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Should Chinese intellectuals abandon the style of medieval times?Contemporary Chinese Thought 29 (2): 63-71. 1998.
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Why I Want to Write', reprinted from'My Spiritual GardenContemporary Chinese Thought 30 (3): 41-46. 1999.
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'Adultery is a Capital Offence'', reprinted from'My Spiritual GardenContemporary Chinese Thought 30 (3): 57-60. 1999.
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'Some Ethical Questions Relating to Homosexuality', reprinted from 'My Spiritual Garden'Contemporary Chinese Thought 30 (3): 69-72. 1999.
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My Views on the'Old Three Classes'', reprinted from'My Spiritual GardenContemporary Chinese Thought 30 (3): 78-82. 1999.
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The Pleasure of Thought', reprinted from'My Spiritual GardenContemporary Chinese Thought 30 (3): 29-40. 1999.
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""My Views on 'Chinese Traditional Studies", reprinted from 'My Spiritual GardenContemporary Chinese Thought 30 (3): 23-28. 1999.
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My Views on the Novel', reprinted from'My Spiritual GardenContemporary Chinese Thought 30 (3): 47-49. 1999.
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Karaoke and the Braying Village', reprinted from'My Spiritual GardenContemporary Chinese Thought 30 (3): 54-56. 1999.
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Cultural Debates', reprinted from'My Spiritual GardenContemporary Chinese Thought 30 (3): 13-18. 1999.
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Beyond the systemic changes (The question of the" true significance of man")Contemporary Chinese Thought 31 (4): 62-70. 2000.
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13The high sex ratio in china: What do the chinese think?Journal of Biosocial Science 44 (1): 121-125. 2012.
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11Organ Donation by Capital Prisoners in China: Reflections in Confucian EthicsJournal of Medicine and Philosophy 35 (2): 197-212. 2010.This article discusses the practice and development of organ donation by capital prisoners in China. It analyzes the issue of informed consent regarding organ donation from capital prisoners in light of Confucian ethics and expounds the point that under the influence of Confucianism, China is a country that attaches great importance to the role of the family in practicing informed consent in various areas, the area of organ donation from capital prisoners included. It argues that a proper form o…Read more
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36Morphology and orientation of iron oxide precipitates in epitaxial BiFeO3thin films grown under two non-optimized oxygen pressuresPhilosophical Magazine 90 (34): 4551-4567. 2010.
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Turning Time from Enemy into an Ally Using the Pomodoro TechniqueIn Darja Šmite, Nils Brede Moe & Pär J. Ågerfalk (eds.), Agility Across Time and Space, Springer Verlag. pp. 149-166. 2010.
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12Genetic and Environmental Influences on Gambling: A Meta-Analysis of Twin StudiesFrontiers in Psychology 8. 2017.
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24Leave or Stay as a Risky Choice: Effects of Salary Reference Points and Anchors on Turnover IntentionFrontiers in Psychology 9. 2018.
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6Reference point-dependent tradeoffs in intertemporal decision makingBehavioral and Brain Sciences 28 (5): 663-664. 2005.We agree with Ainslie's general approach to intertemporal choices and self-control. However, we argue that a concept of “will” is superfluous in explaining tradeoffs between SS (smaller and sooner) and LL (larger and later) rewards in a framework of temporal goal setting and goal aggregation. We provide an alternative framework of reference point-dependent tradeoffs between SS and LL options.
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26Microstructure of the potentially multiferroic Fe/BaTiO3epitaxial interfacePhilosophical Magazine 92 (14): 1733-1747. 2012.
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18Low-cycle fatigue small crack initiation and propagation behaviour of cast magnesium alloys based on in-situ SEM observationsPhilosophical Magazine 86 (11): 1581-1596. 2006.
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25How is maternal survival related to reproductive success?Behavioral and Brain Sciences 22 (2): 236-237. 1999.Campbell's target article is a stimulating attempt to extend our understanding of sex differences in risk-taking behaviors. However, Campbell does not succeed in demonstrating that her account adds explanatory power to those (e.g., Daly & Wilson 1994) previously proposed. In particular, little effort was made to explore the causal links between survival (staying alive) and reproduction.
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8From Simon 's scissors for rationality to abc's adaptive toolboxBehavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (5): 765-766. 2000.The smartness of simple heuristics depends upon their fit to the structure of task environments. Being fast and frugal becomes psychologically demanding when a decision goal is bounded by the risk distribution in a task environment. The lack of clear goals and prioritized cues in a decision problem may lead to the use of simple but irrational heuristics. Future research should focus more on how people use and integrate simple heuristics in the face of goal conflict under risk.
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5Conservation combats exploitation: Choices within an evolutionary frameworkBehavioral and Brain Sciences 37 (4): 437-438. 2014.Intentional change when viewed as making a risky or intertemporal choice with evolutionary relevance helps us understand its successes and its failures. To promote future-oriented ecological rationality requires establishing a linkage between nongenetic, cultural, and symbolic selections and genetic adaptations. Coupled with biophilic instinct, intentional conservation is more likely to prevail against evolved desires of environmental exploitation.
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11Beyond “pardonable errors by subjects and unpardonable ones by psychologists”Behavioral and Brain Sciences 23 (5): 699-700. 2000.Violations and biases relative to normative principles of rationality tend to occur when the structure of task environments is novel or the decision goals are in conflict. The two blades of bounded rationality, the structure of task environments and the computational capacities of the actor, can sharpen the conceptual distinctions between the sources of the normative and descriptive gap.
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12A pointer's hypothesis of general intelligence evolved from domain-specific demandsBehavioral and Brain Sciences 40. 2017.
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26The role of internal stresses on the plastic deformation of the Al–Mg–Si–Cu alloy AA6111Philosophical Magazine 88 (5): 621-640. 2008.