice in health-related fields, as in the article by Pratt and de Vries.1 The title of the article asks: ‘Where is knowledge from the global South?’ Like me, you may answer by saying: ‘Knowledge from the global South is in the global South’. That answer says a lot about how we right epistemic injustice done (...)
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  2.  19
    Science on the periphery: Can it contribute to mainstream science?Subbiah Arunachalam - 1995 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 8 (2):68-84.
    Science is a global phenomenon that knows no frontiers. But in the real world, production and efficient utilization of scientific knowledge are highly concentrated in a few countries. A large majority of countries—those on the periphery, contribute precious little to the growth of scientific knowledge. Indeed, the distribution of science is even more skewed than is the distribution of wealth among nations. As a result, peripheral countries are left out of the intellectual discourse that is at the (...)
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  3. Noise from the Periphery in Autism.Maria Brincker & Elizabeth B. Torres - 2013 - Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience 7:34.
    No two individuals with the autism diagnosis are ever the same—yet many practitioners and parents can recognize signs of ASD very rapidly with the naked eye. What, then, is this phenotype of autism that shows itself across such distinct clinical presentations and heterogeneous developments? The “signs” seem notoriously slippery and resistant to the behavioral threshold categories that make up current assessment tools. Part of the problem is that cognitive and behavioral “abilities” typically are theorized as high-level disembodied and modular functions—that (...)
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  4.  26
    Translocal practices and proximities in short quality food chains at the periphery: the case of North Swedish farmers.Alexandre Dubois - 2019 - Agriculture and Human Values 36 (4):763-778.
    This paper examines the social and organizational innovation processes undertaken by small-scale producers engaged in short food supply chains in the North Swedish region of Västerbotten. The study uses the notion of proximity to empirically analyse and conceptually explore these phenomena. The paper illustrates the ‘new associationalism’ mobilized by producers in order to promote knowledge exchange and learning and highlights the role of translocal practices in sustaining this transition. The study found that open and trusted interactions with consumers are (...)
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  5.  6
    Ruination Science: Producing Knowledge from a Toxic World.Sebastian Ureta - 2021 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 46 (1):29-52.
    The multiple environmental crises our planet is experiencing forces us to change the ways we engage with it, especially the ones developed by scientific disciplines such as toxicology. In particular, widespread degradation should lead us to develop scientific practices that take environmental ruination as a framework condition, not only as an object of analysis. In doing so, we should take into account the practice of science at laboratories located in the peripheries of global science, institutions that have coexisted with extensive (...)
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  6.  10
    From the Periphery to the Center.Mohammed Rustom - 2023 - Journal of World Philosophies 7 (2).
    This article recounts one contemporary Muslim philosopher’s journey into the discipline of philosophy, detailing the importance of diversifying the study of philosophy to take it beyond its Anglo-American and Eurocentric boarders along the way.
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  7.  18
    Views from the Periphery: Discourses of Race and Place in French Military Medicine.Michael Osborne & Richard Fogarty - 2003 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 25 (3):363 - 389.
    Numerous authors have interpreted the history of anthropological and medical conceptions of race in nineteenth century France as following a path mapped out by phrenology, anthropometry, and Paul Broca's version of physical anthropology. On balance, this has resulted in an historical narrative centered on Parisian intellectual life and one leaving the impression that by the 1890s anthropological theories had moved away from ethnological and cultural explanations toward more biological views of race. This article, by contrast, examines the world beyond (...)
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  8. From the Periphery of Modernity.Nadia Urbinati - 1998 - Political Theory 26 (3):370-391.
  9.  67
    Knowledge, Glory and ‘On Human Dignity'.Henri Atlan, Glory Knowledge & On Human Dignity - 2007 - Diogenes 54 (3):11-17.
    The idea of dignity seems indissociable from that of humanity, whether in its universal dimension of ‘human dignity’, or in the individual ‘dignity of the person’. This paper provides an outlook on the ethics governing the sciences and technology, in particular the biological sciences and biotechnology, and recalls the notion of ‘glory’, both human and divine, as it infuses a great part of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance cultures, just before the scientific revolution in Europe.
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  10.  14
    Television from the periphery – Slow television and national identity in Norway.Roel Puijk - 2024 - Communications 49 (2):199-221.
    Since 2009, the Norwegian public service broadcaster NRK has produced a number of slow TV shows. Some of the programmes have had a surprisingly big success in terms of public engagement and audience share even though the majority of the audience was from the oldest age groups. These programmes are not only slow, lasting a long time and lacking dramatic development and progress, they also engage in a particular, traditional version of national identity. The current article argues that, through (...)
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  11.  18
    Science and nationality in the Habsburg Empire: Mitchel G. Ash and Jan Surman : The nationalization of scientific knowledge in the Habsburg Empire, 1848–1918. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012, 272pp, £50.00, $80.00 HB.Sander Gliboff - 2013 - Metascience 23 (2):369-371.
    Even though science strives to transcend national differences, scientists in the multi-national, multi-lingual, multi-ethnic Habsburg Empire could hardly avoid being caught up in a web of competing ethnic, national, and imperial interests. Where should their identities and loyalties lie and where should they seek support for their work? At the level of the empire as a whole? One of its component kingdoms or principalities? Other institutions? What audience should they write for, and in what language? Or, from the point (...)
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  12. Postcard From the Periphery: a View From Mexico.María Pía Lara - 2010 - Thesis Eleven 100 (1):41-45.
  13.  21
    In the Shadow of the 1919 Total Solar Eclipse: The Two British Expeditions and the Politics of Invisibility.Ana Simões - 2022 - Berichte Zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte 45 (4):581-601.
    This paper addresses the legendary total solar eclipse of 29 May 1919. Two British teams confirmed the light bending prediction by Albert Einstein: Charles R. Davidson and Andrew C. C. Crommelin in Sobral, Brazil and Arthur S. Eddington and Edwin T. Cottingham on the African island of Príncipe, then part of the Portuguese empire.By jointly analyzing the two astronomical expeditions supported by written and visual sources, I show how, despite extensive scholarship on this famous historical episode and the historiographical emphasis (...)
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  14.  11
    Voices from the Periphery: The Compelling History of the cepalinos and dependentistas.K. Steven Vincent - 2022 - The European Legacy 28 (1):94-98.
    Structuralism and dependency theories emerged when the World Wars and the Great Depression revealed to Latin American thinkers the peculiar vulnerabilities of their national economies. These theori...
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  15.  13
    Glimpses of truth along the boundaries of thought concerning certain knowledge.S. R. H. [From Old Catalog] Biggs - 1895 - [Boston]: Pub. by the author [printed by Beale publishing company].
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  16. Knowledge from the Marketplace: The Next Generation Socioeconomic Engagement.Sidharta Chatterjee & Mousumi Samanta - 2022 - IUP Journal of Knowledge Management 20 (1):61-73.
    For this study, we have considered Facebook Marketplace (FBM) to understand how knowledge from the social networking world affects consumer choice and behavior, ie, users' economic decisions.[...] the FBM could be considered as a digital socioeconomic system where availability of digital trace data from user interactions would enable studies of population-level human interactions (Sundararajan et al., 2013).
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  17. Reducing the Inadvertent Spread of Retracted Science: recommendations from the RISRS report.Jodi Schneider, Nathan D. Woods, Randi Proescholdt & The Risrs Team - 2022 - Research Integrity and Peer Review 7 (1).
    Background Retraction is a mechanism for alerting readers to unreliable material and other problems in the published scientific and scholarly record. Retracted publications generally remain visible and searchable, but the intention of retraction is to mark them as “removed” from the citable record of scholarship. However, in practice, some retracted articles continue to be treated by researchers and the public as valid content as they are often unaware of the retraction. Research over the past decade has identified a number (...)
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  18. Constructing the centre from the periphery: Spanish travellers to France at the time of the Chemical Revolution.Antonio Garcia Belmar & José Ramon Bertomeu Sanchez - 2003 - Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science 233:143-188.
     
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  19.  77
    From the periphery: The genesis of Eugene P. Wigner's application of group theory to quantum mechanics. [REVIEW]Michael Chayut - 2001 - Foundations of Chemistry 3 (1):55-78.
    This paper traces the origins of Eugene Wigner's pioneering application of group theory to quantum physics to his early work in chemistry and crystallography. In the early 1920s, crystallography was the only discipline in which symmetry groups were routinely used. Wigner's early training in chemistry, and his work in crystallography with Herman Mark and Karl Weissenberg at the Kaiser Wilhelm institute for fiber research in Berlin exposed him to conceptual tools which were absent from the pedagogy available to physicists (...)
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  20.  19
    Writing Philosophy from the Periphery: Lixing as Foundational Empty Signifier in Tang Junyi’s Cultural Consciousness and Moral Reason.Philippe Major - 2021 - Sophia 60 (2):255-276.
    This article adopts Ernesto Laclau’s notion of empty signifier to discuss Tang Junyi’s uses of the concept oflixing(‘reason’ or ‘rationality’) in his seminal workCultural Consciousness and Moral Reason(文化意識與道德理性; 1958). My dual goal, in doing so, is to bring to light the relations of power constitutive of the text’s discourse onlixingand relate them to the problematic of writing philosophy from the periphery. I argue that in this work,lixing’s dual referents—as a translation of ‘reason’ and as denoting a Neo-Confucian faculty (...)
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  21.  7
    Pythagorean knowledge from the ancient to the modern world: askesis, religion, science.Almut-Barbara Renger & Alessandro Stavru (eds.) - 2016 - Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag.
    In both ancient tradition and modern research Pythagoreanism has been understood as a religious sect or as a philosophical and scientific community. Numerous attempts have been made to reconcile these pictures as well as to analyze them separately. The most recent scholarship compartmentalizes different facets of Pythagorean knowledge, but this offers no context for exploring their origins, development, and interdependence. This collection aims to reverse this trend, addressing connections between the different fields of Pythagorean knowledge, such as eschatology, (...)
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  22.  25
    Ecclesiastes: A Reading from the Periphery.Elsa Tamez - 2001 - Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and Theology 55 (3):250-259.
    Qoheleth speaks most profoundly to men and women most disillusioned with a world governed by efficiency, technology, and profit. To them, the sage offers both an affirmation of faith and a call to value the concrete and the sensuous.
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  23.  16
    Where is knowledge from the global South? An account of epistemic justice for a global bioethics.Bridget Pratt & Jantina de Vries - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (5):325-334.
    The silencing of the epistemologies, theories, principles, values, concepts and experiences of the global South constitutes a particularly egregious epistemic injustice in bioethics. Our shared responsibility to rectify that injustice should be at the top of the ethics agenda. That it is not, or only is in part, is deeply problematic and endangers the credibility of the entire field. As a first step towards reorienting the field, this paper offers a comprehensive account of epistemic justice for global health ethics. We (...)
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  24.  28
    Jameson on Allegory: Notes from the Periphery.Maria Elisa Cevasco - 2021 - Historical Materialism 29 (1):151-161.
    This piece makes a comment on the usefulness of allegory as a mode of reading, by way of an examination of the representation of nationalism in Jameson and in Antonio Candido.
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  25.  70
    Controlling Core Knowledge: Conditions for the Ascription of Intentional States to Self and Others by Children.James Russell - 2007 - Synthese 159 (2):167 - 196.
    The ascription of intentional states to the self involves knowledge, or at least claims to knowledge. Armed with the working definition of knowledge as 'the ability to do things, or refrain from doing things, or believe, or want, or doubt things, for reasons that are facts' [Hyman, J. Philos. Quart. 49:432—451], I sketch a simple competence model of acting and believing from knowledge and when knowledge is defeated by un-experienced changes of state. The (...)
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  26.  5
    La philosophie de William James.Théodore Flournoy - 1911 - Saint-Blaise,: Foyer Solidariste.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work. This work is in the (...)
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  27.  9
    International Collaboration in Multilayered Center-Periphery in the Globalization of Science and Technology.Kumju Hwang - 2008 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 33 (1):101-133.
    This article analyzes international scientific collaboration in the context of the globalization of science and technology as a crossing point not only between local and global identities but also between scientific and sociocultural identities. It also elucidates how international collaboration—where middle scientific actors in the hierarchical multilayered center-periphery in the globalization of science and technology obtain advanced knowledge from core science and technology—takes place and structures the global division of research labor. This article emphasizes that we should (...)
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  28. Wittgenstein's Lectures on the Foundations of Mathematics. Cambridge, 1939.R. G. From the Notes of Bosanquet, Norman Malcom, Rush Rhees & Yorick Smythies - 1976 - Harvester Press. Edited by Cora Diamond.
     
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  29.  15
    Critique of the testimonial knowledge from the outsider's point of view: the luck argument and the problem of disagreement.Denis Maslov - 2017 - Epistemology and Philosophy of Science 53 (3):76-82.
    The article considers John Greco's conception of testimonial knowledge that aims to overthrow three sceptical arguments against religious knowledge. Prof. Greco presupposes that a religious community already possesses a true religious belief and its reliability is justified exclusively by means of the reliability of transmission. The author puts this conception into question and presents some sceptical arguments regarding the initial origination of a religious belief and verifying the truth-ness of a religious belief in front of epistemic disagreement problem. (...)
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  30.  25
    Introduction: Centre and periphery in the eighteenth-century Habsburg 'medical empire'.E. C. Spary - 2012 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 43 (3):684-690.
    This paper introduces a collection of essays exploring different aspects of the relationship between medical knowledge and administration in the Habsburg Monarchy. The collection brings together a range of perspectives upon the confrontation between programmes for centralised medical bureaucracy emanating from Vienna, and their implementation in a variety of different cultural, linguistic, social and practical circumstances. Such confrontations raise issues about the nature and limits of enlightened universalism, the relationship between knowledge and government in the seventeenth and (...)
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  31.  6
    The dissemination of mesmerism in Germany (1784–1815): Some patterns of the circulation of knowledge.Claire Gantet - 2021 - Centaurus 63 (4):762-778.
    Franz Anton Mesmer (1734–1815), a physician who graduated from the University of Vienna, invented a therapy based on the concept of a universal fluid, similar to electricity, that flowed through all living things. By restoring the circulation of this fluid in the nerves of human bodies, he believed he could cure illness without resorting to medication. Few medical theories have enjoyed as great success as Mesmer's, first among French high society and then in Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Italy, Sweden, (...)
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  32.  26
    What is a Minor Philosophy? A Conversation on Thinking from the Periphery in a Global World.Roberto Farneti & Alessandro Ferrara - 2012 - Philosophia 40 (4):717-739.
    This is the text of a conversation that follows up on Roberto Farneti’s article “A Minor Philosophy: The State of the Art of Philosophical Scholarship in Italy” published in Philosophia 38 (1) 2009: 1–28. After a brief introductory note that details the reception of the article in Italy, Ferrara and Farneti engage in a conversation on the notion of “minor philosophy” and on the meaning and future of philosophizing “from the periphery” in a globalized world. The text is (...)
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  33.  10
    Some barriers to knowledge from the global south: commentary to Pratt and de Vries.Caesar Alimsinya Atuire - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (5):335-336.
    Pratt and de Vries1 pose an important and uncomfortable question to all stakeholders in the global bioethics space. If global bioethics as they define it is ‘the ethics of public health and healthcare problems that are characterised by a global level effect or that require action beyond individual countries, and the ethics of research related to such problems’, one would expect justice and inclusivity to be among the ethical priorities. Yet, Pratt and de Vries carefully demonstrate how different forms of (...)
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  34.  15
    The Problem of Knowledge from the Standpoint of Validity.Archibald A. Bowman - 1914 - Philosophical Review 23 (1):1.
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  35.  9
    The Problem of Knowledge from the Standpoint of Validity.A. A. Bowman - 1914 - Philosophical Review 23 (2):146.
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  36.  16
    The Problem of Knowledge From the Standpoint of Validity.Archibald A. Bowman - 1914 - Philosophical Review 23 (3):299.
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  37.  30
    The problem of knowledge from the standpoint of validity.Archibald A. Bowman - 1914 - Philosophical Review 23 (1):1-16.
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  38.  9
    Authority and Identity in Medieval Islamic Historiography: Persian Histories from the Peripheries By Mimi Hanaoka.Jürgen Paul - 2020 - Journal of Islamic Studies 31 (3):400-404.
    Authority and Identity in Medieval Islamic Historiography: Persian Histories from the Peripheries By HanaokaMimi, xiii + 301 pp. Price PB £29.99. EAN 978–1107565838.
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  39. Mind, meaning, and knowledge: themes from the philosophy of Crispin Wright.Annalisa Coliva (ed.) - 2012 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    This volume is a collective exploration of major themes in the work of Crispin Wright, one of today's leading philosophers. These newly commissioned papers are divided into four sections, preceded by a substantial Introduction, which places them in the context of the development of Wright's ideas. The distinguished contributors address issues such as the rule-following problem, knowledge of our meanings and minds, truth, realism, anti-realism and relativism, as well as the nature of perceptual justification, the cogency of arguments such (...)
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  40.  13
    The problem of knowledge from the point of view of dualistic realism.James H. Ryan - 1926 - Philosophical Review 35 (5):399-415.
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  41. Shared Knowledge from Individual Vice: the role of unworthy epistemic emotions.Adam Morton - 2014 - Philosophical Inquiries.
    This paper begins with a discussion the role of less-than-admirable epistemic emotions in our respectable, indeed admirable inquiries: nosiness, obsessiveness, wishful thinking, denial, partisanship. The explanation for their desirable effect is Mandevillian: because of the division of epistemic labour individual epistemic vices can lead to shared knowledge. In fact it is sometimes essential to it.
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  42.  4
    Réflexions, morales & politiques.Émile Théodore Joseph Hubert Banning - 1899 - Bruxelles,: Spineux & cie.. Edited by Ernest Édouard Gossart & Alexis Henri Brialmont.
    This work has been selected by scholars as being culturally important, and is part of the knowledge base of civilization as we know it. This work was reproduced from the original artifact, and remains as true to the original work as possible. Therefore, you will see the original copyright references, library stamps (as most of these works have been housed in our most important libraries around the world), and other notations in the work. This work is in the (...)
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  43.  39
    The “Conflict Thesis” and Positivist History of Science: A View From the Periphery.Miguel de Asúa - 2018 - Zygon 53 (4):1131-1148.
    The historiographic tradition of the history of science that originated with Auguste Comte bears all the marks of narratives with roots in the Enlightenment, such as a view of religion as an underdeveloped stage in the ascending road in humanity's quest for a more mature understanding. This article explores the development of the peripheral branch of a tradition that developed in Argentina by the mid‐twentieth century with authors such as the Italians Aldo Mieli, José Babini, and the Hungarian Desiderius Papp. (...)
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  44.  18
    Agriculture, knowledge and the ‘colonial matrix of power’: approaching sustainabilities from the Global South.Johannes M. Waldmueller - 2015 - Journal of Global Ethics 11 (3):294-302.
    The proposed list of 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals sets out to reframe development according to a more holistic perspective. Yet, drawing on the example of the need for sustainable, resilient and biodiverse agriculture, it is argued here that the SDGs remain essentially grounded within one cultural understanding of how to address poverty. At least with regard to agriculture, the SDGs thus remain mono-cultural, one-dimensional, overly technocratic, and are far from universal as they fail to acknowledge the stipulated alternative (...)
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  45.  5
    On the Periphery: Examining Women’s Exclusion From Core Leadership Roles in the “Extremely Gendered” Organization of Men’s Club Football in England.Alexandra J. Rankin-Wright, Stacey Pope & Amée Bryan - 2021 - Gender and Society 35 (6):940-970.
    In this article, we frame men’s club football as an “extremely gendered” organization to explain the underrepresentation of women leaders within the industry. By analyzing women’s leadership work over a 30-year period, we find that women’s inclusion has been confined to a limited number of occupational areas. These areas are removed, in terms of influence and proximity, from the male players and the playing of football. These findings reveal a gendered substructure within club football that maintains masculine dominance in (...)
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  46.  31
    Centers and Peripheries: The Development of British Physiology, 1870-1914. [REVIEW]Stella V. F. Butler - 1988 - Journal of the History of Biology 21 (3):473 - 500.
    By 1910 the Cambridge University physiology department had become the kernel of British physiology. Between 1909 and 1914 an astonishing number of young and talented scientists passed through the laboratory. The University College department was also a stimulating place of study under the dynamic leadership of Ernest Starling.I have argued that the reasons for this metropolitan axis within British physiology lie with the social structure of late-Victorian and Edwardian higher education. Cambridge, Oxford, and University College London were national institutions attracting (...)
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  47.  21
    Mania and knowledge. From the sting of the gods to Socrates as educational gadfly.Michael Erler - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (6-7):565-575.
    In Plato’s Phaedrus, Socrates asserts that madness is a good thing if it comes from the gods, and demonstrates this using the example of love. Eroticism becomes thereby philosophy, the lover a philosopher, with Plato’s Socrates serving as prototype. The question remains, however, how madness can be reconciled with a philosophical search for truth which relies entirely on rationality. This question must be considered within the context of the growing antagonism between irrationality and rationality, enlightenment and counter-enlightenment, cultic ritual (...)
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  48. From the Knowledge Argument to Mental Substance: Resurrecting the Mind.Howard Robinson - 2016 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book presents a strong case for substance dualism and offers a comprehensive defense of the knowledge argument, showing that materialism cannot accommodate or explain the 'hard problem' of consciousness. Bringing together the discussion of reductionism and semantic vagueness in an original and illuminating way, Howard Robinson argues that non-fundamental levels of ontology are best treated by a conceptualist account, rather than a realist one. In addition to discussing the standard versions of physicalism, he examines physicalist theories such as (...)
     
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  49.  46
    From the secrets of nature to public knowledge: The origins of the concept of openness in science.William Eamon - 1985 - Minerva 23 (3):321-347.
  50.  29
    The Logic of Eternal Knowledge from the Standpoint of the Aristotelian Syllogistic.Charles J. Kelly - 1988 - Modern Schoolman 66 (1):29-54.
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