2,365 research outputs found

    Heartbeat Horizon: Saunders\u27s Presentation to Executive Board of Directors Sept. 2012

    No full text
    Speech/presentation by Saunders to the Board of Directors. Outlines how Heartbeat changed Saunders\u27s view of God, Jesus, the Bible, and the church; the importance of vision and the compelling drive of Heartbeat\u27s vision; and a proposal for Heartbeat for the next three years of 2012-2015 and the role Saunders feels he should play. Future goals include a book Saunders wants to author, a Heartbeat Institute, and a plan for laying up content and marketing it to a wide audience. Typed presentation also contains notes and revisions handwritten by Saunders

    Photograph of Benk Green and Tom B. Saunders III at Saunders Ranch Museum

    No full text
    Photograph at the Saunders Ranch Museum of author Benk Green and Tom B. Saunders III

    Opt-out organ donation without presumptions

    No full text
    This paper defends an 'opt-out' scheme for organ procurement, by distinguishing this system from 'presumed consent' (which the author regards as an erroneous justification of it). It, first, stresses the moral importance of increasing the supply of organs and argues that making donation easier need not conflict with altruism. It then goes on to explore one way that donation can be increased, namely by adopting an opt-out system, in which cadaveric organs are used unless the deceased (or their family) registered an objection. Such policies are often labelled 'presumed consent', but it is argued that critics are right to be sceptical of this idea -- consent is shown to be an action, rather than a mental attitude, and thus not something that can be presumed. Either someone has consented or they have not, whatever their attitude to the use of their organs. Thankfully, an opt-out scheme need not rest on the presumption of consent. Actual consent can be given implicitly, by one's actions, so it is argued that the failure to register an objection (given certain background conditions) should itself be taken as sign of consent. Therefore, it is permissible to use the organs of someone who did not opt out, because they have -- by their silence -- actually consented

    Prof. Peter Saunders, 1992

    No full text
    Prof. Peter Saunders, one of the world's leading urban sociologists and author of six books, including his most recent book, 'A Nation of Home Owners'. Prof. Saunders gave a public seminar on his research into the effects of privatisation of the Water Industry in the United Kingdom. Photograph originally appeared in the 'Staff News', 30th April 1992

    J. Saunders Redding, circa 1970

    No full text
    A portrait photo of author Jay Saunders Redding. Written on verso: Saunders Redding (author) - first AA faculty at an Ivy League (Brown).The Atlanta University Center Robert W. Woodruff Library acknowledges the generous support of the Joseph & Evelyn Lowery Institute for Justice and Human Rights, the Joseph Echols Lowery Irrevocable Trust, and other donors in supporting the processing and digitization of Morehouse College's Joseph Echols and Evelyn Gibson Lowery Collection

    Still kicking: George Saunders and ‘shadow realism’

    No full text
    International audienceEven as George Saunders jettisons the usual trappings of literary realism, he does so not in order to debunk authorship and authority (cf. Barthes) or to reduce a story to the language of its own telling. Rather, he reasserts the writer’s moral role, and thereby defines a space for the figure of the author. With reference to Lionel Trilling’s defence of Nathaniel Hawthorne and ‘shadow realism’ this article situates Saunders in a literary tradition which challenges reductive conceptions of mimesis. It cites examples from Saunders’ short stories and novellas (CivilWarLand in Bad Decline, 1996; Pastoralia, 2000; In Persuasion Nation, 2006), and also addresses an author-sponsored website, with attention to how Internet materials are not only a promotion of Saunders’ work, but also an extension of it. Saunders foregrounds the referential workings of language while remaining attached to a sense that language is a tool for moral questions

    Review: fire impacts on Australian invertebrates

    No full text
    Supplemental materials for: Insufficient evidence limits understanding of increasing bushfire risk on Australian invertebrates Manu E. Saunders, Philip S. Barton, James R. M. Bickerstaff, Lindsey Frost, Tanya Latty, Bryan D. Lessard, Elizabeth C. Lowe, Juanita Rodriguez, Thomas E. White, Kate D. L. Umbers Review of empirical studies measuring fire effects on Australian invertebrates. Review conducted at Sysrev: https://sysrev.com/u/992/p/2455

    Tales of a large family - 1974

    No full text
    Tales of a Large Family - 1974 By Kathryn Saunders Hibb

    Review: Artist as Author: Action and Intent in Late-Modernist American Painting

    No full text
    Book review of Artist as Author: Action and Intent in Late-Modernist American Painting by Christa Noel Robbins. University of Chicago Press, June 2021. 256 p. Ill. ISBN 9780226752952 (h/c), $45.00. Reviewed November 2021 by Heather Saunders, Dean of Libraries and Archives, Acadia University, [email protected]

    How to teach moral theories in applied ethics

    No full text
    Recent discussion has focused on whether or not to teach moral theories, and, if yes, to what extent. In this piece the author argues that the criticisms of teaching moral theories raised by Rob Lawlor should lead us to reconsider not whether but how to teach moral theories. It seems that most of the problems Lawlor identifies derive from an uncritical, theory-led approach to teaching. It is suggested that we might instead start by discussing practical cases or the desiderata of a successful moral theory, and then build up to comparing theories such as consequentialism, deontology, and so on. In this way, theories are taught but students do not take them to be the alpha and omega of moral thinking
    corecore