Results for 'Nancy M. Martin'

936 found
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  1.  17
    The Meaning of Life in the World Religions.Nancy M. Martin & Joseph Runzo - 2000 - Library of Global Ethics & Rel.
    This volume brings together some of the most distinguished thinkers in the field of theology to consider the question of the meaning of life in the various global religions.
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  2.  78
    Recommendations for Nanomedicine Human Subjects Research Oversight: An Evolutionary Approach for an Emerging Field.Leili Fatehi, Susan M. Wolf, Jeffrey McCullough, Ralph Hall, Frances Lawrenz, Jeffrey P. Kahn, Cortney Jones, Stephen A. Campbell, Rebecca S. Dresser, Arthur G. Erdman, Christy L. Haynes, Robert A. Hoerr, Linda F. Hogle, Moira A. Keane, George Khushf, Nancy M. P. King, Efrosini Kokkoli, Gary Marchant, Andrew D. Maynard, Martin Philbert, Gurumurthy Ramachandran, Ronald A. Siegel & Samuel Wickline - 2012 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (4):716-750.
    Nanomedicine is yielding new and improved treatments and diagnostics for a range of diseases and disorders. Nanomedicine applications incorporate materials and components with nanoscale dimensions where novel physiochemical properties emerge as a result of size-dependent phenomena and high surface-to-mass ratio. Nanotherapeutics and in vivo nanodiagnostics are a subset of nanomedicine products that enter the human body. These include drugs, biological products, implantable medical devices, and combination products that are designed to function in the body in ways unachievable at larger scales. (...)
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  3.  82
    Relationships among Facial, Prosodic, and Lexical Channels of Emotional Perceptual Processing.Joan C. Borod, Lawrence H. Pick, Susan Hall, Martin Sliwinski, Nancy Madigan, Loraine K. Obler, Joan Welkowitz, Elizabeth Canino, Hulya M. Erhan, Mira Goral, Chris Morrison & Matthias Tabert - 2000 - Cognition and Emotion 14 (2):193-211.
    This study was designed to address the issue of whether there is a general processor for the perception of emotion or whether there are separate processors. We examined the relationships among three channels of emotional communication in 100 healthy right-handed adult males and females. The channels were facial, prosodic/intonational, and lexical/verbal; both identification and discrimination tasks of emotional perception were utilised. Statistical analyses controlled for nonemotional perceptual factors and subject characteristics (i.e. demographic and general cognitive). For identification, multiple significant correlations (...)
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  4.  36
    The proper ambition of science.Martin William Francis Stone & Jonathan Wolff (eds.) - 2000 - New York: Routledge.
    What is the proper relation between the scientific worldview and other parts or aspects of human knowledge and experience? Can any science aim at "complete coverage" of the world, and if it does, will it undermine--in principle or by tendency--other attempts to describe or understand the world? Should morality, theology and other areas resist or be protected from scientific treatment? Questions of this sort have been of pressing philosophical concern since antiquity. The Proper Ambition of Science presents ten particular case (...)
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  5. Olemisen ainutkertaisuudesta ainutkertaisuuden politiikkaan: Parmenides, Heidegger, Nancy.Jussi M. Backman - 2013 - Tiede Ja Edistys 38 (2):108-124.
    Kirjoitus tarkastelee Martin Heideggerin myöhäisajattelussa esiin nousevaa olemisen ainutkertaisuuden (Einzigkeit, Einmaligkeit) teemaa ja sen edelleenkehittelyä Jean-Luc Nancyn ajattelussa. Teeman osoitetaan kytkeytyvän Heideggerin välienselvittelyyn filosofian esisokraattisen alun, erityisesti Parmenideen ajattelun kanssa. Parmenides ajattelee olemista kaikkia yksittäisiä ilmentymiään, "kuolevaisten" äärellisiä "näkemyksiä" (doksai) yhdistävänä absoluuttisen homogeenisena ja itseidenttisenä ilmeisyytenä (alētheia), todellisuuden puhtaana läsnäolona ajattelulle. Tätä vasten Heidegger ajattelee olemisen nimenomaan yksittäisten ilmentymiensä kontekstuaalisena ainutkertaisuutena, mielekkyystilanteiden ainutkertaistavana kontekstualisoitumisena. Nancy jatkaa ajatusta kuvailemalla olemista "ainutkertaiseksi-monikolliseksi" (singulier pluriel), mutta täydentää Heideggerin ajatteluun tunnetusti jäänyttä aukkoa (...)
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  6.  60
    A Midsummer Night's Dream : Relating Ethics to Mutuality.William M. Hawley - 2010 - The European Legacy 15 (2):159-169.
    Shakespeare 's A Midsummer Night's Dream shows ethical conflicts to be resolved relationally. Quarreling lovers divide Duke Theseus's Athenian court in advance of his own nuptial celebration, forcing the Duke to decide moral questions based on their ethical consequences. King Oberon's conflicted fairy world meddles in human affairs, adding to the ethical confusion. Athenian workmen vie for roles in a court performance that becomes both a theatrical travesty and a triumph of relational ethics owing to Bottom, the character most within (...)
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  7.  19
    Bioethics reenvisioned: a path toward health justice.Nancy M. P. King - 2022 - Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press. Edited by Gail Henderson & Larry R. Churchill.
    Bioethics needs an expanded moral vision. It is now time for bioethics to take full account of the problems of health disparities and structural injustice that are made newly urgent by the COVID-19 pandemic and the effects of climate change. Nancy M. P. King, Gail E. Henderson, and Larry R. Churchill make the case for a more social understanding and application of justice, a deeper humility in assessing expertise in bioethics consulting, a broader and more relevant research agenda, and (...)
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  8.  40
    RAC Oversight of Gene Transfer Research: A Model Worth Extending?Nancy M. P. King - 2002 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 30 (3):381-389.
    Clinical gene transfer research has both a unique history and a complex and layered system of research oversight, featuring a unique review body, the Recombinant DNA Advisory Committee. This paper briefly describes the process of decision-making about clinical GTR, considers whether the questions, problems, and issues raised in clinical GTR are unique, and concludes by examining whether the RAC's oversight is a useful model that should be reproduced for other similar areas of clinical research.Clinical GTR is governed by the same (...)
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  9.  49
    Looking Ahead: Addressing Ethical Challenges in Public Health Practice.Nancy M. Baum, Sarah E. Gollust, Susan D. Goold & Peter D. Jacobson - 2007 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 35 (4):657-667.
    In recent years, scholars have begun to lay the groundwork to justify a distinct application of ethics to the field of public health. They have highlighted important features that differentiate public health ethics from bioethics, especially public health’s emphasis on population health rather than issues of individual health. Articulations of public health ethics also tend to emphasize the role of social justice compared to the predominance of autonomy in the bioethical literature. Now that the field of public health ethics is (...)
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  10.  28
    Beyond the Medical Model: Retooling Bioethics for the Work Ahead.Nancy M. P. King, Gail E. Henderson & Larry R. Churchill - 2021 - American Journal of Bioethics 21 (2):53-55.
    The three important target articles make a strong case for regarding racism as a public health crisis. Each calls for advocacy by the bi...
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  11.  28
    Ethical Veganism as Quiet Resistance.Nancy M. Williams - 2023 - Journal of Animal Ethics 13 (2):184-194.
    In this article, I will argue that ethical veganism can be understood as a form of quietism, as a quiet retreat from a world burdened by human moral failings and animal suffering. I will also show how this retreat, although quiet in nature, is both a legitimate and valuable form of genuine resistance to animal oppression. Positing ethical veganism as a form of sociopolitical resistance to animal exploitation is not new, but thinking of it as a quietist retreat and a (...)
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  12.  48
    Who ate the apple? A commentary on the core competencies report.Nancy M. P. King - 1999 - HEC Forum 11 (2):170-175.
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  13. Donna Bowman and Clayton Crockett, eds. Cosmology, Ecology, and the Energy of God.Nancy M. Rourke - 2013 - Environmental Ethics 35 (3):381-382.
  14.  24
    Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain.Nancy M. Bailey & Betty Edwards - 1981 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 15 (2):114.
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  15. God, grace, and creation : shaping a Catholic environmental virtue ethic.Nancy M. Rourke - 2010 - In Philip J. Rossi (ed.), God, Grace, and Creation. Orbis Books.
     
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  16.  45
    The Ethics of Care and Humane Meat: Why Care Is Not Ambiguous About “Humane” Meat.Nancy M. Williams - 2015 - Journal of Social Philosophy 46 (2):264-279.
  17. The paradoxical liberty of bio-power: Hannah Arendt and Michel Foucault on modern politics.Frederick M. Dolan - 2005 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 31 (3):369-380.
    For Hannah Arendt, spontaneous, ‘initiatory’ human action and interaction are suppressed by the normalizing pressures of society once ‘life’ - that is, sheer life - becomes the primary concern of politics, as it does, she finds, in the modern age. Arendt’s concept of the social is indebted to Martin Heidegger’s analysis of everyday Dasein in Being and Time , and contemporary political philosophers inspired by Heidegger, such as Jean-Luc Nancy, Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe, and Giorgio Agamben, tend to reproduce her (...)
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  18.  38
    The Scandal of White Complicity in US Hyper-Incarceration: A Nonviolent Spirituality of White Resistance by Alex Mikulich, Laurie Cassidy, and Margaret Pfeil.Nancy M. Rourke - 2015 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 35 (2):195-196.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Scandal of White Complicity in US Hyper-Incarceration: A Nonviolent Spirituality of White Resistance by Alex Mikulich, Laurie Cassidy, and Margaret PfeilNancy M. RourkeThe Scandal of White Complicity in US Hyper-Incarceration: A Nonviolent Spirituality of White Resistance Alex Mikulich, Laurie Cassidy, and Margaret Pfeil new york: palgrave macmillan, 2013. 203 pp. $90.00As a white American Catholic ethicist, I often envy my Protestant counterparts’ legacy of acknowledging and fighting (...)
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  19.  28
    Consent forms and the therapeutic misconception.Nancy M. P. King, Gail E. Henderson, Larry R. Churchill, Arlene M. Davis, Sara Chandros Hull, Daniel K. Nelson, P. Christy Parham-Vetter, Barbra Bluestone Rothschild, Michele M. Easter & Benjamin S. Wilfond - 2005 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 27 (1):1-7.
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  20.  26
    From continuing education to personal digital assistants: what do physical therapists need to support evidence‐based practice in stroke management?Nancy M. Salbach, Paula Veinot, Susan B. Jaglal, Mark Bayley & Danielle Rolfe - 2011 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 17 (4):786-793.
  21.  38
    Nanomedicine First-in-Human Research: Challenges for Informed Consent.Nancy M. P. King - 2012 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (4):823-830.
    First-in-human research has several characteristics that require special attention with respect to ethics and human subjects protections. At least some nanomedical technologies may also have characteristics that merit special attention in clinical research, as other papers in this symposium show. This paper considers how to address these characteristics in the consent form and process for FIH nanomedicine research, focusing principally on experimental nanotherapeutic interventions but also considering nanodiagnostic interventions.It is essential, as a starting point, to recognize that the consent form (...)
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  22.  10
    The Planet You Inherit: Letters to my Grandchildren When Uncertainty’s a Sure Thing, by Larry L. Rasmussen.Nancy M. Rourke - 2023 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 43 (2):447-448.
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  23.  17
    Moral Entanglements: The Ancillary-Care Obligations of Medical Researchers, written by Henry S. Richardson.Nancy M. P. King - 2015 - Journal of Moral Philosophy 12 (6):787-789.
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  24. The glass house : assessing bioethics.Nancy M. P. King - 2007 - In Lisa A. Eckenwiler & Felicia Cohn (eds.), The ethics of bioethics: mapping the moral landscape. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.
     
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  25.  12
    Inspired Sustainability: Planting Seeds for Action.Nancy M. Rourke - 2018 - Journal of Catholic Social Thought 15 (2):379-381.
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  26. Advance care planning and end-of-life decision-making.Nancy M. P. King & John C. Moskop - 2012 - In D. Micah Hester & Toby Schonfeld (eds.), Guidance for healthcare ethics committees. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
     
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  27.  32
    Shaping Our Selves: On Technology, Flourishing, and a Habit of Thinking by Erik Parens.Nancy M. P. King - 2016 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 26 (1):5-10.
    In Shaping Our Selves, Erik Parens offers both a personal history of bioethics and a cleverly clarifying lens to train on disputes in bioethics about emerging technologies. The question for readers is whether this lens, as useful as it is, leaves too much outside our field of vision. Parens, born in 1957, comes from the first wave of bioethics scholars—those of us who still mostly happened into bioethics as a field, before it was sufficiently well-established to be identified as a (...)
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  28.  30
    Research with Human Subjects: Humility and Deception.Nancy M. P. King - 2018 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 40 (2):12-14.
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  29.  24
    Sacramental Swallow.Nancy M. Rourke & Paula Leslie - 2013 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 13 (2):253-262.
    This paper contributes to our understanding of participation in the Eucharist by examining the swallow. The paper begins with a thick description of the swallow as act, as phenomenon, and as symbol. This description reveals the swallow’s interstitial nature, which is then examined for its implications on the meaning of participation in the sacrament. The paper then recommends approaches to the Eucharist for Catholics for whom swallowing is difficult or impossible. The paper finally incorporates these findings with the ex opere (...)
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  30.  32
    Experimental Treatment Oxymoron or Aspiration?Nancy M. P. King - 1995 - Hastings Center Report 25 (4):6-15.
    Giving up the increasingly troubled distinction between “experiment” and “treatment” would make it easier to focus on informed consent and harder to beg questions about uncertainty and shared decisionmaking in medicine.
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  31.  28
    Goodness of figure and social structure.Nancy M. Henley, Robert B. Horsfall & Clinton B. De Soto - 1969 - Psychological Review 76 (2):194-204.
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  32.  38
    Accident & Desire: Inadvertent Germline Effects in Clinical Research.Nancy M. P. King - 2003 - Hastings Center Report 33 (2):23-30.
    Gene therapy is still a very crude way of treating very complicated problems. It's hard to get new genes to go where they're needed, and hard to keep them from going where they're not wanted. The worst‐case scenario is that they find their way into a patient's germ cells—eggs or sperm—and end up harming the patient's offspring. Yet this possibility is hard to study in human trials, and would be hard to deal with in the clinic. It should, instead, simply (...)
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  33.  18
    Nurses' Promise to Safeguard the Public.Nancy M. Alley, Jo-Ann Marrs & Beth Schreiner - 2005 - Jona's Healthcare Law, Ethics, and Regulation 7 (4):119-124.
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  34.  24
    DEI Is Not Enough.Nancy M. P. King - 2022 - Hastings Center Report 52 (3):3-3.
    Hastings Center Report, Volume 52, Issue 3, Page 3-3, May–June 2022.
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  35.  35
    Who's Winning the IRB Wars? The Struggle for the Soul of Human Research.Nancy M. P. King - 2018 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 61 (3):450-464.
    One of my favorite bioethics quotes is nearing 50 years old:Let us not forget that progress is an optional goal, not an unconditional commitment, and that its tempo in particular, compulsive as it may become, has nothing sacred about it. Let us also remember that a slower progress in the conquest of disease would not threaten society, grievous as it is to those who have to deplore that their particular disease be not yet conquered, but that society would indeed be (...)
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  36.  41
    Defining and Describing Benefit Appropriately in Clinical Trials.Nancy M. P. King - 2000 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 28 (4):332-343.
    Institutional review boards and investigators are used to talking about risks of harm. Both low risks of great harm and high risks of small harm must be disclosed to prospective subjects and should be explained and categorized in ways that help potential subjects to understand and weigh them appropriately. Everyone on an IRB has probably spent time at meetings arguing over whether a three-page bulleted list of risk description is helpful or overkill for prospective subjects. Yet only a small fraction (...)
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  37.  23
    Creation and validation of the evidence‐based practice confidence scale for health care professionals.Nancy M. Salbach & Susan B. Jaglal - 2011 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 17 (4):794-800.
  38.  19
    Key Information in the New Common Rule: Can It Save Research Consent?Nancy M. P. King - 2019 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 47 (2):203-212.
    Informed consent in clinical research is widely regarded as broken, but essential nonetheless. The most recent attempt to reform it comes as part of the first revisions to the Common Rule since it became truly “common” in 1991. This change, the addition of a “key information” requirement for most consent forms, is intended to support and promote a reasoned decision-making process by potential subjects. The key information requirement is both promising and problematic. It is promising because it encourages clarity and (...)
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  39.  72
    Informed consent in clinical practice.Nancy M. Kettle - 2003 - HEC Forum 15 (1):42-54.
    In this paper I attempt to show that the doctrine of informed consent, as practiced in the relationships between physicians and patients, often does not fulfill its main purpose, i.e., it does not safeguard the interests, rights, and dignity of patients. This happens because of clinicians' skepticism about the existence of the right to informed consent, patients' disinclination to make decisions, the current nature of health care, and the absence of clear guidelines about implementing informed consent. In the context of (...)
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  40.  29
    Research Ethics: Reexamining Key Concerns.Nancy M. P. King & Ana S. Iltis - 2012 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 40 (4):865-866.
  41.  64
    Cheating During the College Years: How do Business School Students Compare?Helen A. Klein, Nancy M. Levenburg, Marie McKendall & William Mothersell - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 72 (2):197-206.
    When it comes to cheating in higher education, business school students have often been accused of being the worst offenders; if true, this may be a contributing factor in the kinds of fraud that have plagued the business community in recent years. We examined the issue of cheating in the business school by surveying 268 students in business and other professional schools on their attitudes about, and experiences with, cheating. We found that while business school students actually cheated no more (...)
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  42. Affected ignorance and animal suffering: Why our failure to debate factory farming puts us at moral risk. [REVIEW]Nancy M. Williams - 2008 - Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics 21 (4):371-384.
    It is widely recognized that our social and moral environments influence our actions and belief formations. We are never fully immune to the effects of cultural membership. What is not clear, however, is whether these influences excuse average moral agents who fail to scrutinize conventional norms. In this paper, I argue that the lack of extensive public debate about factory farming and, its corollary, extreme animal suffering, is probably due, in part, to affected ignorance. Although a complex phenomenon because of (...)
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  43.  6
    Strategy, Morality, Courage: Bioethics and Health Law after Dobbs.Nancy M. P. King, Christine Nero Coughlin & Beverly J. Levine - 2024 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 52 (2):290-308.
    Our paper examines what is required to protect and promote effective public discussion and policy development in the current climate of divisive disagreement about many public policy questions. We use abortion as a case example precisely because it is morally fraught. We first consider the changes made by Dobbs, as well as those which led up to the Dobbs decision, accompany it, and follow from it.
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  44.  47
    Athletes Are Guinea Pigs.Nancy M. P. King & Richard Robeson - 2013 - American Journal of Bioethics 13 (10):13 - 14.
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  45.  23
    Othering and Health Justice.Nancy M. P. King - 2022 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 65 (4):604-611.
    ABSTRACT:Bioethics needs to expand its vision. We must examine and interrogate the social and structural barriers that help traditionally privileged communities maintain minoritized groups as inherently inferior "others." Justice requires the field to look beyond the walls of hospitals, clinics, and medical academia to address and ameliorate the structural injustices that give rise to health disparities long before differential access to health services becomes an issue for underserved patients. Doing so means engaging in challenging multidisciplinary collaborations in order to understand (...)
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  46.  15
    (1 other version)The Stories We Tell Ourselves.Nancy M. P. King - 2003 - Hastings Center Report 33 (5):48-48.
  47.  29
    The Importance of Amicable and Productive Disagreement.Nancy M. P. King - 2015 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 40 (3):286-288.
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  48.  17
    Defending Probabilism: The Moral Theology of Juan Caramuel; The Pinckaers Reader: Renewing Thomistic Moral Theology.Nancy M. Rourke - 2009 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 29 (1):260-263.
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  49.  60
    Prudence Gone Wild.Nancy M. Rourke - 2011 - Environmental Ethics 33 (3):249-266.
    A Catholic environmental virtue ethic must include an understanding of prudence that incorporates attunement significantly. Catholic theologians are reluctant to revise notions of prudence, but there are traditions in theology that support such an approach. Catholic virtue ethical traditions point to this necessity, and, in addition, philosophical environmental virtue ethics (which are much more fully developed) simply insist on it. The comparison of a moral character (as it is understood in virtue ethics) with a bioregion’s ecosystem helps support this argument.
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  50.  8
    Bridges to consciousness: complexes and complexity.Nancy M. Krieger - 2014 - New York: Routledge.
    This book investigates consciousness as an emergent state arising from the global functioning of the brain and the body. In this research Krieger applies these concepts to analytical psychology, particularly to the constellation of the complex and of the archetype. Global brain functioning is considered as a complex system whose macroscopic, emergent patterns such as thoughts and behaviours are determined by physical parameters including emotion, memory, and perception. The concept of the feeling-toned complex was among the first of the theories (...)
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