Results for 'Alycia LaGuardia-LoBianco'

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  1.  14
    Reframing Abortion Lessons.Alycia LaGuardia-LoBianco - 2022 - Teaching Ethics 22 (2):201-217.
    A perennial topic in introductory ethics classes, abortion has offered students a real-life issue to critically analyze. In this paper, I argue that a popular approach to teaching abortion in such classes fails to attend to the relevant political context of the issue and that this contributes to harms against pregnant people. I will argue for these conclusions by identifying three related problems with such an approach: these lessons frame a political issue as apolitical, value impartiality over lived experiences in (...)
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  2. The Axiology of Pain and Pleasure.Alycia LaGuardia-LoBianco & Paul Bloomfield - forthcoming - Journal of Value Inquiry:1-24.
    There is little more common in ethics than to think pain is intrinsically bad and pleasure is intrinsically good. A Humean-style error theory of the axiology of pain and pleasure is developed against these commonsense claims. We defend the thesis that the value of pain and pleasure is always contingent and only instrumental. We survey prominent theories of both intrinsic value and pain/pleasure, all of which assume that pain and pleasure are intrinsically valuable. We base our error theory on counterexamples (...)
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  3.  71
    Complicit Suffering and the Duty to Self-Care.Alycia W. LaGuardia-LoBianco - 2018 - Philosophy 93 (2):251-277.
    Moral questions surrounding suffering tend to focus on obligations to relieve others’ suffering. In this paper, I focus on the overlooked question of what sufferers morally owe to themselves, arguing that they have the duty to self-care. I discuss agents who have been shaped by moral luck to contribute to their own suffering and canvass the ways in which this damages their moral agency. I contend that these agents have a duty to care for themselves by protecting and expanding their (...)
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  4.  20
    Community Repair of Moral Damage from Domestic Violence.Alycia LaGuardia-LoBianco - 2022 - Social Philosophy Today 38:47-65.
    I argue that communities have a moral responsibility to repair and prevent moral damage that some survivors of domestic violence may experience. This responsibility is grounded in those communities’ complicity in domestic violence and the moral damage that may result. Drawing on Claudia Card’s work on domestic violence, I first explain two forms of moral damage that some survivors may experience. These are: 1) normative isolation, or abusive environments that are marked by distorted moral standards about the abuse itself, and (...)
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  5.  14
    Emotions Under Trauma.Alycia LaGuardia-LoBianco - 2021 - Journal of Philosophy of Emotion 3 (1):31-38.
    While emotions can play positive, contributory roles in our cognition and our lives, they frequently have the opposite effect. Michael Brady’s otherwise excellent introduction to the topic of emotion is unbalanced because he does not attend to harms emotions cause. The basic problem is that emotions have a normative aspect: they can be justified or unjustified and Brady does not attend to this. An example of this is Brady’s discussion of curiosity as the emotional motivation for knowledge. More importantly, while (...)
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  6.  14
    Self-Saboteurs and Ethical Relationships.Alycia W. LaGuardia-LoBianco - 2019 - Social Theory and Practice 45 (2):249-285.
    Common-sense morality tells us we should help our loved ones who suffer. Self-saboteurs complicate this intuition: ought we help someone who wants to suffer? In this paper, I discuss mechanisms of and motivations for self-sabotaging behavior. I then turn to the ethical complications of these cases: the risk of becoming complicit in another’s self-sabotage; the acceptable limits of caring for a self-saboteur; and the permissibility of paternalistic interference. I argue that while there is some permissible leeway involved in meeting another’s (...)
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  7.  27
    Self-Saboteurs and Ethical Relationships.Alycia W. LaGuardia-LoBianco - 2019 - Social Theory and Practice 45 (2):249-285.
    Common-sense morality tells us we should help our loved ones who suffer. Self-saboteurs complicate this intuition: ought we help someone who wants to suffer? In this paper, I discuss mechanisms of and motivations for self-sabotaging behavior. I then turn to the ethical complications of these cases: the risk of becoming complicit in another’s self-sabotage; the acceptable limits of caring for a self-saboteur; and the permissibility of paternalistic interference. I argue that while there is some permissible leeway involved in meeting another’s (...)
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  8.  47
    Understanding Self-Injury through Body Shame and Internalized Oppression.Alycia W. LaGuardia-LoBianco - 2019 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 26 (4):295-313.
    Although clinical understandings of self-injury, the deliberate mutilation of body tissue, have developed significantly since the phenomenon was first studied, the predominant stereotype of who self-injures is still White, teenage girls.1 White girls as well as White women are, indeed, at risk for SI, and sociocultural explanations appealing to oppressive socialization—particularly the influence of Western beauty norms—have been offered to explain their high rates of SI. Yet evidence exists to challenge this conception that SI is exclusively a White, female issue: (...)
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  9.  8
    Replies to Ben-Ze’ev, Starkey, Reyes Càrdenas, Bloomfield, LaGuardia-LoBianco, and Mendonça.Michael Brady - 2021 - Journal of Philosophy of Emotion 3 (1):49-61.
    In this section, I respond to all six of my commentators. I acknowledge a number of areas where the book could be improved—not least in terms of the categorisation of theories of emotion; the emphasis on the positive value of emotion as opposed to emotion’s negative aspects; and the need to consider how emotions function in a broader range of circumstances. Alongside this, I welcome the defences of the perceptual model and new perspectives on the relations between emotion and virtue (...)
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  10.  99
    Aesthetics of Analogy.Eric LaGuardia - 1968 - Diogenes 16 (62):49-61.
  11.  5
    Evidence for [Coronal] Underspecification in Typical and Atypical Phonological Development.Alycia E. Cummings, Diane A. Ogiela & Ying C. Wu - 2020 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 14.
    The Featurally Underspecified Lexicon theory predicts that [coronal] is the language universal default place of articulation for phonemes. This assumption has been consistently supported with adult behavioral and event-related potential data; however, this underspecification claim has not been tested in developmental populations. The purpose of this study was to determine whether children demonstrate [coronal] underspecification patterns similar to those of adults. Two English consonants differing in place of articulation, [labial] /b/ and [coronal] /d/, were presented to 24 children characterized by (...)
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  12.  6
    Phonological Underspecification: An Explanation for How a Rake Can Become Awake.Alycia E. Cummings, Ying C. Wu & Diane A. Ogiela - 2021 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 15.
    Neural markers, such as the mismatch negativity, have been used to examine the phonological underspecification of English feature contrasts using the Featurally Underspecified Lexicon model. However, neural indices have not been examined within the approximant phoneme class, even though there is evidence suggesting processing asymmetries between liquid and glide phonemes. The goal of this study was to determine whether glide phonemes elicit electrophysiological asymmetries related to [consonantal] underspecification when contrasted with liquid phonemes in adult English speakers. Specifically, /ɹɑ/ is categorized (...)
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  13.  12
    CME stands for commercial medical education: and ACCME still won't address the issue.Adriane Fugh-Berman & Alycia Hogenmiller - 2016 - Journal of Medical Ethics 42 (3):172-173.
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  14.  3
    The Mystic Fable, volume one: The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.David LaGuardia - 1994 - History of European Ideas 18 (5):823-825.
  15.  12
    Is scaling up harder than scaling down? How children and adults visually scale distance from memory.Jodie M. Plumert, Alycia M. Hund & Kara M. Recker - 2019 - Cognition 185 (C):39-48.
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  16.  49
    The Ethics of Reading. [REVIEW]Gari LaGuardia - 1989 - Thought: Fordham University Quarterly 64 (4):411-412.
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  17. An economic analysis of the Norris-LaGuardia Act, the Wagner Act, and the labor representation industry.Morgan O. Reynolds - 1982 - Journal of Libertarian Studies 6 (3-4):3-4.
     
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