Results 261 to 270 of about 7,484,214 (317)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
The Design Journal, 2019
The everyday expression, ‘herding cats’ comes to mind when attempting to communicate the meaning of design in terms of ‘value’, ‘values’ and ‘valuing’.
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The everyday expression, ‘herding cats’ comes to mind when attempting to communicate the meaning of design in terms of ‘value’, ‘values’ and ‘valuing’.
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Ethics, Place & Environment, 1999
Abstract Land use planning decisions are recognised as being value judgements, yet the questions of what values and whose values are rarely addressed. Values may be absolute or relative, intrinsic or extrinsic, passionately emotional or coolly reasoned, and ‘measured’ in a multitude of ways: by rarity, economics, social or aesthetic interpretations ...
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Abstract Land use planning decisions are recognised as being value judgements, yet the questions of what values and whose values are rarely addressed. Values may be absolute or relative, intrinsic or extrinsic, passionately emotional or coolly reasoned, and ‘measured’ in a multitude of ways: by rarity, economics, social or aesthetic interpretations ...
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2021
Abstract Many decisions are done intuitively. Sometimes, this works well, and sometimes they lead us astray. Tools of systems engineering recognize human biases and ask about what we do best—specify what is most important to us under the circumstances.
Charles E. Phelps, Guru Madhavan
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Abstract Many decisions are done intuitively. Sometimes, this works well, and sometimes they lead us astray. Tools of systems engineering recognize human biases and ask about what we do best—specify what is most important to us under the circumstances.
Charles E. Phelps, Guru Madhavan
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Journal of Health Communication, 2008
Nearly a century ago in 1913, Frederick Gates challenged the Rockefeller Foundation's board at its first meeting: “If science and education are the brain and nervous system of civilization, health ...
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Nearly a century ago in 1913, Frederick Gates challenged the Rockefeller Foundation's board at its first meeting: “If science and education are the brain and nervous system of civilization, health ...
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Economic value + environmental value + social value = ?
Interdisciplinary Environmental Review, 2004In today's business world, the successful application of performance measurement has been one of the hallmarks of leading–edge organisations. Performance measurement is implemented to gain insight into, and make judgments about, an organisation and the effectiveness and efficiency of its programs.
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Journal of Moral Education, 1993
Abstract This paper argues that an explicit distinction should be made between two senses in which we can say, as a retrospective judgement, that an individual “had the values of generosity, universal friendship and humour” (say). It is argued that there was previously an established, selective, “hard” sense of “having values” which has been all but ...
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Abstract This paper argues that an explicit distinction should be made between two senses in which we can say, as a retrospective judgement, that an individual “had the values of generosity, universal friendship and humour” (say). It is argued that there was previously an established, selective, “hard” sense of “having values” which has been all but ...
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"NLRA Values, Labor Values, American Values"
2005The National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) was drafted to be far more than a technocratic exercise. The NLRA's policies do play the role - or should play the role - of any legislative policy: providing guidance in interpreting and applying the law. However, the important social, justice, and economic values expressed in - and underpinning - the NLRA's ...
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2015
In February 2009, as the magnitude of the aftermath of the financial collapse of 2008 was becoming chillingly clear, the New York Times ran a story headlined, “In Tough Times, the Humanities Must Justify Their Worth.” It remains one of my favorites in the “crisis of the humanities” genre, and I think it deserves a separate treatment here, for three ...
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In February 2009, as the magnitude of the aftermath of the financial collapse of 2008 was becoming chillingly clear, the New York Times ran a story headlined, “In Tough Times, the Humanities Must Justify Their Worth.” It remains one of my favorites in the “crisis of the humanities” genre, and I think it deserves a separate treatment here, for three ...
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Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 2018
AbstractDoris argues that an agent is responsible for her behavior only if that behavior expresses (a relevant subset of) the agent's values. This view has problems explaining responsibility for mistakes or episodes of forgetfulness. These problems highlight a conceptual problem with Doris's theory of responsible agency and give us reasons to prefer an
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AbstractDoris argues that an agent is responsible for her behavior only if that behavior expresses (a relevant subset of) the agent's values. This view has problems explaining responsibility for mistakes or episodes of forgetfulness. These problems highlight a conceptual problem with Doris's theory of responsible agency and give us reasons to prefer an
openaire +2 more sources

