Results for 'Therapeutics history'

957 found
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  1.  56
    The History and Ethics of the Therapeutic Relationship.Ulrich Koch & Kelso Cratsley - 2021 - In Trachsel Manuel, Şerife Tekin, Nikola Biller-Adorno, Jens Gaab & John Sadler, Oxford Handbook of Psychotherapy Ethics. Oxford University Press. pp. 65-84.
    This chapter reviews past and present debates about the therapeutic relationship in order to draw out the ethical implications of relational practices in psychotherapy. The therapeutic relationship has been understood differently across psychotherapeutic approaches, with each tradition responding to the attendant ethical challenges in distinctive ways. Aside from practitioners’ theoretical and practical commitments, the therapeutic relationship has also been, and continues to be, shaped by broader societal influences. The chapter discusses the shifting ethical implications of relational practices, then, as situated (...)
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  2.  25
    Locating Therapeutic Vaccines in Nineteenth-Century History.Christoph Gradmann - 2008 - Science in Context 21 (2):145-160.
    ArgumentThis essay places some therapeutic vaccines, including particularly the diphtheria antitoxin, into their larger historical context of the late nineteenth century. As industrially produced drugs, these vaccines ought to be seen in connection with the structural changes in medicine and pharmacology at the time. Given the spread of industrial culture and technology into the field of medicine and pharmacology, therapeutic vaccines can be understood as boundary objects that required and facilitated communication between industrialists, medical researchers, public health officials, and clinicians. (...)
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  3.  56
    Therapeutic Reflections on Our Bipolar History of Perception.Robert Pasnau - 2016 - Analytic Philosophy 57 (4):253-284.
    The long history of theorizing about perception divides into two quite distinct and irreconcilable camps, one that takes sensory experience to show us external reality just as it is, and one that takes such experience to reveal our own mind. I argue that we should reject both sides of this debate, and admit that the phenomenal character of experience, as such, reveals little about the nature of the external world and even less about the mind.
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  4.  52
    (1 other version)The computational therapeutic: exploring Weizenbaum’s ELIZA as a history of the present.Caroline Bassett - 2019 - AI and Society 34 (4):803-812.
    This paper explores the history of ELIZA, a computer programme approximating a Rogerian therapist, developed by Jospeh Weizenbaum at MIT in the 1970s, as an early AI experiment. ELIZA’s reception provoked Weizenbaum to re-appraise the relationship between ‘computer power and human reason’ and to attack the ‘powerful delusional thinking’ about computers and their intelligence that he understood to be widespread in the general public and also amongst experts. The root issue for Weizenbaum was whether human thought could be ‘entirely (...)
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  5. History of Immunizations (n. 2); Peter C. English," Therapeutic strategies to combat pneumococcal disease: Repeated failure of physicians to adopt pneumococcal vaccine, 1900-1945,". [REVIEW]A. Parish - 1987 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 30:170-85.
     
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  6.  33
    Medicine Therapeutics from the Primitives to the 20th Century. With an Appendix: History of Dietetics. By Erwin H. Ackerknecht. New York: Hafner Press, and London: Collier Macmillan, 1973. Pp. x + 194. £6.25. [REVIEW]E. Underwood - 1975 - British Journal for the History of Science 8 (2):178-178.
  7.  19
    Settler colonialism and therapeutic discourses on the past: a response to Burnett et al.’s ‘a politics of reminding’.Rafael Verbuyst - 2025 - Critical Discourse Studies 22 (1):53-69.
    In ‘A politics of reminding: Khoisan resurgence and environmental justice in South Africa’s Sarah Baartman district’, Burnett et al. scrutinize the memory activism of the Gamtkwa Khoisan Council, which is part of the wider ‘Khoisan resurgence’ sweeping across post-apartheid South Africa. Although the authors missed important nuances, they also pointed out flaws in the way I used Niezen’s ‘therapeutic history’ [Niezen, R. (2009). The rediscovered self: Indigenous identity and cultural justice. McGill-Queen’s Press] in my work to account for why (...)
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  8.  12
    Indigenous resurgence, collective ‘reminding’, and insidious binaries: a response to Verbuyst’s ‘settler colonialism and therapeutic discourses on the past’.Scott Burnett, Nettly Ahmed, Tahn-dee Matthews, Junaid Oliephant & Aylwyn Walsh - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    This essay intervenes in the on-going debate over the power-knowledge entanglements of classifying emic Indigenous resurgence accounts of the past as “therapeutic history”. We refer to how “therapeutic history” was defined by Ronald Niezen in his 2009 book, The Rediscovered Self. We argue that despite the important refinement of the concept made by Rafael Verbuyst in his application of the term in his work on Khoisan resurgence in South Africa, we believe it to be a problematic category, especially (...)
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  9.  35
    Crackpots and basket-cases: a history of therapeutic work and occupation.Jennifer Laws - 2011 - History of the Human Sciences 24 (2):65-81.
    Despite the long history of beliefs about the therapeutic properties of work for people with mental ill health, rarely has therapeutic work itself been a focus for historical analysis. In this article, the development of a therapeutic work ethic (1813—1979) is presented, drawing particular attention to the changing character and quality of beliefs about therapeutic work throughout time. From hospital factories to radical ‘antipsychiatric’ communities, the article reveals the myriad forms of activities that have variously been considered fit work (...)
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  10.  14
    The Therapeutic Revolution: Essays in the Social History of American Medicine by Morris J. Vogel; Charles E. Rosenberg. [REVIEW]John Warner - 1981 - Isis 72:128-129.
  11.  68
    Therapeutic Misconception: Hope, Trust and Misconception in Paediatric Research.Simon Woods, Lynn E. Hagger & Pauline McCormack - 2014 - Health Care Analysis 22 (1):3-21.
    Although the therapeutic misconception (TM) has been well described over a period of approximately 20 years, there has been disagreement about its implications for informed consent to research. In this paper we review some of the history and debate over the ethical implications of TM but also bring a new perspective to those debates. Drawing upon our experience of working in the context of translational research for rare childhood diseases such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy, we consider the ethical and (...)
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  12.  26
    Pharmacological and therapeutic profiling in drug innovation: the early history of the beta blockers.Rein Vos & Henk Bodewitz - 1988 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 31 (4):469.
  13. The Therapeutic Role of Monastic Paideia for ASD Individuals: The Case of Hildegard of Bingen and her Lingua Ignota.Janko Nešić, Vanja Subotić & Petar Nurkić - 2024 - Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture 8 (2):7-26.
    The aim of this paper is to discuss monastic paideia in the context of providing shelter for ASD individuals in the High Middle Ages. Firstly, we will canvas the historical and conceptual shift from Ancient Greek paideitic ideas to their Christian counterparts. Then, by drawing on the recent literature in the history of medicine that traces the signs and symptoms of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in Hildegard of Bingen, a German abbess in the 12th century, we will turn to (...)
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  14. Testing treatments, managing life: on the history of randomized clinical trials: Harry M. Marks, The Progress of Experiment: Science and Therapeutic Reform in the United States, 1900-1990.Trudy Dehue - 1999 - History of the Human Sciences 12 (1):115-124.
  15.  9
    Medical Theory and Therapeutic Practice in the Eighteenth Century: A Transatlantic Perspective.Jürgen Helm & Renate Wilson (eds.) - 2008 - Franz Steiner Verlag.
    In the course of the long 18th century, medical theory and theories underwent profound changes. These in turn reflected discontinuities and often conflicting assumptions and premises, engendering divergent concepts of physiology and pathology. However, most theoretical considerations were only very inconsistently and partially reflected in therapeutic practice, which continued to be governed by experience with traditional and known medicinals and by patient expectations regarding provider practices. Additional factors in therapeutic decision making were economic considerations and preferences for particular therapies in (...)
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  16. Malaria and Greek History. To Which is Added the History of Greek Therapeutics and the Malaria Theory.W. H. S. Jones & E. T. Withington - 1909 - University Press.
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  17.  49
    Therapeutic culture, authenticity and neo-liberalism.Roger Foster - 2016 - History of the Human Sciences 29 (1):99-116.
    I argue that in recent years, the therapeutic ethos and the ideal of authenticity have become aligned with distinctively neo-liberal notions of personal responsibility and self-reliance. This situation has radically exacerbated the threat to political community that Charles Taylor saw in the ‘ethics of authenticity’. I begin by tracing the history of the therapeutic ethos and its early (Rieff, Lasch, MacIntyre) and late (Furedi) critics. I then discuss Charles Taylor’s argument that the culture of self-fulfillment generated by the therapeutic (...)
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  18.  66
    ‘An aid to mental health’: natural history, alienists and therapeutics in Victorian Scotland.Diarmid A. Finnegan - 2008 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 39 (3):326-337.
    In the nineteenth century natural history was widely regarded as a rational and ‘distracting’ pursuit that countered the ill-effects, physical and mental, of urban life. This familiar argument was not only made by members of naturalists’ societies but was also borrowed and adapted by alienists concerned with the moral treatment of the insane. This paper examines the work of five long-serving superintendents in Victorian Scotland and uncovers the connections made between an interest in natural history and the management (...)
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  19.  21
    Redrawing therapeutic boundaries: microbiota and cancer.Jonathan Sholl, Gregory Sepich-Poore, Rob Knight & Thomas Pradeu - 2022 - Trends in Cancer 8 (2):87-97.
    The unexpected roles of the microbiota in cancer challenge explanations of carcinogenesis that focus on tumor-intrinsic properties. Most tumors contain bacteria and viruses, and the host’s proximal and distal microbiota influence both cancer incidence and therapeutic responsiveness. Continuing the history of cancer–microbe research, these findings raise a key question: to what extent is the microbiota relevant for clinical oncology? We approach this by critically evaluating three issues: how the microbiota provides a predictive biomarker of cancer growth and therapeutic responsiveness, (...)
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  20.  20
    Abracadabra! Postmodern Therapeutic Methods: Language as a Neo-Magical Tool.Marianna Ruah-Midbar Shapiro - 2018 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 17 (49):3-17.
    This paper argues that a new genre of therapy has appeared in the arena of contemporary spiritual alternative healing, which expresses an outlook never-before-seen in the history of medicine: postmodern therapy. Postmodern therapeutic methods express a popularization of postmodernist philosophy in regards to language’s role in the therapeutic process, expressing a novel cosmology. These methods are illustrated in the paper, and then analyzed in comparison to two other groups of methods: traditional/occult magic, and modern medicine. Finally, PTMs are characterized (...)
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  21.  86
    The Therapeutic Reconstruction of Affordances.Shaun Gallagher - 2018 - Res Philosophica 95 (4):719-736.
    I argue that a variety of physical disabilities, and neurological and psychiatric disorders can be understood in terms of changes to the subject’s affordance space. Understanding disorders in this way also has some implications for therapy. On the basis of a phenomenological- and pragmatist-inspired enactivism I propose an affordance-based approach to therapy with a focus on changing physical, social, and cultural environments, and I consider the role of virtual and mixed realities in this context.
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  22.  72
    The Therapeutic Skepticism of Michel de Montaigne.Christopher Edelman - 2015 - Review of Metaphysics 68 (4):781-801.
    Montaigne is widely appreciated as an important figure in the history of skepticism, but the precise nature of his skepticism remains unclear. While most treatments of Montaigne’s skepticism focus on the “Apology for Raymond Sebond,” there is reason to believe that the “Apology” does not contain his last word on the subject, and that—as many scholars have pointed out—whatever endorsement he gives there to ancient Pyrrhonism must be qualified in light of the fact that he does maintain beliefs, not (...)
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  23.  22
    Therapeutic Deception.Veronica Roberts Ogle - 2019 - Augustinian Studies 50 (1):13-42.
    While many scholars have explored the Ciceronian roots of Augustine’s thought, the influence of De Finibus on De ciuitate dei has, as yet, remained unexamined. Dismissed by Testard as abstract and scholastic, De Finibus has long remained in the shadow of Cicero’s other work of moral philosophy, Tusculanae Dispuationes. This article reconsiders the nature of De Finibus and demonstrates its importance for De ciuitate dei. It begins by arguing that the dialogue is actually a meta-commentary on philosophic dogmatism, showing how (...)
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  24.  18
    The therapeutic subject in La Arcadia by Lope de Vega.Cristina Andrade-Rosa, Francisco López-Muñoz & Juan D. Molina - 2017 - Humanidades Médicas 17 (1):201-236.
    En la actualidad, aún se desconoce el verdadero alcance de la vasta cultura de Lope de Vega, pues, aunque se sabe que fue un gran lector, que legó más de 1500 libros, sus títulos se han perdido a lo largo de la historia. No obstante, en sus obras trasciende una serie de textos que contribuyeron a su formación. En el presente trabajo se analiza La Arcadia, considerada la novela pastoril más erudita del Siglo de Oro, desde la perspectiva de los (...)
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  25.  27
    Therapeutic Presentisms: A Hedonist and a Stoic in Agreement?Georgia Mouroutsou - 2024 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 26 (2):321-340.
    This article focuses on two very different thinkers from different periods of time, an early hedonist who belonged to Socrates’ circle and lived until the middle of the fourth century BCE and the late Stoic who ruled the Roman Empire in the second century CE. Despite all substantial divergences – for instance, on the value of pleasure – Aristippus the Elder and Marcus Aurelius shared an interest in presentism, broadly construed as a focus on the present and its primacy, and (...)
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  26.  5
    Why and when should we (not) distinguish between academic and therapeutic discourses on the past? A response to Burnett et al.’s ‘Indigenous resurgence, collective “reminding”, and insidious binaries’.Rafael Verbuyst - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    In this final response to Burnett et al., I make my case for why and when we should and should not distinguish between academic and therapeutic discourses on the past when studying how marginalized people engage with the past. Whereas Burnett et al. regard this as an ‘insidious binary’, I point to various reasons for why it is productive to think through these categories as productive, albeit imperfect analytical lenses.
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  27.  38
    The science of therapeutic images.Connor Cummings - 2017 - History of the Human Sciences 30 (2):69-87.
    The Netherne Hospital in Surrey is perhaps the most prestigious site in the history of British art therapy, associated with the key figures Edward Adamson and Eric Cunningham Dax, whose pioneering work involved the setting-up of a large studio for psychiatric patients to create expressive paintings. What is little-known, however, is the work of the designated scientist for psychiatric research, Hungarian Jewish émigré Francis Reitman, who was charged with an overall scientific analysis of the artistic products of the studio. (...)
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  28. The Grief of Reason. Kant's Idea of General philosophy of History for Therapeutic purposes.Arnd Pollmann - 2011 - Kant Studien 102 (1).
  29. On therapeutic authority: psychoanalytical expertise under advanced liberalism.Peter Miller & Nikolas Rose - 1994 - History of the Human Sciences 7 (3):29-64.
  30.  36
    Epistemic injustice in the therapeutic relationship in psychiatry.Eisuke Sakakibara - 2023 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 44 (5):477-502.
    The notion of epistemic injustice was first applied to cases of discrimination against women and people of color but has since come to refer to wider issues related to social justice. This paper applies the concept of epistemic injustice to problems in the therapeutic relationship between psychiatrists and psychiatric patients. To this end, it is necessary to acknowledge psychiatrists as professionals with expertise in treating mental disorders, which impair the patient’s rationality, sometimes leading to false beliefs, such as delusions. This (...)
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  31.  27
    Therapeutic Interpretation.Nicholas Plants - 1998 - Proceedings of the American Catholic Philosophical Association 72:139-147.
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  32.  49
    Melancholy and the Therapeutic Language of Moral Philosophy in Seventeenth-Century Thought.Jeremy Schmidt - 2004 - Journal of the History of Ideas 65 (4):583-601.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Melancholy and the Therapeutic Language of Moral Philosophy in Seventeenth-Century ThoughtJeremy SchmidtThe concept of melancholy comprehended a wide range of characteristics and conditions in seventeenth-century European culture, from the brooding introspection of the genius and the scholar to a condition of delirious and delusory madness.1 Its central and most immediately identifiable characteristic, however, was the excessive and unreasonable nature of its symptomologically defining emotions of fear and sorrow. As (...)
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  33.  55
    The Therapeutic Nature of Grace in St. Augustine’s De Gratia et Libero Arbitrio.Thomas L. Holtzen - 2000 - Augustinian Studies 31 (1):93-115.
  34.  50
    Imperialism, Race, and Therapeutics: The Legacy of Medicalizing the “Colonial Body”.Patricia Barton - 2008 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 36 (3):506-516.
    The BiDil controversy in America coincides with a renewed interest in the linkages between race and therapeutics, whether in the medical history of the United States itself, or in the colonial world. During the colonial era in South Asia, many anthropological and medical researchers conducted research which compared the European and “colonial” body, contrasting everything from blood composition to brain weight between the races of the Indian Empire. This, as Mark Harrison has shown, was fundamentally a phenomenon of (...)
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  35. Therapeutic Arguments and the Structures of Desire.Martha Nussbaum - 2002 - In Genevieve Lloyd, Feminism and history of philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press.
  36.  16
    (1 other version)Spirituality/Religiosity as a Therapeutic Resource in Clinical Practice: Conception of Undergraduate Medical Students of the Paulista School of Medicine (Escola Paulista de Medicina) - Federal University of São Paulo.Silvia Borragini-Abuchaim, Luis Garcia Alonso & Rita Lino Tarcia - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Introduction: The high degree of religious/spiritual involvement that brings meaning and purpose to a patients’ life, especially when they are weakened by pain, is among the various reasons to consider the spiritual dimension in clinical practice. This involvement may influence medical decisions and, therefore, should be identified in the medical history of a patient.Objective: To verify the opinion of undergraduate medical students of the Paulista School of Medicine – Federal University of São Paulo regarding the use of a patient’s (...)
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  37. The Therapeutic Process, the Self, and Female Psychology, Collected Psychoanalytic Papers. Helene Deutsch.Paul Roazen & Ernst Falzeder - 1995 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 17 (1):173.
  38. Dictionary of Protopharmacology-Therapeutic Practices, 1700-1850.J. Worth Estes & Alain Touwaide - 1995 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 17 (3):503.
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  39.  80
    Therapeutic Intervention of Post-traumatic Stress Disorder by Chinese Medicine: Perspectives for Transdisciplinary Cooperation Between Life Sciences and Humanities. [REVIEW]Thomas Efferth, Mita Banerjee & Alfred Hornung - 2014 - Medicine Studies 4 (1):71-89.
    Taking post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as an example, we present a concept for transdisciplinary cooperation between life sciences and humanities. PTSD is defined as a long-term persisting anxiety disorder after severe psychological traumata. Initially recognized in war veterans, PTSD also appears in victims of crime and violence or survivors of natural catastrophes, e.g., earthquakes. We consider PTSD as a prototype topic to realize transdisciplinary projects, because this disease is multifacetted from different points of view. Based on physiological and molecular biological (...)
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  40.  13
    Healing from History: Psychoanalytic Considerations on Traumatic Pasts and Social Repair.Jeffrey Prager - 2008 - European Journal of Social Theory 11 (3):405-420.
    How to mobilize a traumatic national history on behalf of a less fractured polity? How to gain closure over a past that bifurcates the nation and establishes (at least) two national histories — history as told by the victims and by the perpetrators, now to be replaced by a history, as Mark Sanders (2003: 79) describes it, not of `bare facts but, at a crucial level, a history judged, and thus shaped, according to norms of universal (...)
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  41.  77
    Understanding Adorno on ‘Natural-History’.Tom Whyman - 2016 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 24 (4):452-472.
    ‘Natural-History’ is one of the key concepts in the thought of the Frankfurt School critical theorist Theodor W. Adorno, appearing from his very earliest work through to his very last. Unfortunately, the existing literature provides little illumination as to what Adorno’s concept of natural-history is, or what it is supposed to do. This paper thus seeks to supply the required understanding. Ultimately, I argue that ‘natural-history’ is best understood as a sort of ‘therapeutic’ concept, intended to dissolve (...)
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  42. Transcranial magnetic stimulation: a historical evaluation and future prognosis of therapeutically relevant ethical concerns.Jared C. Horvath, Jennifer M. Perez, Lachlan Forrow, Felipe Fregni & Alvaro Pascual-Leone - 2011 - Journal of Medical Ethics 37 (3):137-143.
    Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) is a non-invasive neurostimulatory and neuromodulatory technique increasingly used in clinical and research practices around the world. Historically, the ethical considerations guiding the therapeutic practice of TMS were largely concerned with aspects of subject safety in clinical trials. While safety remains of paramount importance, the recent US Food and Drug Administration approval of the Neuronetics NeuroStar TMS device for the treatment of specific medication-resistant depression has raised a number of additional ethical concerns, including marketing, off-label use (...)
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  43.  27
    HARRY M. MARKS, The Progress of Experiment: Science and Therapeutic Reform in the United States, 1900–1990. Cambridge History of Medicine. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000. Pp. xii+258. ISBN 0-521-78561-8. £14.95, $19.95. [REVIEW]Carsten Timmermann - 2005 - British Journal for the History of Science 38 (1):118-119.
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  44.  99
    Skeptic purgatives: Therapeutic arguments in ancient skepticism.Martha Nussbaum - 1991 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 29 (4):521-557.
  45.  49
    Placebo Effects and the Ethics of Therapeutic Communication: A Pragmatic Perspective.Marco Annoni & Franklin G. Miller - 2016 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 26 (1):79-103.
    Doctor–patient communication is a crucial component in any therapeutic encounter. Physicians use words to formulate diagnoses and prognoses, to disclose the risks and benefits of medical interventions, and to explain why, how, and when a therapy will be administered to a patient. Likewise, patients communicate to describe their symptoms, to make sense of their conditions, to report side effects, to explore other therapeutic options, and to share their feelings. Throughout the history of medicine, the ethics of the doctor–patient communication (...)
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  46.  45
    Trust in early phase research: therapeutic optimism and protective pessimism.Scott Y. H. Kim, Robert G. Holloway, Samuel Frank, Renee Wilson & Karl Kieburtz - 2008 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 11 (4):393-401.
    Bioethicists have long been concerned that seriously ill patients entering early phase (‘phase I’) treatment trials are motivated by therapeutic benefit even though the likelihood of benefit is low. In spite of these concerns, consent forms for phase I studies involving seriously ill patients generally employ indeterminate benefit statements rather than unambiguous statements of unlikely benefit. This seeming mismatch between attitudes and actions suggests a need to better understand research ethics committee members’ attitudes toward communication of potential benefits and risks (...)
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  47. Ко су били Терапеути у Vita Contemplativa Филона Александријског? (Who were the Therapeuts in Philo’s De Vita Contemplativa?).Aleksandar Djakovac - 2019 - Theological Views 52 (3):601-618.
    In contemporary research, the prevailing view is that the Therapeuts, of which Philo of Alexandria writes in Vita Contemplativa, were a Jewish group or sect. There is also an opinion that Therapeuts are the product of Philo’s utopian fantasy. In both cases, the report of Eusebius of Caesarea in the Church history is dismissed as unfounded. In this paper, we will outline the reasons why we believe that Eusebius’s view cannot be rejected as unfounded, and that it is more (...)
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  48.  52
    What is history for?Beverley C. Southgate - 2005 - New York: Routledge.
    What is History For? is a timely publication that examines the purpose and point of historical studies. Recent debates on the role of the humanities and the ongoing impact of poststructuralist thought on the very nature of historical enquiry, have rendered the question "what is history for?" of utmost importance. Charting the development of historical studies, Beverley Southgate examines the various uses to which history has been put. While history has often supposedly been studied "for its (...)
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  49.  37
    There Is Not Just a War: Recalling the Therapeutic Metaphor in Western Metaphilosophy.Matthew Sharpe - 2016 - Sophia 55 (1):31-54.
    This paper offers a critical response to the claims of Sivin and Lloyd and Mattice to the effect that Greek and Roman philosophy was characterised by a predominance of combat metaphors. Drawing on Plato and Plutarch, as well as contemporary studies led by Nussbaum, I argue that a host of different metaphors was demonstrably used in the Greek tradition to describe philosophy and its subjects, led by the therapeutic or medicinal metaphor of philosophy as ‘therapy of desire’ or of desiderative (...)
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  50.  8
    The History and Development of Modern Pharmacognosy in Ukraine: The National University of Pharmacy, Kharkiv.Alla Kovalyova, Tetiana Ilina, Olga Goryacha, Andriy Grytsyk, Ain Raal & Oleh Oleh Koshovyi - 2024 - Acta Baltica Historiae Et Philosophiae Scientiarum 12 (2):33-71.
    This historical essay presents an analysis of the origins and development of modern pharmacognosy in Ukraine and explores the founding and development of the Department of Pharmacognosy at the National University of Pharmacy (NUPh, Kharkiv), providing an overview of the department`s history, a framework of its educational and methodological processes, primary research directions, and its main achievements. The paper also includes biographical data and outlines the main scientific and pedagogical achievements of prominent individuals who made a significant contribution to (...)
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