747 research outputs found
16: Developing And Renewing Department Chair Leadership
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/138885/1/tia200608.pd
LâĂ©volution de la notion dâexpĂ©rience chez Boullier et Condillac sur la question de lâĂąme des bĂȘtes
Le dualisme mĂ©taphysique de Descartes en sĂ©parant lâĂąme du corps comme deux substances distinctes faisait de lâhomme un ĂȘtre raisonnable, mais au prĂ©judice des animaux qui sâexpliquaient par tout un jeu de mĂ©canismes. Il nâen subsistait pas moins un problĂšme concernant une certaine ressemblance ou analogie remarquable entre les humains et les bĂȘtes. Quâen Ă©tait-il du caractĂšre sensible des animaux qui semblait si Ă©vident ? On sâest souvent servi au XVIIIe siĂšcle de la notion dâexpĂ©rience pour justifier lâexistence de lâĂąme des bĂȘtes, ce qui le diffĂ©rencie nettement du siĂšcle prĂ©cĂ©dent, marquĂ© par lâinnĂ©isme cartĂ©sien. GrĂące en grande partie Ă la propagation des idĂ©es de John Locke en France, la notion dâexpĂ©rience se situera au centre mĂȘme de la pensĂ©e des LumiĂšres et fera partie intĂ©grante de sa nouvelle mĂ©thode. Lâune des rĂ©ponses les plus Ă©laborĂ©es du XVIIIe siĂšcle au systĂšme des animauxÂautomates de Descartes et au mĂ©canisme de ses successeurs fut proposĂ©e par David-Renaud Boullier dans son Essai philosophique sur lâĂąme des bĂȘtes (1728 ; deuxiĂšme Ă©dition en 1737). (Lâarticle AME DES BĂTES (1751) de lâabbĂ© Yvon dans lâEncyclopĂ©die reprend par endroits les thĂšses, voire les exemples, de Boullier presque mot Ă mot). Ătienne Bonnot, abbĂ© de Condillac, Ă©crira son TraitĂ© des animaux en 1755. Les uns et les autres croyaient Ă lâexistence de lâĂąme des bĂȘtes. Mais, de Boullier Ă Condillac, reprĂ©sentants de courants de pensĂ©e majeurs du siĂšcle sur cette question, un changement fondamental sâopĂšre dans la notion dâexpĂ©rience qui « évolue » entre la premiĂšre et la deuxiĂšme moitiĂ© du XVIIIe siĂšcle. Les affinitĂ©s et les divergences de leurs Ă©crits et finalement leurs approches diffĂ©rentes de la notion dâexpĂ©rience tournent autour des degrĂ©s de complexitĂ©, de nĂ©cessitĂ© et de hiĂ©rarchie que les deux auteurs y constatent. On en conclut que leur vision du monde, oĂč la sensibilitĂ© ne se limite pas seulement aux hommes, est de plus en plus complexe et commence Ă ĂȘtre quelque peu problĂ©matique (malgrĂ© lâoccasionalisme des deux auteurs) et de moins en moins hiĂ©rarchisĂ©e.The evolution of the notion of experience in the writings of Boullier and Condillac on animal soulsBy separating the body from the soul as two distinct substances, Descartesâs metaphysical dualism underlined manâs rational nature, but at the expense of animals, whose behaviour was explained in purely mechanical terms. There remained, however, a problematic analogy between humans and animals. What could one make of the obvious sensitive character of animals ? Unlike their predecessors, who appealed to Cartesian innate ideas, 18th-century thinkers used the notion of experience â which became central to Enlightenment thought, primarily becase Lockeâs ideas were disseminated in France â to justify the existence of animal souls. The most important 18th-century responses to Descartesâs system of animal-automata and to his disciplesâ mechanism were David-Renaud Boullierâs Essai philosophique sur lâĂąme des bĂȘtes (1728, 2nd ed. 1737), used heavily and even copied in Yvonâs EncyclopĂ©die article AME DES BĂTES (1751), and Condillacâs TraitĂ© des animaux. Both believed in the existence of animal soul, but from the former to the latter the notion of experience underwent a fundamental transformation, as it âevolvedâ betwen the first and the second halves of the 18th Century. The similarities and differences in their writings, and ultimately their different approaches to the notion of experience, result from the degree of complexity, necessity and hierarchy that they see in it. Their world view, in which sensibility is not limited to humans, becomes increasingly complex and somewhat problematic as it becomes less and less hierarchical
The Enlightenment Past: Reconstructing Eighteenth-Century French Thought
Ă un moment donnĂ© de son nouveau livre, D. Brewer pose la question suivante : « Se rappeler le siĂšcle des LumiĂšres, nâest-ce pas ouvrir lâespace dâune mise en question troublante ? » (p. 146 ; nous traduisons ici et ailleurs dans ce compte-rendu les citations originales du texte en anglais).Cette question, en plus des nombreuses autres quâil pose, donne Ă son ouvrage un ton interrogatif qui reflĂšte un profond malaise et scepticisme dans toute tentative dâinterprĂ©ter les LumiĂšres de façon « tĂ©..
16: A ResearchâBased Rubric for Developing Statements of Teaching Philosophy
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/138851/1/tia200512.pd
The Role of Social Capital, Collective Efficacy, and Webs of Support in Supporting First Year Students: Experiences From the Exploratory Studies Program at the University of Nebraska Omaha
Historically, graduation rates for students entering the University of Nebraska Omaha as âundecidedâ were abysmal. The Exploratory Studies Program was created to support students who enter the university without a major (Explorers), half of them being first-generation, who often equate their indecision with not belonging at the university and face an array of barriers in higher education. Explorers embedded in a âweb of supportâ of faculty, peer mentors, and advisors help to normalize the process of finding a best-fit major and navigating the complexities of academia, well-being, and future career development. The current article employs sociological and human development paradigms to demonstrate how social capital, collective efficacy, and webs of support can improve student belonging in their first year in university and help buffer barriers to success in higher education. In addition, this framework offers educators a powerful tool to work collaboratively with âundecidedâ students to augment persistence toward graduation
The physical activity experiences of men with serious mental illness: Three short stories
Objectives: Although a considerable amount of research has explored the effects of physical activity on mental health, the voices of people with mental illness have been largely excluded from published reports. Through this study we aim to foreground service users' voices in order to shed light on the personal and subjective nature of the relationship between physical activity and serious mental illness (SMI). Methods: An interpretive case study approach was used to explore in depth the physical activity experiences of three men with SMI. Creative analytic practice was used to write three creative non-fictions which, as first-person narratives, foreground the participants' voices. Results: We present three short stories in an effort to communicate participants' personal and subjective experiences of physical activity in an accessible, engaging, and evocative manner. We hope to: (i) provide potentially motivating physical activity success stories for others who live with SMI; (ii) increase awareness among mental health professionals of the possibilities of physical activity; and (iii) provide an empathetic understanding of possibilities and problems of living with SMI which may help challenge the stigma surrounding mental illness. Conclusions: For us, the stories communicate the diversity and difference inherent in the ways men with SMI experience physical activity. We reflect on how the short story form allows these differences to be preserved and respected. We resist making further interpretations of the stories preferring instead to encourage the reader to form her or his own conclusions. © 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Characterization of Rat Meibomian Gland Ion and Fluid Transport
We establish novel primary rat meibomian gland (MG) cell culture systems and explore the ion transport activities of the rat MG
X-BoxâBinding Protein 1 and Innate Immune Responses of Human Cystic Fibrosis Alveolar Macrophages
Rationale: Alveolar macrophages (AMs) play a key role in host defense to inhaled bacterial pathogens, in part by secreting inflammatory mediators. Cystic fibrosis (CF) airways exhibit a persistent, robust inflammatory response that may contribute to the pathophysiology of CF. Recent findings have linked endoplasmic reticulum stress responses mediated by inositol-requiring enzyme 1αâdependent messenger RNA splicing (activation) of X-boxâbinding protein-1 (XBP-1s) to inflammation in peripheral macrophages. However, the role of XBP-1s in CF AM function is not known
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