Results for 'Carol McWilliam'

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  1.  23
    Patient-centered Medicine: Transforming the Clinical Method.Moira A. Stewart, Judith Belle Brown, W. Wayne Weston, Ian R. McWhinney, Carol L. McWilliam & Thomas R. Freeman (eds.) - 2014 - London: CRC Press.
    It describes and explains the patient-centered model examining and evaluating qualitative and quantitative research. It comprehensively covers the evolution and the six interactive components of the patient-centered clinical method, taking the reader through the relationships between the patient and doctor and the patient and clinician. All the editors are professors in the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Western Ontario, London, Canada.
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  2.  24
    Structural impact on gendered expectations and exemptions for family caregivers in hospice palliative home care.Nisha Sutherland, Catherine Ward-Griffin, Carol McWilliam & Kelli Stajduhar - 2017 - Nursing Inquiry 24 (1):e12157.
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  3.  25
    Modern ethics in 77 arguments: a Stone reader.Peter Catapano & Simon Critchley (eds.) - 2017 - New York: Liveright Publishing Corporation.
    A necessary companion to the acclaimed Stone Reader, Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments is a landmark collection for contemporary ethical thought. Since 2010, The Stone—the immensely popular, award-winning philosophy series in The New York Times—has revived and reinterpreted age-old inquires to speak to our modern condition. This new collection of essays from the series does for modern ethics what The Stone Reader did for modern philosophy. New York Times editor Peter Catapano and best-selling author and philosopher Simon Critchley have curated (...)
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  4.  27
    Concerning the applicability of geometric models to similarity data: The interrelationship between similarity and spatial density.Carol L. Krumhansl - 1978 - Psychological Review 85 (5):445-463.
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  5. Rethinking Democracy:Freedom and Social Co-operation in Politics, Economy, and Society.Carol C. Gould - 1988 - Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
    In this book, Carol Gould offers a fundamental reconsideration of the theory of democracy, arguing that democratic decision-making should apply not only to politics but also to economic and social life. Professor Gould redefines traditional concepts of freedom and social equality, and proposes a principle of Equal Positive Freedom in which individual freedom and social co-operation are seen to be compatible. Reformulating basic conceptions of property, authority, economic justice and human rights, the author suggests a number of ways in (...)
  6. Kantianism, Liberalism, and Feminism: Resisting Oppression.Carol Hay - 2013 - Palgrave-Macmillan.
    This is a book about the harms of oppression, and about addressing these harms using the resources of liberalism and Kantianism. Its central thesis is that people who are oppressed are bound by the duty of self-respect to resist their own oppression. In it, I defend certain core ideals of the liberal tradition—specifically, the fundamental importance of autonomy and rationality, the intrinsic and inalienable dignity of the individual, and the duty of self-respect—making the case that these ideals are pivotal in (...)
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  7. Neither man nor beast: feminism and the defense of animals.Carol J. Adams - 1994 - New York: Continuum.
    In just a few years, the book became an underground classic. Neither Man Nor Beast takes Adams' thought one step further.
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  8.  15
    Rethinking cultural sensitivity.Carol Swendson & Carol Windsor - 1996 - Nursing Inquiry 3 (1):3-10.
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  9.  17
    The language of the Cours de Linguistique Générale.Carol Sanders - 2017 - Semiotica 2017 (217):215-219.
    This article examines the degree to which the appeal of the.
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  10.  18
    Ethics Pedagogy 2.0: A Content Analysis of Award-Winning Media Ethics Exercises.Carol B. Schwalbe & David Cuillier - 2013 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 28 (3):175-188.
    A content analysis of 253 Great Ideas for Teachers (GIFTs) found that most of the 18 activities suitable for ethics courses relied on traditional methods of teaching, mainly discussions, teamwork, and case studies. Few used online technology, games, or simulations, compared with activities in other areas of journalism education. While most ethics ideas were designed to stimulate higher order learning, they were less likely than other GIFTs to incorporate varied elements that might improve student engagement. The authors make suggestions, based (...)
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  11. Hearing the Difference: Theorizing Connection.Carol Gilligan - 1995 - Hypatia 10 (2):120 - 127.
    Hearing the difference between a patriarchal voice and a relational voice defines a paradigm shift: a change in the conception of the human world. Theorizing connection as primary and fundamental in human life leads to a new psychology, which shifts the grounds for philosophy and political theory. A crucial distinction is made between a feminine ethic of care and a feminist ethic of care. Voice, relationship, resistance, and women become central rather than peripheral in this reframing of the human world.
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  12. Group Agency and Individualism.Carol Rovane - 2014 - Erkenntnis 79 (S9):1663-1684.
    Pettit and List argue for realism about group agency, while at the same time try to retain a form of metaphysical and normative individualism on which human beings qualify as natural persons. This is an unstable and untenable combination of views. A corrective is offered here, on which realism about group agency leads us to the following related conclusions: in cases of group agency, the sort of rational unity that defines individual rational unity is realized at the level of a (...)
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  13.  36
    Reflections on Socratic Dialogue I: the Theoretical Background in a Modern Context.Carol Anne Bennett, Jane Anderson & Petia Sice - 2015 - Philosophy of Management 14 (3):159-169.
    This paper gives a concise overview of the history and meaning of Socratic Dialogue and how it has been developed and used in modern times. The process of Socratic dialogue is seen as an environment for enhancing learning and in enabling the emergence of new meaning to be articulated in language, thereby making the understanding more accessible to the group. The authors also share their perspective as participants in Socratic dialogues. It is suggested that Socratic dialogue enables open communication and (...)
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  14.  41
    Relativism Requires Alternatives, Not Disagreement or Relative Truth.Carol Rovane - 2010 - In Steven D. Hales (ed.), A Companion to Relativism. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 31–52.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Abstract Two Intuitions Underlying a Consensus on Relativism The Real Dividing Issue: Is the World One or Many? Disagreement and Relative Truth References.
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  15.  38
    The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales.Carol Levine & Oliver Sacks - 1986 - Hastings Center Report 16 (2):42.
    Book reviewed in this article: The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales. By Oliver Sacks.
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  16.  49
    Happiness Around the World: The paradox of happy peasants and miserable millionaires.Carol Graham - 2009 - Oxford University Press.
    The book reviews the theory and concepts of happiness, explaining how these concepts underpin a line of research which is both an attempt to understand the determinants of happiness and a tool for understanding the effects of a host of phenomena on human well being.
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  17. How to formulate relativism.Carol Rovane - 2012 - In Annalisa Coliva (ed.), Mind, meaning, and knowledge: themes from the philosophy of Crispin Wright. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  18.  36
    Finite quantifier equivalence.Carol Karp - 1965 - Journal of Symbolic Logic 36 (1):407--412.
  19.  45
    Knowing Who.Carol A. Rovane - 1989 - Philosophical Review 98 (3):392.
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  20.  23
    Philosophical Issues in Natural History and Its Historiography.Carol E. Cleland - 2008 - In Aviezer Tucker (ed.), A Companion to the Philosophy of History and Historiography. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 44–62.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction The Scientific Method of Yore The Structure and Research Practices of Scientific Historiography of Nature Explanation and Confirmation in Scientific Historiography Narrative Explanation Common Cause Explanation References.
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  21. From needs to goals and representations: Foundations for a unified theory of motivation, personality, and development.Carol S. Dweck - 2017 - Psychological Review 124 (6):689-719.
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  22.  53
    Protecting Democracy by Extending It: Democratic Management Reconsidered.Carol C. Gould - 2019 - Journal of Social Philosophy 50 (4):513-535.
    Journal of Social Philosophy, EarlyView.
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  23.  20
    Envisaging a new politics for an ethical future: Beyond trust, care and generosity — towards an ethic of `social flesh'.Carol Bacchi & Chris Beasley - 2007 - Feminist Theory 8 (3):279-298.
    In times like these, a new ethico-political ideal is required to contest the adequacy of dominant understandings of social interaction as matters of choice and rational decision-making and in contesting these understandings encourage us to imagine social alternatives. We wish to make a contribution to this project of expanding the universe of political discourse as a means to invigorating ethico-political debate. A range of existing vocabularies — the languages of trust (and relatedly respect), care and associated concepts, including corporeal generosity (...)
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  24. (1 other version)Marx’s Social Ontology: Individuality and Community in Marx’s Theory of Social Reality.Carol C. Gould - 1978 - Studies in Soviet Thought 22 (4):306-308.
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  25.  99
    The Personal Stance.Carol Rovane - 1994 - Philosophical Topics 22 (1-2):351-396.
  26.  40
    How Democracy Can Inform Consent: Cases of the Internet and Bioethics.Carol C. Gould - 2019 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 36 (2):173-191.
    Traditional conceptions of informed consent seem difficult or even impossible to apply to new technologies like biobanks, big data, or GMOs, where vast numbers of people are potentially affected, and where consequences and risks are indeterminate or even unforeseeable. Likewise, the principle has come under strain with the appropriation and monetisation of personal information on digital platforms. Over time, it has largely been reduced to bare assent to formalistic legal agreements. To address the current ineffectiveness of the norm of informed (...)
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  27.  95
    Marx’s Social Ontology: Individuality and Community in Marx’s Theory of Social Reality.Carol C. Gould - 1978 - MIT Press.
    Here is the first book to present Karl Marx as one of the great systematic philosophers, a man who went beyond the traditional bounds of the discipline to work out a philosophical system in terms of a concrete social theory and politico-economic critique. Basing her work on the Grundrisse (probably Marx's most systematic work and only translated into English for the first time in 1973), Gould argues that Marx was engaged in a single enterprise throughout his works, specifically the construction (...)
  28. Ecofeminism and the Eating of Animals1.Carol J. Adams - 1991 - Hypatia 6 (1):125-145.
    In this essay, I will argue that contemporary ecofeminist discourse, while potentially adequate to deal with the issue of animals, is now inadequate because it fails to give consistent conceptual place to the domination of animals as a significant aspect of the domination of nature. I will examine six answers ecofeminists could give for not including animals explicitly in ecofeminist analyses and show how a persistent patriarchal ideology regarding animals as instruments has kept the experience of animals from being fully (...)
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  29. The Book of Job: A Contest of Moral Imaginations.Carol A. Newsom - 2003
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  30. (1 other version)Structuring global democracy: Political communities, universal human rights, and transnational representation.Carol C. Gould - 2009 - Metaphilosophy 40 (1):24-41.
    Abstract: The emergence of cross-border communities and transnational associations requires new ways of thinking about the norms involved in democracy in a globalized world. Given the significance of human rights fulfillment, including social and economic rights, I argue here for giving weight to the claims of political communities while also recognizing the need for input by distant others into the decisions of global governance institutions that affect them. I develop two criteria for addressing the scope of democratization in transnational contexts— (...)
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  31.  31
    The Powers of Art: Patronage and Indian Culture.Carol R. Bolon & Barbara Stoler Miller - 1997 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 117 (1):205.
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  32.  41
    Children in HIV/AIDS Clinical Trials: Still Vulnerable after All These Years.Carol Levine - 1991 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 19 (3-4):231-237.
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  33.  21
    Cates, Diana Fritz, and Paul Lauritzen, eds. Medicine and the Ethics of Care.Carol B. Smith - 2002 - The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 2 (1):179-181.
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  34. Is group agency a social phenomenon?Carol Rovane - 2019 - Synthese 196 (12):4869-4898.
    It is generally assumed that group agency must be a social phenomenon because it involves interactions among many human beings. This assumption overlooks the real metaphysical nature of agency, which is both normative and voluntarist. Construed as a normative phenomenon, individual agency arises wherever there is a point of view from which deliberation and action proceed in accord with the requirements that define individual rationality. Such a point of view is never a metaphysical given, but is always a product of (...)
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  35.  77
    Hands On/Hands Off: Why Health Care Professionals Depend on Families but Keep Them at Arm's Length.Carol Levine & Connie Zuckerman - 2000 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 28 (1):5-18.
    In the theater the fictional Dr. Kelekian’s relief that he does not have to talk to family members about his patient’s cancer treatment draws uneasy laughter from the audience. Doctors, patients, and family members alike recognize the situation, even if hearing it so baldly expressed discomfits them.Why do physicians and other health care professionals, including lawyers and bioethicists, so often view families as “trouble”? And why do families so often see medical professionals as uncaring and uncommunicative? Presumably everyone wants the (...)
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  36.  28
    Socializing the Means of Free Development.Carol C. Gould - 2020 - Philosophical Topics 48 (2):81-103.
    This paper investigates the import for a conception of democratic socialism of Marx’s well-known principle “From each according to their abilities, to each according to their needs,” arguing that it is best taken together with another of his principles: “The free development of each is the condition for the free development of all.” It considers their implications for the near term rather than some possible ultimate form of communal society, and also brings in a principle that I have developed previously—equal (...)
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  37. Exodus.Carol Meyers - 2005
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  38.  6
    The NIH Trials of Growth Hormone for Short Stature.Carol A. Tauer - 1994 - IRB: Ethics & Human Research 16 (3):1.
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  39.  48
    Self-theories.Carol S. Dweck & Daniel C. Molden - 2005 - In Andrew J. Elliot & Carol S. Dweck (eds.), Handbook of Competence and Motivation. The Guilford Press. pp. 122--140.
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  40.  20
    Exploring Biopower in the Regulation of Farm Animal Bodies: Genetic Policy Interventions in UK Livestock.Carol Morris & Lewis Holloway - 2007 - Genomics, Society and Policy 3 (2):1-17.
    This paper explores the analytical relevance of Foucault's notion of biopower in the context of regulating and managing non-human lives and populations, specifically those animals that are the focus of livestock breeding based on genetic techniques. The concept of biopower is seen as offering theoretical possibilities precisely because it is concerned with the regulation of life and of populations. The paper approaches the task of testing the 'analytic mettle' of biopower through an analysis of four policy documents concerned with farm (...)
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  41. A social ontology of human rights.Carol C. Gould - 2015 - In Rowan Cruft, S. Matthew Liao & Massimo Renzo (eds.), Philosophical Foundations of Human Rights. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press UK.
     
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  42. The representation of protein complexes in the Protein Ontology.Carol Bult, Harold Drabkin, Alexei Evsikov, Darren Natale, Cecilia Arighi, Natalia Roberts, Alan Ruttenberg, Peter D’Eustachio, Barry Smith, Judith Blake & Cathy Wu - 2011 - BMC Bioinformatics 12 (371):1-11.
    Representing species-specific proteins and protein complexes in ontologies that are both human and machine-readable facilitates the retrieval, analysis, and interpretation of genome-scale data sets. Although existing protin-centric informatics resources provide the biomedical research community with well-curated compendia of protein sequence and structure, these resources lack formal ontological representations of the relationships among the proteins themselves. The Protein Ontology (PRO) Consortium is filling this informatics resource gap by developing ontological representations and relationships among proteins and their variants and modified forms. Because (...)
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  43. Self-Reference.Carol Rovane - 1993 - Journal of Philosophy 90 (2):73-97.
  44.  41
    Automatism and Agency Intertwined: A Spectrum of Photographic Intentionality.Carol Armstrong - 2012 - Critical Inquiry 38 (4):705-726.
    A concatenation of forces surrounded the rise of the photographic to the center of contemporary art practice. During the sixties the author-function was seriously critiqued. Roland Barthes announced the death of the author in 1967, and Michel Foucault answered his own question, what is an author? deconstructively in 1969, replacing what William Wimsatt and Monroe Beardsley had already termed the intentional fallacy with a model of the cultural constructedness of all notions of creative agency. At the same time, notions of (...)
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  45.  42
    Objections to Simpson’s argument in ‘Robots, Trust and War’.Carol Lord - 2019 - Ethics and Information Technology 21 (3):241-251.
    In “Robots, Trust and War” Simpson claims that victory in counter-insurgency conflicts requires that military forces and their governing body win the ‘hearts and minds’ of civilians. Consequently, forces made up primarily of autonomous robots would be ineffective in these conflicts for two reasons. Firstly, because civilians cannot rationally trust them because they cannot act from a motive based on good character. If they ever did develop this capacity then the purpose of sending them to war in our stead would (...)
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  46.  41
    Emotion socialisation, attachment, and patterns of adult emotional traits.Carol Magai, Nancy Distel & Renee Liker - 1995 - Cognition and Emotion 9 (5):461-481.
  47.  37
    Roman Catholic Health Care Identity and Mission: Does Jesus Language Matter?Carol Taylor - 2001 - Christian Bioethics 7 (1):29-47.
    This article examines the current use of Jesus language in a convenience sample of twenty-five mission statements from Roman Catholic hospitals and health care systems in the United States. Only twelve statements specifically use the words “Jesus” or “Christ” in their mission statements. The author advocates the use of explicit Jesus language and modeling. While the witness of Jesus in the Gospel healing narratives is not the only corrective to current abuses in the health care delivery system, it is foundational (...)
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  48. Varieties of Global Responsibility: Social Connection, Human Rights, and Transnational Solidarity.Carol C. Gould - 2009 - In Ann Ferguson & Mechtild Nagel (eds.), Dancing with Iris: The Philosophy of Iris Marion Young. New York: Oup Usa.
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  49.  21
    The Dissimulating Harmony: The Image of Interpretation in Nietzsche, Rilke, Artaud and Benjamin.Ann Smock & Carol Jacobs - 1979 - Substance 8 (1):116.
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  50.  30
    Genetics and Personal Identity.Carol Rovane - 2002 - In Justine Burley & John Harris (eds.), A Companion to Genethics. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 245–252.
    The prelims comprise: Introduction: Locke's Distinction between Personal and Animal Identity The Irrelevance of Cloning Personal Identity and Science Notes.
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