Results for 'experiments in living'

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  1. When experiments in living go awry.Kyle Swan - 2007 - In Jonathan Riley (ed.), Studies in the History of Ethics, Symposium: J.S. Mill's Ethics.
    What reactions are legitimate when someone is pursuing an experiment in living that has, in your considered view, gone awry? This essay discusses how the way Mill expressed his concern over the cultivation of individuality places some stress on the harm principle and on the permissibility of making the sort of judgments about another person that seem fairly natural to make when someone is pursuing an experiment in living that has gone considerably awry. It is surprisingly difficult, but (...)
     
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  2.  2
    Experiments in Living: A Study of the Nature and Foundation of Ethics Or Morals in the Light of Recent Work in Social Anthropology.Alexander Macbeath - 1978 - Macmillan.
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  3.  29
    Experiments in Living.Aylon R. Manor - 2021 - Social Theory and Practice 47 (2):351-375.
    A number of liberal and libertarian philosophers make the moral case for laissez-faire polycentricity—a political order centered around voluntary association. Some of these philosophers further present epistemic arguments in favor of polycentric forms of organization. Initially, one might think that the epistemic arguments reinforce the moral ones, resulting in a philosophically robust case for laissez-faire polycentricity. This paper argues against this conclusion. Through examining the intersection between epistemic considerations and institutional arrangements, I show that the epistemic arguments point away from (...)
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    Experiments in Living.D. O’Donoghue - 1954 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 4:86-91.
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  5. Experiments in Living Together: How Democracy Drives Social Progress.Michael Fuerstein - 2024 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Over the past 70 years, the United States has undergone major moral shifts surrounding gender, sexual orientation, and race. These changes have been highly problematic and incomplete. But they appear as stunning improvements–progress–in the human condition nonetheless. Democracy plausibly has something to do with this. On its face, democratic governance embodies the promise of protest, voice, foment, and therefore social change. And yet, as a new crop of skeptics has pointed out, democratic citizens tend to be ignorant, irrational, and easily (...)
     
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    Experiments in living.Alexander Macbeath - 1952 - London,: Macmillan.
  7. (2 other versions)Experiments in Living. A Study of the Nature and Foundation of Ethics or Morals in the Light of Recent Work in Social Anthropology.A. Macbeath - 1953 - Mind 62 (248):545-549.
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  8. Experiments in living.Neera Badhwar - 2006 - The Philosophers' Magazine 35 (35):58-61.
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  9. Social Movements, Experiments in Living, and Moral Progress: Case Studies from Britain’s Abolition of Slavery.Elizabeth Anderson - unknown
    This is the text of The Lindley Lecture for 2014, given by Elizabeth Anderson, an American philosopher.
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  10.  58
    Experiments in Living; a Study of the Nature and Foundation of Ethics or Morals in the Light of Recent Work in Social Anthropology. [REVIEW]John Ladd - 1952 - Journal of Philosophy 49 (19):614-619.
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  11. John Stuart mill and experiments in living.Elizabeth S. Anderson - 1991 - Ethics 102 (1):4-26.
  12. Expanding the Justificatory Framework of Mill's Experiments in Living.Ryan Muldoon - 2015 - Utilitas 27 (2):179-194.
    In On Liberty, Mill introduced the concept of . I will provide an account of what Mill saw to be the basic problem he was addressing – the extensive pressure to fit in with the crowd, and how this bred mediocrity. I connect this to worries about public reason models of justification. I argue that a generalized version of Mill's argument offers us a better path to political justification stemming from experimentation. Rather than grounding political justification on shared political reasons, (...)
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  13.  62
    Researching lived experience in health care: Significance for care ethics.Bernadette Dierckx de Casterlé, Sofie Tl Verhaeghe, Marijke C. Kars, Annemarie Coolbrandt, Marleen Stevens, Maaike Stubbe, Nathalie Deweirdt, Jeroen Vincke & Maria Grypdonck - 2011 - Nursing Ethics 18 (2):232-242.
    The aim of this article is to demonstrate the usefulness of qualitative research for studying the ethics of care, bringing to light the lived experience of health care recipients, together with the importance of methods that allow reconstruction of the processes underlying this lived experience. Lived experiences of families being approached for organ donation, parents facing the imminent death of their child and patients being treated using stem cell transplantation are used to illustrate how ethical principles are differentiated, modified or (...)
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  14.  24
    Experiments in Living: A study of the nature and foundations of ethics or morals in the light of recent work in Social Anthropology. The Gifford Lectures for 1948–49, delivered in the University of St. Andrews. By A. macbeath. (London, Macmillan, 1952. Pp. ix + 462. Price 30s.). [REVIEW]A. C. Ewing - 1953 - Philosophy 28 (106):268-.
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    Lived Experience in New Models of Care for Substance Use Disorder: A Systematic Review of Peer Recovery Support Services and Recovery Coaching.David Eddie, Lauren Hoffman, Corrie Vilsaint, Alexandra Abry, Brandon Bergman, Bettina Hoeppner, Charles Weinstein & John F. Kelly - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  16.  41
    Rethinking Neuroscientific Methodology: Lived Experience in Behavioral Studies.Nedah Nemati - 2024 - Biological Theory 19 (3):184-197.
    The role of experience in the process of behavioral refinement has been undertheorized by philosophers of neuroscience and neuroscientists. By examining sleep studies in behavioral neurobiology, I show that scientists frequently invoke a variety of lived experiences—what I call experientially derived notions—to refine the behavior under investigation. Of note, these behaviors must remain sufficiently fuzzy throughout experimentation to permit refinement. The aim of this article is to recognize that neuroscientists’ use of lived experience necessarily helps refine behaviors and render those (...)
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  17. MACBEATH, A. - Experiments in Living[REVIEW]L. J. Russell - 1953 - Mind 62:545.
     
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  18.  38
    Anchoring in Lived Experience as an Act of Resistance.Claire Petitmengin - 2021 - Constructivist Foundations 16 (2):172-181.
    Context: The pandemic we are going through is an unprecedented situation from which tragic consequences loom. Disturbing and painful though it is, we should, however, remember that it is but a ….
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  19.  30
    Researching lived experience in health care: Significance for care ethics.Bernadette Dierckx de Casterlé, Sofie T. L. Verhaeghe, Marijke C. Kars, Annemarie Coolbrandt, Marleen Stevens, Maaike Stubbe, Nathalie Deweirdt, Jeroen Vincke & Maria Grypdonck - 2011 - Nursing Ethics 18 (2):232-242.
    The aim of this article is to demonstrate the usefulness of qualitative research for studying the ethics of care, bringing to light the lived experience of health care recipients, together with the importance of methods that allow reconstruction of the processes underlying this lived experience. Lived experiences of families being approached for organ donation, parents facing the imminent death of their child and patients being treated using stem cell transplantation are used to illustrate how ethical principles are differentiated, modified or (...)
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  20.  31
    The Intensity of Lived-Experience in Martin Heidegger’s Basic Problems of Phenomenology : A Comparison to Being and Time. [REVIEW]Scott M. Campbell - 2019 - Human Studies 42 (4):581-599.
    The following essay compares and contrasts Martin Heidegger’s Being and Time with an earlier lecture course that he delivered in the Winter Semester of 1919/2020 entitled Basic Problems of Phenomenology. Heidegger says explicitly that the pre-phenomenal basis for his analysis in Being and Time is “entities” in their equipmental totality. He calls these the “preliminary theme” for his analysis of Dasein. While the analytic of Dasein is the first step in posing the question of Being, the pre-phenomenal basis for the (...)
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    Positive and Negative Experiences of Living in COVID-19 Pandemic: Analysis of Italian Adolescents’ Narratives.Chiara Fioretti, Benedetta Emanuela Palladino, Annalaura Nocentini & Ersilia Menesini - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    IntroductionDespite a growing interest in the field, scarce narrative studies have delved into adolescents’ psychological experiences related to global emergencies caused by infective diseases. The present study aims to investigate adolescents’ narratives on positive and negative experiences related to COVID-19.MethodsItalian adolescents, 2,758, completed two narrative tasks on their most negative and positive experiences during the COVID-19 emergency. Data were analyzed by modeling an analysis of emergent themes.Results“Staying home as a limitation of autonomy,” “School as an educational, not relational environment,” the (...)
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  22.  46
    Engaging people with lived experience in the grant review process.Katherine Rittenbach, Candice G. Horne, Terence O’Riordan, Allison Bichel, Nicholas Mitchell, Adriana M. Fernandez Parra & Frank P. MacMaster - 2019 - BMC Medical Ethics 20 (1):1-5.
    People with lived experience are individuals who have first-hand experience of the medical condition being considered. The value of including the viewpoints of people with lived experience in health policy, health care, and health care and systems research has been recognized at many levels, including by funding agencies. However, there is little guidance or established best practices on how to include non-academic reviewers in the grant review process. Here we describe our approach to the inclusion of people with lived experience (...)
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  23.  27
    Nature and Lived Experience in Late Sartre.Adrián Bene - 2015 - Dialogue and Universalism 25 (2):143-152.
    The paper deals with the Sartrean concept of lived experience which constitutes a bridge between phenomenology and Marxism, psychology and ontology, individual and society, as well as between philosophy and literary criticism. The notion of lived experience is rooted in psychology, at the same time being embedded in literary criticism and phenomenology. It is interlinked with the notions of facticity, contingency, singularity, intersubjectivity, and body in the Being and Nothingness, and became the theoretical base of Sartre’s essays on Baudelaire, Genet, (...)
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    Knowledge as a ‘Body Run’: Learning of Writing as Embodied Experience in Accordance with Merleau-Ponty’s Theory of the Lived Body.Eva Alerby - 2009 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 9 (1):1-8.
    What significance does the body have in the process of teaching and learning? In what way can the thoughts of a contemporary junior-level teacher in this regard be connected to the theory of the lived body formulated by the French phenomenologist philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty, and vice versa? The aim of this paper is to illuminate, enable understanding and discuss the meaning of the body in the learning process, with specific focus on the learning of writing as embodied experience. In the (...)
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  25.  16
    Experiments in love and death: medicine, postmodernism, microethics and the body.Paul A. Komesaroff - 2014 - Austin, TX: River Grove Books.
    Experiments in Love and Death is about the depth and complexity of the ethical issues that arise in illness and medicine. In his concept of 'microethics' Paul Komesaroff provides an alternative to the abstract debates about principles and consequences that have long dominated ethical thought. He shows how ethical decisions are everywhere: in small decisions, in facial expressions, in almost inconspicuous acts of recognition and trust. Through powerful descriptions of case studies and clear and concise explanations of contemporary philosophical (...)
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  26. Experiments in Distributive Justice and Their Limits.Michael Bennett - 2016 - Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 28 (3-4):461-483.
    Mark Pennington argues political systems should be decentralized in order to facilitate experimental learning about distributive justice. Pointing out the problems with Pennington's Hayekian formulation, I reframe his argument as an extension of the Millian idea of 'experiments in living.' However, the experimental case for decentralization is limited in several ways. Even if decentralization improves our knowledge about justice, it impedes the actual implementation of all conceptions of justice other than libertarianism. I conclude by arguing for the compatibility (...)
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  27.  62
    Reflection on lived experience in educational research.Robyn Barnacle - 2004 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 36 (1):57–67.
  28. Using students' lived experiences in an urban science classroom: An elementary school teacher's thinking.Bhaskar Raj Upadhyay - 2006 - Science Education 90 (1):94-110.
     
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  29. Man as Radical Reality: The Dialectic of Lived Experience in the Philosophy of Jose Ortega y Gasset.Pedro Blas Gonzalez - 1995 - Dissertation, Depaul University
    My dissertation is a critical study of Jose Ortega Y Gasset's attempt to reconcile his notion of lived-experience , which is fundamentally immediate experience, with his idea of life as vital-reason. But life as vital reason is, itself, best understood as consisting of life as a rational-existential project. This, in effect is Ortega's manner of fusing idealism and realism. The result of this mediation is to be interpreted as the self-with-things or what amounts to: I-in-the-world. Man is never what he (...)
     
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  30.  82
    Just love in live organ donation.Kristin Zeiler - 2009 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 12 (3):323-331.
    Emotionally-related live organ donation is different from almost all other medical treatments in that a family member or, in some countries, a friend contributes with an organ or parts of an organ to the recipient. Furthermore, there is a long-acknowledged but not well-understood gender-imbalance in emotionally-related live kidney donation. This article argues for the benefit of the concept of just love as an analytic tool in the analysis of emotionally-related live organ donation where the potential donor(s) and the recipient are (...)
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    Present in Body or Just in Mind: Differences in Social Presence and Emotion Regulation in Live vs. Virtual Singing Experiences.Daisy Fancourt & Andrew Steptoe - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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    Whose history? Whose future? Expanding the exploration of lived experience in ethics consultation to include empirical patient and family and community-based research.Catherine Myser - 2001 - American Journal of Bioethics 1 (4):1 – 3.
    (2001). Whose History? Whose Future? Expanding the Exploration of Lived Experience in Ethics Consultation to Include Empirical Patient and Family and Community-Based Research. The American Journal of Bioethics: Vol. 1, No. 4, pp. 1-3.
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    (1 other version)Temporal experience in mania.Marcin Moskalewicz & Michael A. Schwartz - 2018 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences:1-14.
    The paper examines both the phenomenology of the manic self as well as critical aspects of manic neurobiology, focusing, with respect to both domains, on manic temporality. We argue that the distortions of lived time in mania exceed mere acceleration and are fundamental for manic affectivity. Mania involves radical acceleration and radical asynchronicity, which result in an instantaneous existence. People with mania rebel against the facticity of reality and suffer from an existential leap towards the future, in which the self (...)
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  34.  33
    Temporal experience in recovery from psychosis.Jann E. Schlimme & Birgit Hase - 2020 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 19 (2):335-348.
    During recovery from psychosis (diagnosed as schizophrenia) things must often be done slower than normally expected. The tempo of the socially shared reality is often experienced as being too fast for the recovering person. We will describe how this impairment stems from the pre-reflective mental structure underlying psychosis and how it can be transferred into an active skill supporting recovery, often including social retreat. In this paper, co-written by a psychiatrist and a person experienced in psychosis (= participatory health research), (...)
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    Experimenting with Living Nature: Documented Practices of Sixteenth-Century Naturalists and Naturalia Collectors.Florike Egmond - 2017 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 6 (1):21-45.
    This article discusses experimentation in the context of sixteenth-century natural history, or natural science as I prefer to call it here. It uses predominantly textual sources, many of them manuscript letters, from different European countries, mainly Italy, the Low Countries, France and Germany-Austria. The focus is on the practice of experimentation and its documentation, partly because I proceed from the assumption that the investigation of living nature did not necessarily entail the same type of experimentation as contempo­rary alchemy, pharmacy, (...)
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    Phototoxicity in live fluorescence microscopy, and how to avoid it.Jaroslav Icha, Michael Weber, Jennifer C. Waters & Caren Norden - 2017 - Bioessays 39 (8):1700003.
    Phototoxicity frequently occurs during live fluorescence microscopy, and its consequences are often underestimated. Damage to cellular macromolecules upon excitation light illumination can impair sample physiology, and even lead to sample death. In this review, we explain how phototoxicity influences live samples, and we highlight that, besides the obvious effects of phototoxicity, there are often subtler consequences of illumination that are imperceptible when only the morphology of samples is examined. Such less apparent manifestations of phototoxicity are equally problematic, and can change (...)
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  37.  2
    Fatherhood’s Subjective Experience in the Face of Adolescent Children’ Depressive Symptomatology and Suicide Attempt.Milagros Rocío Saldaña Tumbay - 2018 - Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Philosophia:119-135.
    Fatherhood’s subjective experience in the face of adolescent children’ depressive symptomatology and suicide attempt. The fatherhood’s experience of living with a teenage son or daughter who presents depressive symptomatology and has tried to commit suicide constitutes a subjective experience in and of itself. For the father, these adverse conditions represent a challenge in his constituted role and cause an emotional impact which must be analysed by considering his subjective constitution. The aim of this research is to explore this experience (...)
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    Relationships and burden: An empirical‐ethical investigation of lived experience in home nursing arrangements.Anna‐Henrikje Seidlein, Ines Buchholz, Maresa Buchholz & Sabine Salloch - 2019 - Bioethics 33 (4):448-456.
    Quantitative research has called attention to the burden associated with informal caregiving in home nursing arrangements. Less emphasis has been placed, however, on care recipients’ subjective feelings of being a burden and on caregivers’ willingness to carry the burden in home care. This article uses empirical material from semi‐structured interviews conducted with older people affected by multiple chronic conditions and in need of long‐term home care, and with informal and professional caregivers, as two groups of relevant others. The high burden (...)
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  39. Bodies that love themselves and bodies that hate themselves : the role of lived experience in body integrity dysphoria.Antonino Pennisi & Alessandro Capodici - 2021 - In Valentina Cardella & Amelia Gangemi (eds.), Psychopathology and Philosophy of Mind: What Mental Disorders Can Tell Us About Our Minds. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  40.  29
    Knowledge as a 'Body Run': Learning of Writing as Embodied Experience in accordance with Merleau-Ponty's Theory of the Lived Body.A. Alerby - 2009 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 9 (1).
    What significance does the body have in the process of teaching and learning? In what way can the thoughts of a contemporary junior-level teacher in this regard be connected to the theory of the lived body formulated by the French phenomenologist philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty (1908-1961), and vice versa? The aim of this paper is to illuminate, enable understanding and discuss the meaning of the body in the learning process, with specific focus on the learning of writing as embodied experience. In (...)
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    Understanding people's needs in a commercial public space: About accessibility and lived experience in social settings.Tiiu Poldma, Delphine Labbé, Sylvain Bertin, Ève De Grosbois, Maria Barile, Kathrina Mazurik, Michel Desjardins, Hakim Herbane & Gatline Artis - 2014 - Alter - European Journal of Disability Research / Revue Européenne de Recherche Sur le Handicap 8 (3):206-216.
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  42. The psychic factor in living organisms.Ralph S. Lillie - 1943 - Philosophy of Science 10 (4):262-270.
    In my recent paper on Living Systems and Non-living Systems I considered briefly the question of the special rôle assignable to the psychic, as natural factor associated with yet different from the physical, in the activities of living organisms. The general conclusion was reached that this rôle is primarily integrative, in correspondence with the integrative character which is the essential distinguishing feature of the psychic in our experience. As integrative, the psychic factor has a special relation to (...)
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    Introduction: What is the Role of Lived Experience in Research?Anna Bergqvist, David Crepaz-Keay & Alana Wilde - 2023 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 94:1-14.
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    “Our Ears Lived Their Own Lives”. The Auditory Experience in Breslau Autobiographical Literature during the ‘Third Reich’.Annelies Augustyns - 2020 - Avant: Trends in Interdisciplinary Studies 11 (3).
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  45.  16
    Finding or Creating a Living Organism? Past and Future Thought Experiments in Astrobiology Applied to Artificial Intelligence.Daniel S. Helman - 2022 - Acta Biotheoretica 70 (2):1-24.
    This is a digest of how various researchers in biology and astrobiology have explored questions of what defines living organisms—definitions based on functions or structures observed in organisms, or on systems terms, or on mathematical conceptions like closure, chirality, quantum mechanics and thermodynamics, or on biosemiotics, or on Darwinian evolution—to clarify the field and make it easier for endeavors in artificial intelligence to make progress. Current ideas are described to promote work between astrobiologists and computer scientists, each concerned with (...)
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    Sense and Self-Referentiality in Living Beings.Arno L. Goudsmit - 2009 - Biosemiotics 2 (1):39-46.
    This contribution investigates the idea that an act of signification can be understood in terms of the self-referentiality that is typical of the biological organization. The capacity of a living being to interpret and appreciate its own environment can be understood as being grounded in its ability to perform self-referential experiences. We may call this the living being’s capacity of sense. In any act that generates sense, it is possible to distinguish a process of signification from its outcome, (...)
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    An Experiment in Leisure.Marion Milner - 2011 - Routledge.
    What is it that stops people from knowing what they want? How often do we wonder where we are going and what our world is all about? Written in 1936 as a companion piece to _A Life of One’s Own_, _ An Experiment in Leisure_ further charts Marion Milner’s illuminating and rewarding investigation into how we lead our lives. Instead of drawing on her daily diary, she turns to memory images – images not only from her own life but also (...)
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  48. (1 other version)The Laboratory of the Mind: Thought Experiments in the Natural Sciences.James Robert Brown - 1991 - New York: Routledge.
    Newton's bucket, Einstein's elevator, Schrödinger's cat – these are some of the best-known examples of thought experiments in the natural sciences. But what function do these experiments perform? Are they really experiments at all? Can they help us gain a greater understanding of the natural world? How is it possible that we can learn new things just by thinking? In this revised and updated new edition of his classic text _The Laboratory of the Mind_, James Robert Brown (...)
  49.  79
    The tidal model: The lived-experience in person-centred mental health nursing care.Phil Barker Phd Rn - 2001 - Nursing Philosophy 2 (3):213–223.
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    The disoriented self. Layers and dynamics of self-experience in dementia and schizophrenia.Michela Summa - 2014 - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences 13 (3):477-496.
    This paper explores the question concerning the relationship between basic and higher layers of experience and self-experience. The latter distinction implicitly presupposes the idea of a univocal foundation. After explaining the formal ontological law of foundation, an attempt is made to clarify how the idea of foundation may be suitable to understand the relationship among moments, or layers, of self-experience. To this aim, the phenomenological descriptions of self- and world-experience in dementia and schizophrenia are compared. The comparison between these two, (...)
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