Results for 'Peta Baxter'

398 found
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  1.  11
    Contrasting Similar Words Facilitates Second Language Vocabulary Learning in Children by Sharpening Lexical Representations.Peta Baxter, Mienke Droop, Marianne van den Hurk, Harold Bekkering, Ton Dijkstra & Frank Leoné - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    This study considers one of the cognitive mechanisms underlying the development of second language vocabulary in children: The differentiation and sharpening of lexical representations. We propose that sharpening is triggered by an implicit comparison of similar representations, a process we call contrasting. We investigate whether integrating contrasting in a learning method in which children contrast orthographically and semantically similar L2 words facilitates learning of those words by sharpening their new lexical representations. In our study, 48 Dutch-speaking children learned unfamiliar orthographically (...)
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  2.  8
    Child-Robot Interactions for Second Language Tutoring to Preschool Children.Paul Vogt, Mirjam de Haas, Chiara de Jong, Peta Baxter & Emiel Krahmer - 2017 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 11.
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  3. Many-one identity.Donald L. M. Baxter - 1988 - Philosophical Papers 17 (3):193-216.
    Two things become one thing, something having parts, and something becoming something else, are cases of many things being identical with one thing. This apparent contradiction introduces others concerning transitivity of identity, discernibility of identicals, existence, and vague existence. I resolve the contradictions with a theory that identity, number, and existence are relative to standards for counting. What are many on some standard are one and the same on another. The theory gives an account of the discernibility of identicals using (...)
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  4. Hume's theory of space and time in its sceptical context.Donald L. M. Baxter - 1993 - In David Fate Norton & Jacqueline Taylor (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Hume. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 105-146.
    Hume's Treatise arguments concerning space, time, and geometry, especially ones involving his denial of infinite divisibility; have suffered harsh criticism. I show that in the section "Of the ideas of space and time," Hume gives important characterizations of his skeptical approach, in some respects Pyrrhonian, that will be developed in the rest of the Treatise. When that approach is better understood, the force of Hume's arguments can be appreciated, and the influential criticisms of them can be seen to miss the (...)
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  5. Identity, Discernibility, and Composition.Donald L. M. Baxter - 2014 - In A. J. Cotnoir & Donald L. M. Baxter (eds.), Composition as Identity. Oxford University Press. pp. 244-253.
    There is more than one way to say that composition is identity. Yi has distinguished the Weak Composition thesis from the Strong Composition thesis and attributed the former to David Lewis while noting that Lewis associates something like the latter with me. Weak Composition is the thesis that the relation between the parts collectively and their whole is closely analogous to identity. Strong Composition is the thesis that the relation between the parts collectively and their whole is identity. Yi is (...)
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  6.  58
    Embodied Care: Jane Addams, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and Feminist Ethics.Peta Bowden - 2006 - Hypatia 21 (3):210-214.
  7.  68
    An ‘ethic of care’ in clinical settings: encompassing ‘feminine’ and ‘feminist’ perspectives.Peta Bowden - 2000 - Nursing Philosophy 1 (1):36-49.
    Recent work in clinical nursing ethics has been influenced by two main areas of insight associated with the challenge levelled by the women's movement to traditional thinking about morality and ethics. Broadly speaking these two realms have been distinguished as articulating ‘feminist’ socio‐political and ‘feminine’ ethic of care concerns. Often these two impulses are seen as pulling against each other, or worse, the ‘feminine’ emphasis on the ethics of care is seen as reinforcing the dynamics that elicit the ‘feminist’ concern. (...)
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  8. A Pyrrhonian Interpretation of Hume on Assent.Donald L. M. Baxter - 2016 - In Diego Machuca & Baron Reed (eds.), Skepticism: From Antiquity to the Present. Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 380-394.
    How is it possible for David Hume to be both withering skeptic and constructive theorist? I recommend an answer like the Pyrrhonian answer to the question how it is possible to suspend all judgment yet engage in active daily life. Sextus Empiricus distinguishes two kinds of assent: one suspended across the board and one involved with daily living. The first is an act of will based on appreciation of reasons; the second is a causal effect of appearances. Hume makes the (...)
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  9. Caring: Gender-Sensitive Ethics.Peta Bowden - 1996 - New York: Routledge.
    In _Caring_, Peta Bowden extends and challenges recent debates on feminist ethics. She takes issue with accounts of the ethics of care that focus on alleged principles of caring rather than analysing caring in practice. Caring, Bowden argues, must be understood by 'working through examples'. Following this approach, Bowden explores four main caring practices: mothering, friendship, nursing and citizenship. Her analysis of the differences and similarities in these practices - their varying degrees of intimacy and reciprocity, formality and informality, (...)
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  10. Hume, Distinctions of Reason, and Differential Resemblance.Donald L. M. Baxter - 2010 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 82 (1):156-182.
    Hume discusses the distinction of reason to explain how we distinguish things inseparable, and so identical, e.g., the color and figure of a white globe. He says we note the respect in which the globe is similar to a white cube and dissimilar to a black sphere, and the respect in which it is dissimilar to the first and similar to the second. Unfortunately, Hume takes these differing respects of resemblance to be identical with the white globe itself. Contradiction results, (...)
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  11.  9
    On surface and place: between architecture, textiles and photography.Peta Carlin - 2018 - London ; New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    On Surface and Place is a rich and poetic exploration of surfaces which foregrounds their significance in our understanding and experience of place. Adopting weaving as its overarching metaphor, it departs from Gottfried Semper's discussion of correspondences between architecture and textiles, and emerges from the reading of photographs, a swatch of Harris Tweed and curtain wall façade juxtaposed. In juxtaposing the fabric of the city with the weave of Harris Tweed the book charts an original course across a range of (...)
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  12. Deputy Director, Northern Metropolitan Health Region, Department of Health, New South Wales [The views expressed in this paper are those of the author and not nec-essarily those of the Department of Health, New South Wales.].Peta Colebatch - forthcoming - The Tiniest Newborns: Survival-What Price?.
     
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  13. Hume on Space and Time.Donald L. M. Baxter - 2016 - In Paul Russell (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of David Hume. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Understanding Hume’s theory of space and time requires suspending our own. When theorizing, we think of space as one huge array of locations, which external objects might or might not occupy. Time adds another dimension to this vast array. For Hume, in contrast, space is extension in general, where being extended is having parts arranged one right next to the other like the pearls on a necklace. Time is duration in general, where having duration is having parts occurring one aft (...)
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  14.  18
    Infant-directed speech is consistent with teaching.Baxter S. Eaves, Naomi H. Feldman, Thomas L. Griffiths & Patrick Shafto - 2016 - Psychological Review 123 (6):758-771.
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  15. Composition as Identity.Aaron J. Cotnoir & Donald L. M. Baxter (eds.) - 2014 - Oxford: Oxford University Press USA.
    This collection of essays is the first of its kind to focus on the relationship between composition and identity. Twelve original articles--written by internationally renowned scholars and rising stars in the field--argue for and against the controversial doctrine that composition is identity.--Provided by publisher.
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  16. Ethical Attention: Accumulating Understandings.Peta Bowden - 2002 - European Journal of Philosophy 6 (1):59-77.
  17.  25
    Expecting the unexpected: Goal recognition for rational and irrational agents.Peta Masters & Sebastian Sardina - 2021 - Artificial Intelligence 297 (C):103490.
  18. Julius barnathan.Richard H. Baxter, William S. Blair, Ab Blankenship, Francis G. Boehm, Joseph E. Bradley, Rf Creighton, Cornelius Dubois, Jay Eliasberg, George S. Fabian & Robert Garsen - 1965 - In Karl W. Linsenmann (ed.), Proceedings. St. Louis, Lutheran Academy for Scholarship.
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  19.  63
    What Constitutes Adequate Public Consultation? Xenotransplantation Proceeds in Australia.Peta S. Cook - 2011 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 8 (1):67-70.
    The Australian moratorium on human clinical trials of xenotransplantation was lifted in December 2009. This decision follows public consultations on whether xenotransplantation should or should not proceed in Australia, which occurred in 2002 and 2004. However, the public consultation, in its design and process, did not facilitate meaningful public engagement and involvement, thus marginalising the public and devaluing their social experiences and diverse knowledges. This brief article questions what constitutes adequate public consultation, and suggests that consensus conferences or citizen juries (...)
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  20.  17
    Mark T. Conard, ed.(2007) The Philosophy of Martin Scorsese.Linda PetÅ - 2007 - Film-Philosophy 11 (3).
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  21. Machinic Assemblages.Peta Malins - 2004 - Janus Head 7 (1):84-104.
    The body conceived of as a machinic assemblage becomes a body that is multiple. Its function or meaning no longer depends on an interior truth or identity, but on the particular assemblages it forms with other bodies. In this paper I draw on the work of Deleuze and Guattari to explore what happens to the drug using body when it is rethought as a machinic assemblage. Following an exploration of how the body of the drug user is put together and (...)
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  22. Abstraction, inseparability, and identity.Donald L. M. Baxter - 1997 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 57 (2):307-330.
    Berkeley and Hume object to Locke's account of abstraction. Abstraction is separating in the mind what cannot be separated in reality. Their objection is that if a is inseparable in reality from b, then the idea of a is inseparable from the idea of b. The former inseparability is the reason for the latter. In most interpretations, however, commentators leave the former unexplained in explaining the latter. This article assumes that Berkeley and Hume present a unified front against Locke. Hume (...)
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  23. Loose identity and becoming something else.Donald L. M. Baxter - 2001 - Noûs 35 (4):592–601.
    Armstrong has loose identity be an equivalence relation, yet in cases of something becoming something else, loose identity is not transitive. My alternate account has an attribution of loose identity be really two: a true attribution of an underlying relation (perhaps not transitive) and a false attribution--a Humean feigning-of strict identity. The feigning may become less appropriate as the underlying relation grows more distant. What makes it appropriate initially is that the underlying relation supports a predictable change in some collective. (...)
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  24.  18
    The ethics of nursing care and ‘the ethic of care’.Peta Lyn Bowden - 1995 - Nursing Inquiry 2 (1):10-21.
    Recent discussions concerning the ethics of nursing care have gained added impetus from articulations of die so‐called ‘ethic of carersquo; in moral philosophy. This paper addresses the question of recognizing and elaborating the ethics of nursing care by exploring the problems and the possibilities of diese intersecting discourses. In the first part of the paper it is argued that appropriation of ‘the ethic of care’ by nursing theorists as the central value of nursing, in contradistinction to other moral values such (...)
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  25. Hume on Abstraction and Identity.Donald L. M. Baxter - 2017 - In Stefano Di Bella & Tad M. Schmaltz (eds.), The Problem of Universals in Early Modern Philosophy. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. pp. 285-304.
    Hume’s critique of traditional abstraction entails a result that undercuts his account of the idea of identity. To save his account of identity, Hume would have to accept abstraction as well. What links these two discussions is (1) Hume’s widely shared assumption that traditional abstraction is separating in the mind what are inseparable in reality, (2) his principle that what are different are mentally separable, and (3) his principle that we cannot conceive of the impossible. Given these, it will turn (...)
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  26.  7
    Philosophical Theories.Brian Baxter - 1978 - Philosophical Quarterly 28 (110):81-83.
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  27.  62
    On some models of modal logics.R. J. Baxter - 1973 - Notre Dame Journal of Formal Logic 14 (1):121-122.
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  28.  9
    From Descartes to Wittgenstein: A Short History of Modern Philosophy.Brian Baxter - 1983 - Philosophical Quarterly 33 (133):411-412.
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  29.  23
    Modern Moral Philosophy.Brian Baxter - 1984 - Philosophical Quarterly 34 (137):509-509.
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  30.  9
    11 A Sociality of Death: Towards a New Materialist Politics and Ethics of Life Itself.Peta Hinton - 2017 - In Vicki Kirby (ed.), What If Culture Was Nature All Along? Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 223-247.
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  31.  14
    Codes of Ethics.Peta Bowden & Anne Surma - 2003 - Professional Ethics, a Multidisciplinary Journal 11 (1):19-36.
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  32. City folds : injecting drug use and urban space.Peta Malins - 2007 - In Anna Hickey-Moody & Peta Malins (eds.), Deleuzian Encounters: Studies in Contemporary Social Issues. Palgrave-Macmillan.
     
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  33.  53
    Happiness and Dependency: Reflections on Happiness: Personhood, Community, Purpose by Pedro Alexis Tabensky.Peta Bowden - 2004 - South African Journal of Philosophy 23 (4):394-401.
    This paper argues that Pedro Tabenksy's Aristotelean understanding of true happiness overlooks the constitutive significance of the virtues and values of relationships of radical dependency. Tabensky's focus on the rational and contextual aspects of personhood as the locus for our social interdependence results in friendship relationships being taken as paradigmatic for social engagements. Through a sketch of some of the unique dimensions of the asymmetrical relations upon which our bodily functioning and personal identities inevitably depend, I show that this focus (...)
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  34.  11
    Politics of fear, fury and emotional censorship in theatrical performance: Belarus Free Theatre.Peta Tait - 2022 - Thesis Eleven 169 (1):82-97.
    This article argues that political performance reveals the significance of the emotions, emotional feelings, affect and mood in relation to the censorship of democratic expression. Belarus Free Theatre performers spoke about fear as they gave personal accounts of imprisonment and undertook extreme physical action on aerial ropes, creating performances that evoked both emotionally felt responses and bodily affect. The aesthetic mood effect in these performances shifted from amusing audiences with the absurdity of political censorship to alarming them with the terror (...)
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  35. Lucretian conclusions.Peta Fowler - 2007 - In Monica Gale (ed.), Lucretius. New York: Oxford University Press.
     
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  36. Not a matter of will : a narrative and cross-cultural exploration of maternal ambivalence.Peta White, Sandra Wooltorton & Marilyn Palmer - 2018 - In Alison L. Black & Susanne Garvis (eds.), Women activating agency in academia: metaphors, manifestos and memoir. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  37.  11
    Using biomarkers in acute medicine to prevent hearing loss: should this require specific consent?Peta Coulson-Smith & Anneke Lucassen - 2020 - Journal of Medical Ethics 46 (8):536-537.
    In this round table response, we discuss some of the problems inherent in insisting on specific consent for an activity that needs to happen rapidly as part of a package of care. The Human Tissue Authority consider that specific consent is mandatory to assess which antibiotics are appropriate on the neonatal unit, but this insistence may actually limit the autonomy which consent aims to promote. While genetic testing to determine which child will react adversely to particular antibiotics has been available (...)
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  38.  3
    CHAPTER 10 Curated Panel: ‘New Materialisms across the Natural Sciences and Humanities: Trajectories, Inspirations and Stirrings’.Peta Hinton, Dagmar Lorenz-Meyer, Josef Barla, Veit Braun, Claude Draude, Waltraud Ernst, Xin Liu, Natasha Mauthner, Sigrid Schmitz, Jiřina Šmejkalová & Marianna Szczygielska - 2024 - In Felicity Colman & Iris van der Tuin (eds.), Methods and Genealogies of New Materialisms. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 212-238.
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  39.  52
    The Divine Horizon: Rethinking Political Community in Luce Irigaray's “Divine Women”.Peta Hinton - 2013 - Hypatia 28 (3):436-451.
    The question of the transcendent, that which operates above and beyond the material stuff of the world, remains an enduring one for feminism, bound up as it is with the foundations of feminism's corporeal politics and the definition of its political subject. With the specificity of the situated and meaningful body grounding feminist politics, the universal and neutral status of the speaking subject has been diagnosed as masculine, and unable to properly account for sexed differences. On this basis, political community, (...)
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  40. Hume's Difficulty: Time and Identity in the Treatise.Donald L. M. Baxter - 2008 - New York: Routledge.
    In this volume--the first, focused study of Hume on time and identity--Baxter focuses on Hume’s treatment of the concept of numerical identity, which is central to Hume's famous discussions of the external world and personal identity. Hume raises a long unappreciated, and still unresolved, difficulty with the concept of identity: how to represent something as "a medium betwixt unity and number." Superficial resemblance to Frege’s famous puzzle has kept the difficulty in the shadows. Hume’s way of addressing it makes (...)
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  41. Eva Feder Kittay and Ellen K. Feder, eds., The Subject of Care: Feminist Perspectives on Dependency Reviewed by.Peta Bowden - 2003 - Philosophy in Review 23 (5):345-347.
  42. Ecological thinking, advocacy and priwilege.“.Peta Bowden - 2008 - Ethics, Place and Environment. A Journal of Philosophy and Geography 11:49-56.
     
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  43.  10
    First page preview.Peta Bowden - 2008 - Ethics, Place and Environment 11 (1).
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  44. Naomi Scheman and Peg O'Connor, eds., Feminist Interpretations of Ludwig Wittgenstein Reviewed by.Peta Bowden - 2004 - Philosophy in Review 24 (1):53-55.
     
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  45. Theoretical care: feminism, theory and ethics.Peta Bowden - 1993 - Critical Review (University of Melbourne) 33:129-47.
  46.  12
    Understanding Feminism.Peta Bowden & Jane Mummery - 2009 - Routledge.
    "Understanding Feminism" provides an accessible guide to one of the most important and contested movements in progressive modern thought. Presenting feminism as a dynamic, multi-faceted and adaptive movement that has evolved in response to the changing practical and theoretical problems faced by women, the authors take a problem-oriented approach that maps the complex strands of feminist thinking in relation to women's struggles for equal recognition and rights, and freedom from oppressive constraints of sex, self-expression and autonomy. Each chapter focuses on (...)
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  47. Identity in the loose and popular sense.Donald L. M. Baxter - 1988 - Mind 97 (388):575-582.
    This essay interprets Butler’s distinction between identity in the loose and popular sense and in the strict and philosophical sense. Suppose there are different standards for counting the same things. Then what are two distinct things counting strictly may be one and the same thing counting loosely. Within a given standard identity is one-one. But across standards it is many-one. An alternative interpretation using the parts-whole relation fails, because that relation should be understood as many-one identity. Another alternative making identity (...)
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  48.  20
    In Defense of Best Interests: When Parents and Clinicians Disagree.Peta Coulson-Smith, Angela Fenwick & Anneke Lucassen - 2018 - American Journal of Bioethics 18 (8):67-69.
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  49. Self‐Differing, Aspects, and Leibniz's Law.Donald L. M. Baxter - 2018 - Noûs 52:900-920.
    I argue that an individual has aspects numerically identical with it and each other that nonetheless qualitatively differ from it and each other. This discernibility of identicals does not violate Leibniz's Law, however, which concerns only individuals and is silent about their aspects. They are not in its domain of quantification. To argue that there are aspects I will appeal to the internal conflicts of conscious beings. I do not mean to imply that aspects are confined to such cases, but (...)
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  50.  29
    Rat running the G20: collective intelligence for navigating the disrupted city.Carlos Estrada-Grajales, Peta Mitchell, Marcus Foth & Christine Satchell - 2018 - AI and Society 33 (1):133-146.
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