Results for 'Doug Hester'

626 found
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  1.  15
    Two Requests on Good Friday in the Preoperative Assessment Clinic.Doug Hester - 2016 - Journal of Medical Humanities 37 (1):115-115.
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  2.  91
    Where the ethical action is.Doug Hardman & Phil Hutchinson - 2022 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (1):45–48.
    It is common to think of medical and ethical modes of thought as different in kind. In such terms, some clinical situations are made more complicated by an additional ethical component. Against this picture, we propose that medical and ethical modes of thought are not different in kind, but merely different aspects of what it means to be human. We further propose that clinicians are uniquely positioned to synthesise these two aspects without prior knowledge of philosophical ethics.
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  3.  64
    A Response to Daniel Holbrook's 'Descartes on Persons' and Doug Anderson's 'The Legacy oE Bowne's Empiricism'.Doug Anderson - 1992 - The Personalist Forum 8 (Supplement):15-20.
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  4.  35
    On having control over our actions.Doug Hardman - 2024 - Philosophical Investigations 47 (2):165-177.
    In this essay, I investigate the longstanding philosophical problem of whether we have control over our actions in a deterministic world. In working through a range of everyday situations in which this problem could arise, I come to the realisation that determinism has no bearing on whether we have control over our actions, because having control over our actions and determinism only make sense under different aspects.
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  5.  59
    Balancing the duty to treat with the duty to family in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic.Doug McConnell - 2020 - Journal of Medical Ethics 46 (6):360-363.
    Healthcare systems around the world are struggling to maintain a sufficient workforce to provide adequate care during the COVID-19 pandemic. Staffing problems have been exacerbated by healthcare workers (HCWs) refusing to work out of concern for their families. I sketch a deontological framework for assessing when it is morally permissible for HCWs to abstain from work to protect their families from infection and when it is a dereliction of duty to patients. I argue that it is morally permissible for HCWs (...)
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  6.  64
    It could have been otherwise: contingency and necessity in Dominican theology at Oxford, 1300-1350.Hester Goodenough Gelber - 2004 - Boston: Brill.
    Hester Goodenough Gelber is Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Stanford University.
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  7.  24
    Making psychiatry moral again: the role of psychiatry in patient moral development.Doug McConnell, Matthew Broome & Julian Savulescu - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (6):423-427.
    Psychiatric involvement in patient morality is controversial. If psychiatrists are tasked with shaping patient morality, the coercive potential of psychiatry is increased, treatment may be unfairly administered on the basis of patients’ moral beliefs rather than medical need, moral disputes could damage the therapeutic relationship and, in any case, we are often uncertain or conflicted about what is morally right. Yet, there is also a strong case for the view that psychiatry often works through improving patient morality and, therefore, should (...)
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  8.  67
    A case study of community-based participatory research ethics: The healthy public housing initiative.Doug Brugge & Alison Kole - 2003 - Science and Engineering Ethics 9 (4):485-501.
    We conducted and analyzed qualitative interviews with 12 persons working on the Healthy Public Housing Initiative in Boston, Massachusetts in 2001. Our goal was to generate ideas and themes related to the ethics of the community-based participatory research in which they were engaged. Specifically, we wanted to see if we found themes that differed from conventional research that is based on an individualistic ethics. There were clearly distinct ethical issues raised with respect to projects and individuals who engage in community-based (...)
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  9.  60
    Protecting the navajo people through tribal regulation of research.Doug Brugge & Mariam Missaghian - 2006 - Science and Engineering Ethics 12 (3):491-507.
    This essay explores the process and issues related to community collaborative research that involves Native Americans generally, and specifically examines the Navajo Nation’s efforts to regulate research within its jurisdiction. Researchers need to account for both the experience of Native Americans and their own preconceptions about Native Americans when conducting research about Native Americans. The Navajo Nation institutionalized an approach to protecting members of the nation when it took over Institutional Review Board (IRB) responsibilities from the US Indian Health Service (...)
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  10.  61
    Conscientious objection in healthcare: How much discretionary space best supports good medicine?Doug McConnell - 2018 - Bioethics 33 (1):154-161.
    Daniel Sulmasy has recently argued that good medicine depends on physicians having a wide discretionary space in which they can act on their consciences. The only constraints Sulmasy believes we should place on physicians’ discretionary space are those defined by a form of tolerance he derives from Locke whereby people can publicly act in accordance with their personal religious and moral beliefs as long as their actions are not destructive to society. Sulmasy also claims that those who would reject physicians’ (...)
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  11.  43
    Agreed: The Harm Principle Cannot Replace the Best Interest Standard … but the Best Interest Standard Cannot Replace The Harm Principle Either.D. Micah Hester, Kellie R. Lang, Nanibaa' A. Garrison & Douglas S. Diekema - 2018 - American Journal of Bioethics 18 (8):38-40.
    In Bester’s article (2018) challenging the use of the harm principle and advocating sole reliance on the use of a best interest standard (BIS) in pediatric decision-making, we believe that the auth...
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  12.  79
    II. "Implications of Polanyi's Thought Within the Arts" A Bibliographic Essay" by Doug Adams.Doug Adams - 1975 - Tradition and Discovery 2 (2):3-5.
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  13.  70
    Ending the War Right: Jus Post Bellum and the Just War Tradition.Doug McCready - 2009 - Journal of Military Ethics 8 (1):66-78.
  14.  29
    Pretending to care.Doug Hardman - 2023 - Journal of Medical Ethics 49 (7):506-509.
    On one hand, it is commonly accepted that clinicians should not deceive their patients, yet on the other there are many instances in which deception could be in a patient’s best interest. In this paper, I propose that this conflict is in part driven by a narrow conception of deception as contingent on belief. I argue that we cannot equate non-deceptive care solely with introducing or sustaining a patient’s true belief about their condition or treatment, because there are many instances (...)
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  15.  27
    Quantifying the Ebbinghaus figure effect: target size, context size, and target-context distance determine the presence and direction of the illusion.Hester Knol, Raoul Huys, Jean-Christophe Sarrazin & Viktor K. Jirsa - 2015 - Frontiers in Psychology 6.
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  16.  26
    UK doctors’ strikes 2023: not only justified but, arguably, supererogatory.Doug McConnell & Darren Mann - 2024 - Journal of Medical Ethics 50 (3):152-156.
    The 2023 doctors’ strikes in the UK have elicited a familiar moral outcry that such strikes are morally wrong. We consider five arguments that might be thought to show doctors’ strikes are morally impermissible but show that they all fail. The most we can conclude from such arguments is that doctors’ strikes are morally permissible in a narrower range of circumstances than strikes in other sectors.We then outline two independent but compatible justifications for doctors’ strikes, one that appeals to doctors’ (...)
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  17.  9
    Natural Literacy: How to Learn What We Yearn to Know.Doug Dix - 2008 - Hamilton Books.
    Harold Shapiro, the former president of Princeton, ventured to say that theology had been divorced from the liberal. Professor Doug Dix's book is about arranging a remarriage. His analysis suggests the divorce goes deeper than Shapiro may have realized. Love has been divorced from learning because money has replaced truth as the object of affection. Now students learn to earn. Natural Literacy strives to motivate students and faculty to instead learn to love.
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  18. Deficient virtue in the Phaedo.Doug Reed - 2020 - Classical Quarterly 70 (1):119-130.
    Plato seems to have been pessimistic about how most people stand with regard to virtue. However, unlike the Stoics, he did not conclude that most people are vicious. Rather, as we know from discussions across several dialogues, he countenanced decent ethical conditions that fall short of genuine virtue, which he limited to the philosopher. Despite Plato's obvious interest in this issue, commentators rarely follow his lead by investigating in detail such conditions in the dialogues. When scholars do investigate what kind (...)
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  19.  88
    Questioning the Consensus on Placebo and Nocebo Effects.Doug Hardman, Phil Hutchinson & Giulio Ongaro - 2021 - Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics 90 (3):211–212.
  20.  15
    Posthumous HIV Disclosure and Relational Rupture.D. Micah Hester & Laura K. Guidry-Grimes - 2018 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 29 (3):196-200.
    In response to Anne L. Dalle Ave and David M. Shaw, we agree with their general argument but emphasize a moral risk of HIV disclosure in deceased donation cases: the risk of relational rupture. Because of the importance that close relationships have to our sense of self and our life plans, this kind of rupture can have long-ranging implications for surviving loved ones. Moreover, the now-deceased individual cannot participate in any relational mending. Our analysis reveals the hefty moral costs that (...)
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  21.  77
    Expressing Our Attitudes.Doug Kremm - 2018 - Analysis 78 (1):139-150.
    © The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Analysis Trust. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: [email protected] volume collects nine of Mark Schroeder’s essays on expressivism, two of which are previously unpublished, along with a substantial introduction that helpfully ties them all together.1 The essays work very nicely as a collection. They are mutually illuminating, and together they make a ‘cumulative case’ for a particular conclusion – namely, that expressivist theories are best understood in (...)
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  22.  82
    Criteria of facial attractiveness in five populations.Doug Jones & Kim Hill - 1993 - Human Nature 4 (3):271-296.
    The theory of sexual selection suggests several possible explanations for the development of standards of physical attractiveness in humans. Asymmetry and departures from average proportions may be markers of the breakdown of developmental stability. Supernormal traits may present age- and sex-typical features in exaggerated form. Evidence from social psychology suggests that both average proportions and (in females) “neotenous” facial traits are indeed more attractive. Using facial photographs from three populations (United States, Brazil, Paraguayan Indians), rated by members of the same (...)
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  23.  36
    Public reason in justifications of conscientious objection in health care.Doug McConnell & Robert F. Card - 2019 - Bioethics 33 (5):625-632.
    Current mainstream approaches to conscientious objection either uphold the standards of public health care by preventing objections or protect the consciences of health‐care professionals by accommodating objections. Public justification approaches are a compromise position that accommodate conscientious objections only when objectors can publicly justify the grounds of their objections. Public justification approaches require objectors and assessors to speak a common normative language and to this end it has been suggested that objectors should be required to cast their objection in terms (...)
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  24.  76
    The fallacy of accident and the dictum de omni: Late medieval controversy over a reciprocal pair.Hester Goodenough Gelber - 1987 - Vivarium 25 (2):110-145.
  25.  50
    Narrative, addiction, and three aspects of self-ambiguity.Doug McConnell & Anna Golova - 2023 - Philosophical Explorations 26 (1):66-85.
    ABSTRACT‘Self-ambiguity’, we suggest, is best understood as an uncertainty about how strongly a given feature reflects who one truly is. When this understanding of self-ambiguity is applied to a view of the self as having both essential and shapable components, self-ambiguity can be seen to have two aspects: (1) uncertainty about one's essential or relatively unchangeable characteristics, e.g. one's sexuality, and (2) uncertainty about how to shape oneself, e.g. which values to commit to, actions to pursue, or essential features to (...)
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  26.  43
    Sapience + care: reason and responsibility in posthuman politics.Helen Hester - 2019 - Angelaki 24 (1):67-80.
    abstractPosthumanism can be understood as a position that de-prioritizes or rescinds the privilege of the human in some way – frequently by attempting to think humanity as one element of a wider ecology of interdependent forces. This paper argues that one can be on the side of the human without neglecting the assemblages of which we are all a part – by conceiving of humanity as a site of nascent potential for sapience + care – an alienated understanding of a (...)
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  27.  42
    When Rights Just Won’t Do: Ethical Considerations When Making Decisions for Severely Disabled Newborns.D. Micah Hester, Cheryl D. Lew & Alissa Swota - 2015 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 58 (3):322-327.
    Children like Baby G, born with complex chronic medical conditions that compromise function in the long term, are an increasing presence in tertiary-level neonatal intensive care units. The parents and health-care providers of these children are faced with profoundly difficult decisions. Whether severe congenital anomalies with poor prognosis are diagnosed antenatally or are discovered at the time of birth, the issues are vexing, and the impact decisions will have on everyone in the family is profound. What should such decisions be (...)
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  28.  72
    Quantum Reality as Unrealised Possibility.Doug Porpora - 2000 - Journal of Critical Realism 3 (2):34-39.
  29.  64
    The Importance of Self-Narration in Recovery from Addiction.Doug McConnell & Anke Snoek - 2018 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 25 (3):31-44.
    Addiction involves a chronic deficit in self-governance that treatment aims to restore. We draw on our interviews with addicted people to argue that addiction is, in part, a problem of self-narrative change. Over time, agents come to strongly identify with the aspects of their self-narratives that are consistently verified by others. When addiction self-narratives become established, they shape the addicted person’s experience, plans, and expectations so that pathways to recovery appear implausible and feel alien. Therefore, the agent may prefer to (...)
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  30.  25
    III jsp.Doug Anderson, James Campbell, Ellen Kappy Suckiel & Eugene Taylor - 2003 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 17 (4).
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  31.  41
    What Constitutes a Just Match?: A Reply to Murphy.D. Micah Hester - 2003 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 12 (1):78-82.
    In April of 2001 I published a brief commentary in the journal Academic Medicine questioning the current character and functioning of the National Residency Matching Program. The purpose of the article was to stimulate a rethinking of process. At 50 years old, the environment through which the match operates has changed, and as such I thought it time to ask ourselves whether or not the match, its algorithm, and, more important, the values it manifests might well need an overhaul.
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  32.  11
    Analysis of a probabilistic model of redundancy in unsupervised information extraction.Doug Downey, Oren Etzioni & Stephen Soderland - 2010 - Artificial Intelligence 174 (11):726-748.
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  33.  23
    The Socialist Feminist Project: A Contemporary Reader in Theory and Politics.Hester Eisenstein - 2006 - Science and Society 70 (4):556-558.
  34.  16
    Andrew Kagan, Paul Klee: Art and Music.Marcus Hester - 1984 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 42 (4):451-452.
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  35.  23
    A note on existence.William Hester - 1941 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 2 (1):101-103.
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  36.  34
    Science and the painter's knowledge.Marcus Hester - 1975 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 34 (1):73-74.
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  37.  28
    Trumping Professionalism.D. Micah Hester & Karen Kovach - 2004 - American Journal of Bioethics 4 (2):51-52.
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  38.  22
    Does Husserl have a philosophy of history in the'crisis of european sciences'.Doug Mann - 1992 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 23 (2):156-166.
  39.  20
    Animal Rights: Broadening Our Perspective; Broadening Our Base.Doug Moss - 1988 - Between the Species 4 (2):14.
  40. Stephen St C. Bostock, Zoos and Animal Rights: The ethics of keeping animals Reviewed by.Doug Simak - 1994 - Philosophy in Review 14 (3):167-169.
     
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  41.  49
    Ethics training needs to emphasize disclosure and apology.Doug Wojcieszak, James W. Saxton & Maggie M. Finkelstein - 2008 - HEC Forum 20 (3):291-305.
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  42.  7
    Libraries of Minnesota.Doug Ohman, Will Weaver, Pete Hautman, John Coy, Nancy Carlson, Marsha Wilson Chall, David LaRochelle & Kao Kalia Yang - 2011 - Minnesota Historical Society Press.
    A rich exhibition of Minnesota’s beloved libraries, with stunning photographs by the popular Doug Ohman and library stories by seven of Minnesota’s best-known writers of books for children and young adults.
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  43.  12
    Keeping your ethical edge sharp: how to cultivate a personal character that is honest, faithful, just, and morally clean.Doug Sherman - 1990 - Colorado Springs, Colo.: NavPress. Edited by William Hendricks.
    In Keeping Your Ethical Edge Sharp, Doug Sherman and Bill Hendricks discuss the critical issues that confront us in the workplace--possibly our most strategic sphere of influence today. They point put the obstacles that often keep our lights from shining in the darkness, and they present six principles we must be mindful of if we're to keep our ethical edge sharp and our witness distinctive.
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  44.  48
    An Intersectional Analysis of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender (LGBT) People’s Evaluations of Anti-Queer Violence.Doug Meyer - 2012 - Gender and Society 26 (6):849-873.
    The author uses an intersectionality framework to examine how lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people evaluate the severity of their violent experiences. Previous research focusing on the severity of anti-LGBT violence has given relatively little attention to race, class, and gender as systems of power. In contrast, results from this study, based on 47 semi-structured, in-depth interviews, reveal that Black and Latino/latina respondents often perceived anti-queer violence as implying that they had negatively represented their racial communities, whereas white respondents typically (...)
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  45.  25
    Introduction to healthcare ethics committees.D. Micah Hester & Toby Schonfeld - 2012 - In D. Micah Hester & Toby Schonfeld (eds.), Guidance for healthcare ethics committees. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. pp. 1.
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  46.  44
    Government Influence on Patient Organizations.Hester M. Bovenkamp & Margo J. Trappenburg - 2011 - Health Care Analysis 19 (4):329-351.
    Patient organizations increasingly play an important role in health care decision-making in Western countries. The Netherlands is one of the countries where this trend has gone furthest. In the literature some problems are identified, such as instrumental use of patient organizations by care providers, health insurers and the pharmaceutical industry. To strengthen the position of patient organizations government funding is often recommended as a solution. In this paper we analyze the ties between Dutch government and Dutch patient organizations to learn (...)
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  47. Releasing the visual archive : on the ethics of destruction.Doug Bailey - 2020 - In Bjørnar Olsen, Mats Burström, Caitlin DeSilvey & Þóra Pétursdóttir (eds.), After discourse: things, affects, ethics. New York, NY: Routledge.
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  48.  56
    Is pragmatism well-suited to bioethics?D. Micah Hester - 2003 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 28 (5 & 6):545 – 561.
    This paper attempts to defend pragmatic approaches to bioethics against detractors, showing how particular critics have failed or succeeded. The paper divides bioethics from a pragmatic point of view into three groups. The first group is called "bioethical pragmatism" that will be represented by two book-chapters from the anthology, Pragmatic Bioethics . The second group is called "clinical pragmatism" championed by Fins, Baccetta, and Miller. Finally, a third group, which has roots in the legal tradition, has been called "freestanding pragmatism" (...)
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  49.  25
    Choosing to Stop a Heart: The Ethical Status of Deactivating an Implantable Cardiac Device.D. Micah Hester & Alissa Swota - 2019 - Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 28 (2):327-328.
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  50. Does volunteering foster physical health and longevity.Doug Oman - 2007 - In Stephen Garrard Post (ed.), Altruism and Health: Perspectives From Empirical Research. Oup Usa. pp. 15--32.
     
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