Results for 'Arianne Robichaud'

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  1.  7
    Habermas et la question de l'éducation.Arianne Robichaud - 2018 - [Québec]: Presses de l'Université Laval.
    "La pensée du théoricien allemand Jürgen Habermas figure parmi les plus importantes théories sociales issues du xxe siècle : toutefois, à ce jour, elle n’a inspiré qu’un nombre restreint d’études portant spécifiquement sur leur articulation à l’éducation moderne et contemporaine. Cet ouvrage présente ainsi une analyse critique de la façon dont la théorie de l’agir communicationnel développée par Habermas s’arrime à une étude macro et microsociologique de l’éducation, soit une analyse de l’organisation politique, économique et idéologique des systèmes éducatifs occidentaux (...)
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  2.  39
    Colonial monuments as slurring speech acts.Arianne Shahvisi - 2017 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 55 (3):453-468.
    Journal of Philosophy of Education, EarlyView.
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  3. Responsibility - The Epistemic Condition.Philip Robichaud & Jan Wieland (eds.) - 2017 - Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    Philosophers have long agreed that moral responsibility might not only have a freedom condition, but also an epistemic condition. Moral responsibility and knowledge interact, but the question is exactly how. Ignorance might constitute an excuse, but the question is exactly when. Surprisingly enough, the epistemic condition has only recently attracted the attention of scholars, and it is high time for a full volume on the topic. The chapters in this volume address the following central questions. Does the epistemic condition require (...)
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  4.  41
    Engendering Harm: A Critique of Sex Selection For “Family Balancing”.Arianne Shahvisi - 2018 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 15 (1):123-137.
    The most benign rationale for sex selection is deemed to be “family balancing.” On this view, provided the sex distribution of an existing offspring group is “unbalanced,” one may legitimately use reproductive technologies to select the sex of the next child. I present four novel concerns with granting “family balancing” as a justification for sex selection: families or family subsets should not be subject to medicalization; sex selection for “family balancing” entrenches heteronormativity, inflicting harm in at least three specific ways; (...)
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  5.  57
    Towards responsible ejaculations: the moral imperative for male contraceptive responsibility.Arianne Shahvisi - 2020 - Journal of Medical Ethics 46 (5):328-336.
    In this paper, I argue that men should take primary responsibility for protecting against pregnancy. Male long-acting reversible contraceptives are currently in development, and, once approved, should be used as the standard method for avoiding pregnancy. Since women assume the risk of pregnancy when they engage in penis-in-vagina sex, men should do their utmost to ensure that their ejaculations are responsible, otherwise women shoulder a double burden of pregnancy risk plus contraceptive responsibility. Changing the expectations regarding responsibility for contraception would (...)
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  6.  33
    Quelle juste part ? Normativité, remplaçabilité et portée.David Robichaud & Patrick Turmel - 2014 - Philosophiques 41 (1):177-193.
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  7.  48
    Panpsychism: A Response to the Anthropocene Age.Arianne Conty - 2021 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 35 (1):27-49.
    Panpsychism, the view that the material elements of the universe have mental properties, has until quite recently remained in the periphery of the philosophical mainstream due to its blatant contradiction of normative Cartesian dualities, which divided the world into mental properties and material properties, that are devoid of value and sentience. The recent geological shift to the Anthropocene Age, in which human culture can be found in pesticide resistant mosquitoes and the ozone heavens, has undermined the foundations of Cartesian dualism, (...)
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  8.  37
    Meta‐analysis of the effectiveness of chronic care management for diabetes: investigating heterogeneity in outcomes.Arianne M. J. Elissen, Lotte M. G. Steuten, Lidwien C. Lemmens, Hanneke W. Drewes, Karin M. M. Lemmens, Jolanda A. C. Meeuwissen, Caroline A. Baan & Hubertus J. M. Vrijhoef - 2012 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 19 (5):753-762.
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  9. Is Ignorance of Climate Change Culpable?Philip Robichaud - 2017 - Science and Engineering Ethics 23 (5):1409-1430.
    Sometimes ignorance is an excuse. If an agent did not know and could not have known that her action would realize some bad outcome, then it is plausible to maintain that she is not to blame for realizing that outcome, even when the act that leads to this outcome is wrong. This general thought can be brought to bear in the context of climate change insofar as we think (a) that the actions of individual agents play some role in realizing (...)
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  10. On Culpable Ignorance and Akrasia.Philip Robichaud - 2014 - Ethics 125 (1):137-151,.
    A point of contention in recent discussions of the epistemic condition of moral responsibility is whether culpable ignorance must trace to akratic belief mismanagement. Neil Levy has recently defended an akrasia requirement by arguing that only an akratic agent has the capacity rationally to comply with epistemic expectations the violation of which contributes to her ignorance. In this paper I show that Levy’s argument is unsound. It is possible to have the relevant rational capacity in the absence of akrasia. I (...)
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  11.  30
    Attracting Attention: Right or Wrong.Allyson Robichaud - 2010 - American Journal of Bioethics 10 (9):66-67.
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  12.  18
    The ethical is political: Israel’s production of health scarcity in Gaza.Arianne Shahvisi - 2024 - Journal of Medical Ethics 50 (5):289-291.
    One of the most important motifs within (medical) ethics is scarcity: where essential (health) resources are scarce, urgent ethical questions arise. Over the last decade, at least 250 papers addressing the allocation of scarce health resources have been published in the Journal of Medical Ethics alone.1 In the typical set-up, the authors introduce a situation of scarcity and then review and adjudicate the available or recommended courses of action, sometimes through the lens of a pet normative ethical theory. It is (...)
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  13.  32
    How to Differentiate a Macintosh from a Mongoose.Arianne Conty - 2017 - Techné: Research in Philosophy and Technology 21 (2/3):295-318.
    Many scholars have understood the Anthropocene as confirming the patient work in the social sciences to deconstruct the nature/culture divide, for the human being is now present in the entire eco-system, from deet-resistant mosquitoes to the ozone hole in the heavens. Scholars like Bruno Latour have claimed that nature and culture have always been co-determined and thus that their separation was a case of modern bad faith with disastrous consequences. Because Latour blames this divide on the human exceptionalism that pitted (...)
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  14.  14
    À propos des limites de l'expertise psychiatrique pénale des victimes.Arianne Casanova - 2007 - Médecine et Droit 2007 (86):159-163.
  15.  31
    Cutting slack and cutting corners: an ethical and pragmatic response to Arora and Jacobs’ ‘Female genital alteration: a compromise solution’.Arianne Shahvisi - 2016 - Journal of Medical Ethics 42 (3):156-157.
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  16.  58
    No Understanding, No Consent: The Case Against Alternative Medicine.Arianne Shahvisi - 2016 - Bioethics 30 (2):69-76.
    The demand for informed consent in clinical medicine is usually justified on the basis that it promotes patient autonomy. In this article I argue that the most effective way to promote autonomy is to improve patient understanding in order to reduce the epistemic disparity between patient and medical professional. Informed consent therefore derives its moral value from its capacity to reduce inequalities of power as they derive from epistemic inequalities. So in order for a patient to have given informed consent, (...)
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  17.  15
    Medical Decision Making for Patients Without Proxies: The Effect of Personal Experience in the Deliberative Process.Allyson L. Robichaud - 2015 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 26 (4):355-360.
    The number of admissions to hospitals of patients without a proxy decision maker is rising. Very often these patients need fairly immediate medical intervention for which informed consent—or informed refusal—is required. Many have recommended that there be a process in place to make these decisions, and that it include a variety of perspectives. People are particularly wary of relying solely on medical staff to make these decisions. The University Hospitals Case Medical Center recruits community members from its Ethics Committee to (...)
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  18.  53
    Animism in the Anthropocene.Arianne Conty - 2022 - Theory, Culture and Society 39 (5):127-153.
    Following upon Bruno Latour’s famous injunction that ‘we have never been modern’, Graham Harvey has recently added that perhaps ‘we have always been animists.’ With the massive ecosystem destruction that is underway in the Anthropocene, this realization could represent a necessary paradigm shift to address anthropogenic climate change. If the expropriation and destruction intrinsic to the modern division between a world of cultural values attributed exclusively to humans and a world of inanimate matter devoid of value has become untenable, then (...)
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  19.  47
    The Politics of Nature: New Materialist Responses to the Anthropocene.Arianne Françoise Conty - 2018 - Theory, Culture and Society 35 (7-8):73-96.
    In order to explore some of the divergences within new materialism and elucidate their relationship to actor-network theory, this article will develop Latour’s theory of agency and then compare it to those new materialists who uphold a ‘flat ontology’ that includes technological tools and those who uphold an animate/inanimate distinction. In light of the ecological crisis called the Anthropocene, the dissolution of the animate/inanimate distinction will be defended in order to address both polar bears and glaciers, coral reefs and clown (...)
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  20.  9
    Marsilio Ficino's 'si deus fiat homo' and Augustine's 'non ibi legi': The Incarnation and Plato's Persona in the Scholia to the Laws.Denis J.-J. Robichaud - 2014 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 77 (1):87-114.
  21.  55
    Redistribution and moral consistency: arguments for granting automatic citizenship to refugees.Arianne Shahvisi - 2020 - Journal of Global Ethics 16 (2):182-202.
    1. Birth within a particular state is a major determinant of a person’s life course: their life expectancy, health possibilities, income, level of education, employment opportunities, and the safet...
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  22.  28
    Moral Capacity Enhancement Does Not Entail Moral Worth Enhancement.Philip Robichaud - 2014 - American Journal of Bioethics 14 (4):33-34.
  23.  24
    Centring race, deprivation, and disease severity in healthcare priority setting.Arianne Shahvisi - 2022 - Journal of Medical Ethics 48 (2):77-78.
    The fair distribution of health resources is critical to health justice. But distributing healthcare equitably requires careful attention to the existing distribution of other resources, and the economic system which produces these inequalities. Health is strongly determined by socioeconomic factors, such as the effects of racism on the health of communities of colour, as well as the broader market-oriented healthcare and pharmaceutical systems that put the pursuit of profit above the alleviation of suffering. Two papers in this issue confront health (...)
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  24.  3
    Will to evil instead of will to power: Georges Bataille’s reading of Nietzsche.Arianne Conty - forthcoming - Journal for Cultural Research:1-11.
    Bataille’s book On Nietzsche is a critique of all goal-oriented activity, since for Bataille, useful activities transform the human being into a ‘soldier’ or ‘savant’, a part rather than a whole. In his rejection of goal-oriented morality, Bataille thus espouses what he calls ‘evil’ as a strategy to escape from the public good and its reduction of the human being to use-function. Such an escape involves the sacrifice of the will, and in particular of Nietzsche’s Will to Power. Indeed, Bataille (...)
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  25.  18
    Look, no hands!Conty Arianne - 2019 - Metodo. International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy 7 (2):151-176.
    Philosopher of science Bruno Latour defines the image as “any sign, work of art, inscription or painting serving as a mediation to reach something else.” According to this definition, mediation could very well be a synonym for image. In this article, I would like to use Latour’s work to argue for the crucial role that images play in overcoming a certain modern worldview that has divided the world into ontological essences that separate subject and object, nature and culture. It is (...)
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  26.  2
    Can Street-Level Bureaucrats Assist with Material Resources? Naming, Trivializing and Privatizing Economic Abuse in Israel.Arianne Renan Barzilay, Orly Benjamin, Dalit Yassour-Borochowitz & Karni Krigel - forthcoming - Ethics and Social Welfare.
    Street Level Bureaucrats’ (SLBs) contribution to social inequality was proposed to be best assessed by combining three analytical approaches: Discretion, Positioning, and Reproduction. Such a triple analytical framework may be required for understanding SLBs’ responses to Economic Abuse (EA) in Israel where formal law has not addressed EA while the prevalent welfare orientation denies the material resources required in responding to EA. Applying the triple framework in analyzing fifty-three interviews conducted with Israeli SLBs operating in state welfare organizations reveals the (...)
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  27.  18
    Acknowledgments.Denis J.-J. Robichaud - 2018 - In Plato's persona: Marsilio Ficino, Renaissance humanism, and Platonic traditions. Philadelphia: PENN, University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 341-344.
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  28.  31
    Interaction as Text: A Semiotic Look at an Organizing Process.Daniel Robichaud - 2001 - American Journal of Semiotics 17 (1):141-161.
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  29.  36
    Austerity or Xenophobia? The Causes and Costs of the “Hostile Environment” in the NHS.Arianne Shahvisi - 2019 - Health Care Analysis 27 (3):202-219.
    During the “age of austerity” the UK government has progressively limited free health services for “overseas visitors” on the grounds of fairness and frugality. This is despite the fact that the cost of the additional bureaucracy required by the new system and the public health consequences are expected to exceed the sums saved. In this article I explore the interaction between the discourses of austerity and xenophobia as they relate to migrants’ access to healthcare. By examining the available data and (...)
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  30.  45
    Tropicality and abjection: What do we really mean by “Neglected Tropical Diseases”?Arianne Shahvisi - 2019 - Developing World Bioethics 19 (4):224-234.
    Neglected tropical diseases are defined operationally as diseases that prevail in “tropical” regions and are under‐researched, under‐funded, and under‐treated compared with their disease burden. By analysing the adjectives “tropical” and “neglected,” I expose and interrogate the discourses within which the term “neglected tropical disease” derives its meaning. First, I argue that the term “tropical” conjures the notion of “tropicality,” a form of Othering which erroneously explains the disease‐prevalence of “tropical” regions by reference to environmental determinism, rather than colonialism and neocolonialism. (...)
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  31.  30
    Health worker migration and migrant healthcare: Seeking cosmopolitanism in the NHS.Arianne Shahvisi - 2018 - Bioethics 32 (6):334-342.
    The U.K.'s National Health Service (NHS) is critically reliant on staff from overseas, which means that a sizeable number of U.K. healthcare professionals have received their training at the cost of other states, whose populations are urgently in need of healthcare professionals. At the same time, while healthcare is widely seen as a primary good, many migrants are unable to access the NHS without charge, and anti‐immigration political trends are likely to further reduce that access. Both of these topics have (...)
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  32.  59
    Fragments of Marsilio Ficino’s Translations and Use of Proclus’ Elements of Theology and Elements of Physics: Evidence and Study.Denis Robichaud - 2016 - Vivarium 54 (1):46-107.
    _ Source: _Volume 54, Issue 1, pp 46 - 107 The present paper discusses the question of Marsilio Ficino’s lost translations of Proclus’ _Elements of Physics_ and _Elements of Theology_. It reviews all known evidence for Ficino’s work on the _Elements of Physics_ and _Elements of Theology_, examines new references and fragments of these texts in Ficino’s manuscripts, especially in his personal manuscript of Plotinus’ _Enneads_, and studies how they fit within the Florentine’s philosophical oeuvre. The present case studies of (...)
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  33.  16
    Plato's persona: Marsilio Ficino, Renaissance humanism, and Platonic traditions.Denis J.-J. Robichaud - 2018 - Philadelphia: PENN, University of Pennsylvania Press.
    In 1484, humanist philosopher and theologian Marsilio Ficino published the first complete Latin translation of Plato's extant works. Students of Plato now had access to the entire range of the dialogues, which revealed to Renaissance audiences the rich ancient landscape of myths, allegories, philosophical arguments, etymologies, fragments of poetry, other works of philosophy, aspects of ancient pagan religious practices, concepts of mathematics and natural philosophy, and the dialogic nature of the Platonic corpus's interlocutors. By and large, Renaissance readers in the (...)
  34.  43
    Medicine is Patriarchal, But Alternative Medicine is Not the Answer.Arianne Shahvisi - 2019 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 16 (1):99-112.
    Women are over-represented within alternative medicine, both as consumers and as service providers. In this paper, I show that the appeal of alternative medicine to women relates to the neglect of women’s health needs within scientific medicine. This is concerning because alternative medicine is severely limited in its therapeutic effects; therefore, those who choose alternative therapies are liable to experience inadequate healthcare. I argue that while many patients seek greater autonomy in alternative medicine, the absence of an evidence base and (...)
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  35.  48
    Religion in the Age of the Anthropocene.Arianne Françoise Conty - 2021 - Environmental Values 30 (2):215-234.
    Though responses to the Anthropocene have largely come from the natural and social sciences, religious responses to the Anthropocene have also been gaining momentum and many scholars have been calling for a religious response to complement scientific responses to climate change. Yet because Genesis 1:28 does indeed tell human beings to ‘subdue the earth’ monotheistic religions have often been understood as complicit in the human exceptionalism that is thought to have created the conditions for the Anthropocene. In distinction to such (...)
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  36.  25
    Précis de La juste part (Montréal, Atelier 10, 2012).David Robichaud & Patrick Turmel - 2014 - Philosophiques 41 (1):157-160.
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  37.  39
    Why UK doctors should be troubled by female genital mutilation legislation.Arianne Shahvisi - 2017 - Clinical Ethics 12 (2):102-108.
    A UK doctor was recently acquitted of charges of reinstating a variety of female genital mutilation after delivering a child. In this paper, I contend that this incident reflects a broader confusion concerning the ethico-legal status of non-therapeutic genital surgeries for children and adults, which are not derivable from tenets of medical ethics, but rather violate them. I argue that medical professionals have an obligation to announce and address this confusion in order to motivate legislative reform, since the inconsistency of (...)
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  38.  46
    Conscientious objection: a morally insupportable misuse of authority.Arianne Shahvisi - 2018 - Clinical Ethics 13 (2):82-87.
    In this paper, I argue that the conscience clause around abortion provision in England, Scotland and Wales is inadequate for two reasons. First, the patient and doctor are differently situated with respect to social power. Doctors occupy a position of significant moral and epistemic authority with respect to their patients, who are vulnerable and relatively disempowered. Doctors are rightly required to disclose their conscientious objection, but given the positioning of the patient and doctor, the act of doing so exploits the (...)
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  39.  60
    Resisting Wrongful Explanations.Arianne Shahvisi - 2021 - Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 19 (2).
    In this paper I explore a method for refusing uptake when explanations are morally and epistemically troubling. Gaile Pohlhaus Jr has shown that imploring marginalised people to “understand” marginalising practices amounts to a request that they legitimise their own marginalisation. In this paper, I expand upon this analysis with the aim of describing a method for withholding understanding. First, I analyse understanding through its association with explanation. Drawing on pragmatic theories, I describe explanations as speech acts whose success depends on (...)
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  40.  6
    Notes.Denis J.-J. Robichaud - 2018 - In Plato's persona: Marsilio Ficino, Renaissance humanism, and Platonic traditions. Philadelphia: PENN, University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 247-288.
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  41.  16
    Chapter 1. Prosopon/persona: Philosophy and Rhetoric.Denis J.-J. Robichaud - 2018 - In Plato's persona: Marsilio Ficino, Renaissance humanism, and Platonic traditions. Philadelphia: PENN, University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 25-68.
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  42.  32
    Characterizing the Value of Morally Responsible Agency.Philip Robichaud - 2021 - The Monist 104 (4):458-470.
    Moral influence theories of responsibility justify practices of praising and blaming by pointing to their effects on the development of our reasons-responsive capacities. Exercising these capacities has instrumental value—for example, they enable agents to act rightly and to flourish—but some argue that it is also intrinsically valuable. In this paper, I develop a value theory of morally responsible agency. I show how the value realized by exercising agency depends on the moral valence of the action performed and the skill with (...)
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  43.  35
    The Undoing of All Things.Paul Robichaud - 2001 - Renascence 53 (2):149-165.
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  44.  34
    Fudo: a Buddhist Response to the Anthropocene.Arianne Conty - 2024 - Sophia 63 (4):735-754.
    For many environmental philosophers, the dualisms intrinsic to Modernity that separate body from mind and nature from culture must be deconstructed in order to develop an inclusive ecology that might respond to the Anthropocene Age. In seeking alternatives to human exceptionalism and humans as exclusive owners of souls to the exclusion of other animals, many scholars have turned to Asian philosophies founded in presuppositions that are far more eco-centric. Focusing on Buddhism, this article will outline some eco-centric aspects of Buddhist (...)
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  45.  31
    Getting Degrees of Wrongness Right: Nudges and Value of Agency.Philip Robichaud - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (11):28-30.
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  46. Marsilio Ficino’s ‘De vita platonis, apologia de moribus platonis’. Against the Poetasters and Cynics: Aristippus, Lucian, Cerberus and other Dogs.Denis Robichaud - 2006 - Accademia 8:23-59.
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  47.  28
    Decommodifying the most important determinant of health.Arianne Shahvisi - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (10):661-662.
    Among the most harrowing visuals of Britain’s ongoing ‘cost of living crisis’ are the security tags that began to appear on cheese, butter, chicken, sweets and infant formula milk in 2022. A week’s worth of formula milk—the sole or main food of the vast majority of infants for the first 6 months of life—now costs between £9.39 and £15.95.1 Low-income households are entitled to a ‘Healthy Start’ welfare payment, intended to avert malnutrition among the poorest children, but the weekly allowance (...)
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  48.  32
    Healing and feeling: The clinical ontology of emotion.Allyson L. Robichaud - 2003 - Bioethics 17 (1):59–68.
    In the clinical setting, not enough attention is paid to the role that emotion plays. It is at worst ignored or avoided, isolating those who are suffering, at best treated as something to help another to endure. This is the result, in part, of an impoverished idea that views emotion as mere feelings. However, emotions are not just feelings, they are cognitive. If we look beneath the surface, emotions can provide information about values and beliefs, some of which may be (...)
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  49.  22
    Particles Do Not Conspire.Arianne Shahvisi - 2019 - Journal for General Philosophy of Science / Zeitschrift für Allgemeine Wissenschaftstheorie 50 (4):521-543.
    The aim of this paper is to debunk the assertion that miraculous “conspiracies” between fundamental particles are required to bring about the projectibility of special science generalisations. Albert and Loewer have proposed a theory of lawhood which supplements the Best System of fundamental laws with a statistical postulate over the initial conditions of the universe, thereby rendering special science generalisations highly probable, and dispelling the conspiracy. However, concerns have been raised about its ability to confer typicality upon special science generalisations (...)
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  50.  48
    Racism in healthcare and bioethics.Agomoni Ganguli-Mitra, Arianne Shahvisi, Angela Ballantyne & Keisha Ray - 2022 - Bioethics 36 (3):233-234.
    Bioethics, Volume 36, Issue 3, Page 233-234, March 2022.
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