Results for 'Medicine and the humanities. '

975 found
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  1.  25
    Between Medicine and the Humanities: On the Philosophy Struggling with the Concept of Mental Disorder.Konrad Banicki - 2015 - Ethos: Kwartalnik Instytutu Jana Pawla Ii 28 (110):91-108.
    Philosophy of psychiatry is a philosophical discipline focused on fundamental theoretical and conceptual issues in contemporary psychiatry. One of such issues is the so-called demarcation problem, which can be understood as the question about the difference between mental illness and psychological functioning which is normal, or healthy. After a brief account of the standard criteria for such differentiation the dominant naturalistic understanding of psychiatry as well as the notion of mental illness proper to the latter are subjected to scrutiny. Then, (...)
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  2. Medicine and the Humanities.Michael Gordon - 2023 - Canadian Journal of Bioethics / Revue canadienne de bioéthique 6 (2):149-151.
    Dans les premiers récits écrits, les médecins et les maladies jouaient souvent un rôle important. Certains érudits renommés de la tradition juive, comme Moïse Maïmonide était un philosophe, un écrivain prolifique et un médecin. Parmi les auteurs mondialement connus, on peut citer : François Rabelais (1483-1553), Anton Tchekhov (1860-1904), Arthur Conan Doyle (1859-1930), Oliver Sacks (1933-2015) et le contemporain Abraham Verghese (1955-), pour n’en citer que quelques-uns. Le lien entre la médecine et les sciences humaines semble avoir diminué dans certains (...)
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  3. Petition to Include Cephalopods as “Animals” Deserving of Humane Treatment under the Public Health Service Policy on Humane Care and Use of Laboratory Animals.New England Anti-Vivisection Society, American Anti-Vivisection Society, The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, The Humane Society of the United States, Humane Society Legislative Fund, Jennifer Jacquet, Becca Franks, Judit Pungor, Jennifer Mather, Peter Godfrey-Smith, Lori Marino, Greg Barord, Carl Safina, Heather Browning & Walter Veit - forthcoming - Harvard Law School Animal Law and Policy Clinic.
  4.  37
    Countertheses: Medicine and the human situation: A response.George Concordia - 1969 - World Futures 8 (2):35-52.
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  5.  10
    9. Genetics, Medicine, and the Human Person: The Papal Theology.Joseph Boyle - 2007 - In Daniel Monsour (ed.), Ethics & the New Genetics: An Integrated Approach. University of Toronto Press. pp. 134-142.
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  6.  32
    Laying Medicine Open: Innovative Interaction Between Medicine and the Humanities.Warren T. Reich & Laurence B. McCullough - 1999 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 9 (1):1-5.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Laying Medicine Open: Innovative Interaction Between Medicine and the HumanitiesLaurence B. McCullough and Warren Thomas ReichThe past three decades have witnessed the emergence and remarkable success of the fields of bioethics and medical humanities. The intellectual landscape of medicine and that of the humanities have been remarkably altered in the process. Twenty-five to 30 years ago in the United States there existed but a few courses (...)
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  7.  17
    Deformity and the Humane Ideal of Medicine.Robert M. Goldwyn - 1990 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 1 (3):235-236.
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  8.  7
    Bottoms Up!: A Pathologist's Essays on Medicine and the Humanities.William B. Ober - 1990 - Harpercollins.
    In fourteen scholarly yet delightfully readable essays, Ober solves some ancient mysteries and reveals the secret kinks and passions of famous and obscure historical figures.
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  9.  6
    Medicine Unbound: The Human Body and the Limits of Medical Intervention.Robert H. Blank & Andrea L. Bonnicksen - 1994
    This volume focuses on issues involving the inviolability of the human body and the decision to end life. The contributors explore the difficulties in framing a public policy that legalizes aid in dying, and return to the more general question of what is the most fair and effective relationship between private medical authority and public policy.
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  10.  19
    Medieval Medical Miniatures. Peter Murray JonesArs Medica: Art, Medicine, and the Human Condition. Diane R. Karp.Karen Reeds - 1986 - Isis 77 (4):688-690.
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  11. Medicine and the Moral Basis of the Human Sciences.David Appelbaum - 1983 - Analecta Husserliana 15:421.
     
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  12.  94
    Psychosomatic medicine and the philosophy of life.Michael A. Schwartz & Osborne P. Wiggins - 2010 - Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine 5:1-5.
    Basing ourselves on the writings of Hans Jonas, we offer to psychosomatic medicine a philosophy of life that surmounts the mind-body dualism which has plagued Western thought since the origins of modern science in seventeenth century Europe. Any present-day account of reality must draw upon everything we know about the living and the non-living. Since we are living beings ourselves, we know what it means to be alive from our own first-hand experience. Therefore, our philosophy of life, in addition (...)
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  13.  35
    Biogerontology, “Anti‐aging Medicine,” and the Challenges of Human Enhancement.Eric T. Juengst, Robert H. Binstock, Maxwell Mehlman, Stephen G. Post & Peter Whitehouse - 2003 - Hastings Center Report 33 (4):21-30.
    Slowing the aging process would be one of the most dramatic and momentous ways of enhancing human beings. It is also one that mainstream science is on the brink of pursuing. The state of the science, together with its possible impact, make it an important example for how to think about research into all enhancement technologies.
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  14.  11
    Errors, Medicine and the Law.Alan Merry & Alexander McCall Smith - 2001 - Cambridge University Press.
    Untoward injuries are unacceptably common in medical treatment, at times with tragic consequences for patients. The phrases 'an epidemic of error' and 'the medical toll' have been coined to describe this problem of 'iatrogenic harm', which it has been suggested may have contributed to 98,000 deaths per year in the US. Some of these incidents are the result of negligence on the part of doctors, but more usually they are no more than inevitable concomitants of the complexity of modern healthcare. (...)
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  15.  33
    Call for Papers for Special Issue of the Journal of Medical Humanities : “Medicine and the Humanities: the Pedagogical Landscape”.Suzanne Fleischman - 1999 - Journal of Medical Humanities 20 (4):293-294.
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  16.  31
    Bioethics and the humanities: attitudes and perceptions.R. S. Downie - 2007 - New York: Routledge-Cavendish. Edited by Jane Macnaughton.
    Critiquing many areas of medical practice and research whilst making constructive suggestions about medical education, this book extends the scope of medical ethics beyond sole concern with regulation. Illustrating some humanistic ways of understanding patients, this volume explores the connections between medical ethics, healthcare and subjects, such as philosophy, literature, creative writing and medical history and how they can affect the attitudes of doctors towards patients and the perceptions of medicine, health and disease which have become part of contemporary (...)
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  17.  36
    “Human Drugs” in Chinese Medicine and the Confucian View: An Interpretive Study.Jing-Bao Nie - forthcoming - Confucian Bioethics.
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  18.  19
    Medicine, health and the human side: responsibility in medical practice.Gabriela Palavicini - 2022 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 25 (2):289-297.
    Throughout history, the world has been concerned with progress in different areas, and Medicine has not been the exception. Nevertheless, has this progress been positive in the sense of entailing benefits? The question emerges considering that through this progress, human beings have been able to modify natural processes. Considering this, the research question is: What is the role that medicine—a human and scientific discipline—must play, and which is the concept of what a human being must have in a (...)
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  19. Philosophy of medicine and other humanities: Toward a wholistic view.Howard Brody - 1985 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 6 (3).
    A less analytic and more wholistic approach to philosophy, described as best overall fit or seeing how things all hang together, is defended in recent works by John Rawls and Richard Rorty and can usefully be applied to problems in philosophy of medicine. Looking at sickness and its impact upon the person as a central problem for philosophy of medicine, this approach discourages a search for necessary and sufficient conditions for being sick, and instead encourages a listing of (...)
     
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  20. Man, medicine, and the state: the human body as an object of government sponsored medical research in the 20th century.Wolfgang Uwe Eckart (ed.) - 2006 - Stuttgart: Steiner.
    Mit Beitragen von: Wolfgang U. Eckart, Christian Bonah, Wolfgang U. Eckart / Andreas Reuland, Alexander Neumann, Peter Steinkamp, Volker Roelcke, Anne ...
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  21.  38
    Good Deaths, “Stupid Deaths”: Humane Medicine and the Call of Invisible Bodies.Maura A. Ryan - 2016 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 41 (6):642-658.
    Jeffrey Bishop’s The Anticipatory Corpse exposes a functional metaphysics at the root of contemporary medical practice that gives rise to inhumane medicine, especially at the end of life. His critique of medicine argues for alternative spaces and practices in which the communal significance of the body, its telos, can be restored and the meaning of a “good death” enriched. This essay develops an alternative epistemology of the body, drawing from Christian theological accounts of the communal or Eucharistic body (...)
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  22.  14
    Biomedicine and the human condition: challenges, risks, and rewards.Michael G. Sargent - 2005 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    How to avoid disease, how to breed successfully, and how to live to a reasonable age are questions that have perplexed humankind throughout history. This book explores our progress in understanding these challenges, and the risks and rewards of devising solutions. A broad range of topics are covered, including reproduction, the development of human progeny from conception to adulthood, staying healthy, ageing, cancer, infection and the burden of our genetic legacy.
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  23.  13
    Life the Human Being between Life and Death: A Dialogue between Medicine and Philosophy: Recurrent Issues and New Approaches.Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka & Zbigniew Zalewski - 2000 - Springer.
    Medicine's crucial concern with health is perennial, but its reflection, concepts, means change with the advance of science and social life. We present here a fascinating panorama of current medical discussions with their philosophical underpinnings, and queries as they have evolved from the past. The role of Tymieniecka's phenomenology of life is brought forth as the system of philosophical reference.
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  24. Promoting the "human" in law, policy, and medicine: essays in honour of Bartha Maria Knoppers.Bartha Maria Knoppers, E. S. Dove, Vasiliki Rahimzadeh & Michael J. S. Beauvais (eds.) - 2025 - Boston: Brill/Nijhoff.
    Professor Bartha Maria Knoppers stepped down from the Canada Research Chair in Law and Medicine at McGill University in April 2024, a post she held for more than 20 years. Professor Knoppers consistently prioritized "humanity" in her academic work and in policymaking. As such, she forged a strong intellectual legacy, notably through her work on the human right to science, genomic and health-related data sharing, genome editing, human reproductive technologies, stem cell research, the rights of children, and population health. (...)
     
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  25.  6
    Medicine at the crossroads: a collection of stories and conversations to forge a vision for health care.Michael Attas - 2018 - Houston: Stellar Communications Houston.
    Medicine at the Crossroads is a collection of essays based a column originally published in the Waco-Tribune Herald by renowned cardiologist Dr. Michael Attas of Baylor University. It touches on three perspectives - the physician, the patient, and the healthcare system - and addresses some of the most pressing questions in medicine today.
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  26.  14
    Graphic Medicine and the Critique of Contemporary U.S. Healthcare.Sathyaraj Venkatesan & Chinmay Murali - 2019 - Journal of Medical Humanities 43 (1):27-42.
    Comics has always had a critical engagement with socio-political and cultural issues and hence evolved into a medium with a subversive power to challenge the status quo. Staying true to the criticality of the medium, graphic medicine critiques the exploitative and unethical practices in the field of healthcare, thereby creating a critical consciousness in the reader. In close reading select graphic pathographies such as Gabby Schulz's Sick, Emily Steinberg's Broken Eggs, Ellen Forney's Marbles: Mania, Depression, Michelangelo & Me and (...)
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  27.  59
    The ends of medicine and the crisis of chronic pain.Kyle E. Karches - 2019 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 40 (3):183-196.
    Pellegrino and Thomasma have proposed a normative medical ethics founded on a conception of the end of medicine detached from any broader notion of the telos of human life. In this essay, I question whether such a narrow teleological account of medicine can be sustained, taking as a starting point Pellegrino and Thomasma’s own contention that the end of medicine projects itself onto the intermediate acts that aim at that end. In order to show how the final (...)
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  28.  34
    The Bioethically Informed Attorney and the Humanization of Medicine.Marshall B. Kapp - 1985 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 13 (2):82-82.
  29.  52
    The twilight of "medicine" and the dawn of "health care": Reflections on bioethics at the turn of the millennium.Maurizio Mori - 2000 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 25 (6):723 – 744.
    The traditional paradigm of medicine assumes that health is a natural given depending on a body's intrinsic teleology, and that medicine aims at restoring or preserving health, making a physician only an "assistant to nature." I argue that nowadays this paradigm is becoming obsolete, because the concept of health is no longer a "natural given" and interventions on the human body attempt not only to help nature's teleology, but also to change it whenever doing so can satisfy human (...)
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  30.  38
    The Ends of Medicine and the Experience of Patients.D. Robert MacDougall - 2020 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 45 (2):129-144.
    The ends of medicine are sometimes construed simply as promotion of health, treatment and prevention of disease, and alleviation of pain. Practitioners might agree that this simple formulation captures much of what medical practice is about. But while the ends of medicine may seem simple or even obvious, the essays in this issue demonstrate the wide variety of philosophical questions and issues associated with the ends of medicine. They raise questions about how to characterize terms like “health” (...)
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  31.  41
    Personalized Genomic Medicine and the Rhetoric of Empowerment.Eric T. Juengst, Michael A. Flatt & Richard A. Settersten - 2012 - Hastings Center Report 42 (5):34-40.
    A decade after the completion of the Human Genome Project, the widespread appeal of personalized genomic medicine's vision and potential virtues for health care remains compelling. Advocates argue that our current medical regime “is in crisis as it is expensive, reactive, inefficient, and focused largely on one size fits all treatments for events of late stage disease.” What is revolutionary about this kind of medicine, its advocates maintain, is that it promises to resolve that crisis by simultaneously increasing (...)
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  32. Medicine and the cartesian image of man.Henk A. M. J. Have - 1987 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 2 (2).
    The contemporary philosophy of medicine may be characterized as a continuous struggle with the Cartesian heritage, in order to reach a more satisfying image of man. This paper outlines the influence of Cartesian dualism on the foundations of medicine.The notion of a real distinction between the mental and physical, particularly the mechanistic conception of the human body, made possible the development of the natural sciences as well as scientific medicine, not hampered any longer by the risk of (...)
     
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  33.  24
    Emergent medicine and the law.P. -L. Chau - 2020 - Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave-Macmillan. Edited by Jonathan Herring.
    This book examines the relationship between law and scientific advancement, with a particular focus on the theory of evolution and medical innovation. Historically, the law has struggled to keep pace with modern medical advances. The authors demonstrate that the laws that govern human behaviour must evolve in response to such advances."--Provided by publisher.
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  34.  59
    Nanotechnology in Global Medicine and Human Biosecurity: Private Interests, Policy Dilemmas, and the Calibration of Public Health Law.Thomas A. Faunce - 2007 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 35 (4):629-642.
    This article explores a unique opportunity for shaping public health law and policy to reflect a greater balance between public and private goods in two areas of primary concern to human well-being: medicine and human biosecurity. This opportunity is presented both by the rapid changes likely to occur in these areas as a result of nanotechnology and the fact that multinational corporate actors have not yet had the opportunity to use their well-honed techniques of governance influence to modify public (...)
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  35.  14
    Erika Gielen; Michèle Goyens . Towards the Authority of Vesalius: Studies on Medicine and the Human Body from Antiquity to the Renaissance and Beyond. 475 pp., index. Turnhout: Brepols, 2018. €110 . ISBN 9782503579146.Rinaldo Fernando Canalis; Massimo Ciavolella . Andreas Vesalius and the “Fabrica” in the Age of Printing: Art, Anatomy, and Printing in the Italian Renaissance. xxiv + 332 pp., illus., index. Turnhout: Brepols, 2018. €100 . ISBN 9782503576237. [REVIEW]Vivian Nutton - 2019 - Isis 110 (4):816-817.
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  36.  42
    Medicine and the Holocaust: a visit to the Nazi death camps as a means of teaching medical ethics in the Israel Defense Forces Medical Corps.Anthony S. Oberman, Tal Brosh-Nissimov & Nachman Ash - 2010 - Journal of Medical Ethics 36 (12):821-826.
    A novel method of teaching military medical ethics, medical ethics and military ethics in the Israel Defense Force (IDF) Medical Corps, essential topics for all military medical personnel, is discussed. Very little time is devoted to medical ethics in medical curricula, and even less to military medical ethics. Ninety-five per cent of American students in eight medical schools had less than 1 h of military medical ethics teaching and few knew the basic tenets of the Geneva Convention. Medical ethics differs (...)
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  37.  24
    Biological Medicine and the Survival of the Person.Henri Atlan - 1995 - Science in Context 8 (1):265-277.
    The ArgumentThe status of the person is analyzed as represented by the life sciences under the influence of modern physico–chemical and molecular biology.At the same time the linguistic structure of reality as seen through formalized scientific discourse is not that of a language, but rather that of operational symbolisms, so that the judeo–Greek tradition of Verb as creating and Logos as procreating — which is probably at the origin of the surprising confidence in the possibility of dominating nature through words (...)
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  38.  42
    Lacan and the Human Sciences. [REVIEW]Joseph H. Smith - 1992 - Review of Metaphysics 46 (2):408-408.
    The articles assembled here demonstrate the impact of Lacan's thought on epistemology, anthropology, feminist studies, and literature. The focus of Leupin's introduction and of the first chapters by Jean-Claude Milner and Francois Regnault is Lacan's linking of the social sciences and science. Leupin writes that while Freud drew upon "medicine and biology to ensure... scientific consistency", in Lacan these are replaced by mathematics and topology. Lacan argued that the social or human sciences should be renamed the "conjectural sciences"--that they (...)
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  39.  53
    Technological medicine and the autonomy of man.Bjørn Hofmann - 2002 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 5 (2):157-167.
    Is technology value-free or is it value-laden? How does technology affect human autonomy? These questions, viewed within the context of medicine, are the focus of attention in this article. The central argument is that we need neither to subscribe to the value-neutrality dictum nor to the all-encompassing value-ladenness thesis to explain the pertinent position of technology in medicine. Technology is constitutive of and strongly implicated in difficult questions of value. This, however, does not mean that technology is identical (...)
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  40.  41
    Medicine as a human science between the singularity of the patient and technical scientific reproducibility.Marco Buzzoni - 2003 - Poiesis and Praxis 1 (3):171-184.
    The often-emphasized tension between the singularity of the patient and technical–scientific reproducibility in medicine cannot be resolved without a discussion of the epistemological and methodological status of the human sciences. On the one hand, the rules concerning human action are analogous to the scientific laws of nature. They are de facto sufficiently stable to allow predictions and explanations similar to those of experimental sciences. From this point of view, it is only a trivial truth, but still a methodological irrelevancy, (...)
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  41.  22
    The Human, Human Rights, and DNA Identity Tests.Noa Vaisman - 2018 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 43 (1):3-20.
    This special issue examines the diverse realities created by the intersection of emerging technologies, new scientific knowledge, and the human being. It engages with two key questions: how is the human being shaped and constructed in new ways through advances in science and technology? and how might these new ways of imagining the subject shape present and future human rights law and practice? The papers examine a variety of scientific technologies—personalized medicine and organ transplant, mitochondrial DNA replacement, and scaffolds (...)
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  42.  63
    Medicine and Public Health, Ethics and Human Rights.Jonathan M. Mann - 2012 - Hastings Center Report 27 (3):6-13.
    There is more to modern health than new scientific discoveries, the development of new technologies, or emerging or re‐emerging diseases. World events and experiences, such as the AIDS epidemic and the humanitarian emergencies in Bosnia and Rwanda, have made this evident by creating new relationships among medicine, public health, ethics, and human rights. Each domain has seeped into the other, making allies of public health and human rights, pressing the need for an ethics of public health, and revealing the (...)
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  43.  11
    Medicine and humanistic understanding.Jerry Vannatta - 2005 - Philadelphia, [Pa.]: University of Pennsylvania Press. Edited by Ronald Schleifer & Sheila Crow.
    An interactive DVD-ROM that examines the doctor-patient relationship, changing nature of illness, ethics and practice of everyday medicine, and the goals of medical pedagogy; it also features interviews with prominent physicians, caretakers, writers, researchers, and philosophers, and is used at the University of Oklahoma in its continuing education for physicians.
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  44.  22
    Research Within Bounds. Protecting Human Participants in Modern Medicine and the Declaration of Helsinki, 1964–2014.Markus Wahl & Anna Maria Lehner - 2014 - Ethik in der Medizin 26 (2):167-169.
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  45. Medicine, Animal Experimentation, and the Moral Problem of Unfortunate Humans.R. G. Frey - 1996 - Social Philosophy and Policy 13 (2):181.
    We live in an age of great scientific and technological innovation, and what seemed out of the question or at least very doubtful only a few years ago, today lies almost within our grasp. In no area is this more true than that of human health care, where lifesaving and life-enhancing technologies have given, or have the enormous potential in the not so distant future to give, relief from some of the most terrible human illnesses. On two fronts in particular, (...)
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  46.  10
    The Natural and the Human: Science and the Shaping of Modernity, 1739–1841.Stephen Gaukroger - 2016 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.
    Stephen Gaukroger presents an original account of the development of empirical science and the understanding of human behaviour from the mid-eighteenth century. During this period science was cut loose from the legitimating culture in which it had had a public rationale as a fruitful and worthwhile form of enquiry. An abrupt but fundamental shift in how the tasks of scientific enquiry were conceived is at the centre of this development, and at its core lies the naturalization of the human: attempts (...)
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  47.  22
    Human Selves, Chronic Illness, and the Ethics of Medicine.Strachan Donnelley - 1988 - Hastings Center Report 18 (2):5-8.
    Bioethical principles and theories rest on fundamental philosophic conceptions of the human self that usually go unexamined. Reconsideration of our philosophic understanding of a human self requires that health practitioners broaden their ethical concern for patients decidedly beyond respect for decision‐making autonomy and gaining informed consent for medical procedures.
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  48.  12
    Reassessing Foucault: Power, Medicine, and the Body.Colin Jones & Roy Porter - 1994 - Psychology Press.
    This study sets out to examine the implications of Foucault's work for students and researchers in a wide selection of areas in the social and human sciences.
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  49.  68
    Levinas and the patient as other: The ethical foundation of medicine.Michelle Clifton-Soderstrom - 2003 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 28 (4):447 – 460.
    The thesis of this paper is that because the significance of Western medicine lies in its ability to enhance the health of persons within a society, the practice of medicine is foremost an ethic and only thereafter a science. In support of the priority of an ethical perspective in medical practice, the paper explores the socio-cultural nature of knowledge, upon which science itself is constructed. Next, it draws from Levinas' philosophy, which illumines the problem of ontological and epistemological (...)
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  50. China and the Human: Part Ii.David L. Eng, Teemu Ruskola & Shuang Shen - 2012 - Duke University Press.
    In the Western media, stories about China seem to fall into one of two categories: China’s astounding economic development or its human rights abuses. As human rights discourses follow increasingly hegemonic conventions, especially with regard to China, many of their key assumptions remain unexamined. This special issue—the second in a two-part series beginning with “Cosmologies of the Human”—critically investigates the relationship between China and the human as it plays out in law, politics, biopolitics, political economy, labor, medicine, and culture. (...)
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