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  1.  91
    Norming COVID‐19: The Urgency of a Non‐Humanist Holism.Jeffrey P. Bishop & Martin J. Fitzgerald - 2022 - Heythrop Journal 63 (3):333-348.
  2.  33
    Being in Relation, Being through Change.Martin J. Fitzgerald - 2022 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 47 (6):681-687.
    Ethics exists among beings that can relate to one another and who can create change in one another. Although this may appear as a simple truism, the implications of relation and change in bioethics are manifold. For instance, one can relate not only to others, but also can enter into self-relation by relating to oneself. Self-relation problematizes autonomy insofar as one does not have immediate access to all of oneself and so therefore also does not immediately fully determine oneself in (...)
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  3.  1
    Can bioethics bray? Non-human animals, biosemiotics, and a road to shared decision-making.Martin J. Fitzgerald - 2025 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 46 (1):103-120.
    The prospect of shared decision-making with animals is an elusive one. Its elusiveness comes largely from how difficult it is to assess the linguistic abilities of animals, whether that be their ability to ‘speak’ or their ability to maintain propositional values. In this paper, I suggest a path to shared decision-making with animals that attempts to avoid these deadlocks by using resources from biosemiotics and _Umwelt_ theory. I begin with an examination of the general structure of decision-making, demonstrating its future-orientation, (...)
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