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Agency (philosophy)

About: Agency (philosophy) is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 10461 publications have been published within this topic receiving 350831 citations. The topic is also known as: Thought & Human agency.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The debate concerning corporate moral agency is normally conducted through philosophical arguments in articles which argue from only one point of view as discussed by the authors, and the arguments in favour have more weight than arguments against.
Abstract: The debate concerning corporate moral agency is normally conducted through philosophical arguments in articles which argue from only one point of view. This paper summarises both the arguments for and against corporate moral agency and concludes from this that the arguments in favour have more weight. The paper also addresses the way in which the law in the U.K. and the U.S.A. currently views this issue and shows how it is supportive of the concept of corporate moral agency. The paper concludes by considering the implications of the debate for business ethics in general, and stakeholder theory and virtue ethics in particular.

120 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors use behavioral models and a unique survey of medical groups to analyze how group sociology influences physician incentive pay and behavior, and conclude that informal interactions among group members influence pay practices and behaviors.
Abstract: When working together, people engage in non-contractual and informal interactions that constitute the sociology of the group. We use behavioral models and a unique survey of medical groups to analyze how group sociology influences physician incentive pay and behavior. We conclude that informal interactions among group members influence pay practices and behaviors, but the relationship is complex. No single aspect of group sociology is entirely consistent with all the patterns in the data. Factors emphasized in the economic theory of agency, notably risk aversion, also shape pay policies, but these factors cannot account for all the observed empirical relationships.

120 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a review of how geographical concepts can help us better understand the development and effects of social movements is provided, and the most fruitful strategy for conceptualizing the geographical underpinnings of social movement would be to examine how issues of space, scale, and place affect the processes already identified in the established sociological and political science literature on social movements.
Abstract: This article aims to provide a review of how geographical concepts can help us better understand the development and effects of social movements. Geographers have been rather slow to analyze the specific processes and mechanisms that make it possible for people to cooperate and engage in sustained political struggles with rich and powerful adversaries. Not only has this inattention to social movements deprived the discipline of robust conceptual tools for analyzing contentious politics, it has also limited the discipline’s abilities to contend with broader theoretical issues concerning collective action and agency in the political arena. Recent research into social movements has begun to fill this void. The article maintains that the most fruitful strategy for conceptualizing the geographical underpinnings of social movements would be to examine how issues of space, scale, and place affect the processes already identified in the established sociological and political science literature on social movements.

120 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a sociohistorical theory of white spaces in advertising, showing how specific movements and social forces acted upon the meaning of this particular visual rhetorical device and how this meaning is today shared and understood by both producers of ads (ad agency creative directors) and the readers of advertisers (ordinary consumers).
Abstract: We seek to advance visual theory in the domain of commercial rhetoric (advertising) by demonstrating how objects and symbols derive meaning from their histories. We do this by examining a single visual trope common in advertising, white space. The choice of white space was purposeful in that it is not a picture and its history is both accessible and traceable. Our sociohistorical theory is supported by showing how specific movements and social forces acted upon the meaning of this particular visual rhetorical device and how this meaning is today shared and understood by both producers of ads (ad agency creative directors) and the readers of ads (ordinary consumers). We conclude with a discussion of the implications of this approach to rhetorical and other major theoretical formulations.

119 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: There is a significant gulf between expressed beliefs and intuitive religious cognition and evidence for a moralization bias of gods' minds, which is demonstrated the farther away from spirits' place of governance a moral behavior takes place, the less they know and care about it.

119 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20247
20235,872
202212,259
2021566
2020532
2019559