Results for 'Nancy Bogen'

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  1. The Problem of William Blake's Early Religion.Nancy Bogen - 1968 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 49 (4):509.
     
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  2. Making a Necessity of Virtue: Aristotle and Kant on Virtue.Nancy Sherman - 1997 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    This book is the first to offer a detailed analysis of Aristotelian and Kantian ethics together, in a way that remains faithful to the texts and responsive to debates in contemporary ethics. Recent moral philosophy has seen a revival of interest in the concept of virtue, and with it a reassessment of the role of virtue in the work of Aristotle and Kant. This book brings that re-assessment to a new level of sophistication. Nancy Sherman argues that Kant preserves (...)
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  3.  40
    Stoic Wisdom: Ancient Lessons for Modern Resilience.Nancy Sherman - 2021 - New York, NY, United States of America: Oxford University Press.
    A deeply informed exploration of what Stoic ideas have to offer us today Stoicism is the ideal philosophy of life for those seeking calm in times of stress and uncertainty. For many, it has become the new Zen, with meditation techniques that help us face whatever life throws our way. Indeed, the Stoics address a key question of our time: how can we be masters of our fate when the outside world threatens to unmoor our well-being? In Stoic Wisdom, Georgetown (...)
  4.  8
    Afterwar: Healing the Moral Wounds of Our Soldiers.Nancy Sherman - 2015 - Oup Usa.
    Drawing on in-depth interviews with service women and men, Nancy Sherman weaves narrative with a philosophical and psychological analysis of the moral and emotional attitudes at the heart of the afterwars. Afterwar offers no easy answers for reintegration. It insists that we widen the scope of veteran outreach to engaged, one-on-one relationships with veterans.
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  5.  80
    The Research‐Treatment Distinction: A Problematic Approach for Determining Which Activities Should Have Ethical Oversight.Nancy E. Kass, Ruth R. Faden, Steven N. Goodman, Peter Pronovost, Sean Tunis & Tom L. Beauchamp - 2013 - Hastings Center Report 43 (s1):4-15.
    Calls are increasing for American health care to be organized as a learning health care system, defined by the Institute of Medicine as a health care system “in which knowledge generation is so embedded into the core of the practice of medicine that it is a natural outgrowth and product of the healthcare delivery process and leads to continual improvement in care.” We applaud this conception, and in this paper, we put forward a new ethics framework for it. No such (...)
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  6. Neural events and perceptual awareness.Nancy Kanwisher - 2001 - Cognition 79 (1):89-113.
  7.  44
    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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  8.  98
    How Can I Be Trusted?: A Virtue Theory of Trustworthiness.Nancy Nyquist Potter - 2002 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    This work examines the concept of trust in the light of virtue theory, and takes our responsibility to be trustworthy as central. Rather than thinking of trust as risk-taking, Potter views it as equally a matter of responsibility-taking. Her work illustrates that relations of trust are never independent from considerations of power, and that asking ourselves what we can do to be trustworthy allows us to move beyond adversarial trust relationships and toward a more democratic, just, and peaceful society.
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  9. In Defence of ‘This Worldly’ Causality: Comments on van Fraassen’s Laws and Symmetry.Nancy Cartwright - 1993 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 53 (2):431-444.
  10.  97
    Mechanisms, laws and explanation.Nancy Cartwright, John Pemberton & Sarah Wieten - 2020 - European Journal for Philosophy of Science 10 (3):1-19.
    Mechanisms are now taken widely in philosophy of science to provide one of modern science’s basic explanatory devices. This has raised lively debate concerning the relationship between mechanisms, laws and explanation. This paper focuses on cases where a mechanism gives rise to a ceteris paribus law, addressing two inter-related questions: What kind of explanation is involved? and What is going on in the world when mechanism M affords behavior B described in a ceteris paribus law? We explore various answers offered (...)
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  11.  78
    Trust: The Fragile Foundation of Contemporary Biomedical Research.Nancy E. Kass, Jeremy Sugarman, Ruth Faden & Monica Schoch-Spana - 1996 - Hastings Center Report 26 (5):25-29.
    It is widely assumed that informing prospective subjects about the risks and possible benefits of research not only protects their rights as autonomous decisionmakers, but also empowers them to protect their own interests. Yet interviews with patient‐subjects conducted under the auspices of the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments suggest this is not always the case. Patient‐subjects often trust their physician to guide them through decisions on research participation. Clinicians, investigators, and IRBs must assure that such trust is not misplaced.
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  12. Theological reflection and spiritual direction.Nancy J. Ault - 2013 - The Australasian Catholic Record 90 (1):81.
    Ault, Nancy J Spiritual direction is at risk in a society which is turning increasingly to personal feelings to validate experience and justify decision making. An appeal to feelings and emotions enables marketers to sell religion and spirituality as consumer products. As a product among many, the wider contexts of religion and spirituality may fade from consciousness and be lost. In such a 'pick and mix' culture, as well as losing sight of the embodied nature of understanding, what may (...)
     
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  13.  12
    The language of history in the Renaissance.Nancy S. Struever - 1970 - Princeton, N.J.,: Princeton University Press.
    At any time, basic assumptions about language have a direct effect on the writing of history. The structure of language is related to the structure of knowledge and thus to the definition of historical reality, while linguistic competence gives insights into the relation of ideas and action. Within the framework of these ideas, and drawing on recent work in linguistic theory, including that of the French structuralists. Professor Struever studies the major shift in attitudes toward language and history which the (...)
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  14.  18
    Avicenna in Renaissance Italy: The Canon and Medical Teaching in Italian Universities after 1500.Nancy G. Siraisi - 2014 - Princeton University Press.
    The Canon of Avicenna, one of the principal texts of Arabic origin to be assimilated into the medical learning of medieval Europe, retained importance in Renaissance and early modern European medicine. After surveying the medieval reception of the book, Nancy Siraisi focuses on the Canon in sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century Italy, and especially on its role in the university teaching of philosophy of medicine and physiological theory. Originally published in 1987. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology (...)
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  15.  57
    An empirical evaluation of the effect of Peer and managerial ethical behaviors and the ethical predispositions of prospective advertising employees.Nancy K. Keith, Charles E. Pettijohn & Melissa S. Burnett - 2003 - Journal of Business Ethics 48 (3):251-265.
    An advertising firm''s ethical culture (as defined by the firm''s managerial and peer ethical behaviors) may affect the employees'' comfort levels and ethical behaviors. In this research, scenarios were used to describe advertising firms with various ethical cultures. Respondents'' perceived comfort levels in working for the firms described in the scenarios and the respondents'' behavioral intentions when faced with various advertising situations were assessed. Results of the study indicate that peer ethical behavior exerts a strong influence on the comfort or (...)
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  16. Stakeholders' Views of Alternatives to Prospective Informed Consent for Minimal‐Risk Pragmatic Comparative Effectiveness Trials.Danielle Whicher, Nancy Kass & Ruth Faden - 2015 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 43 (2):397-409.
    As interest in comparative effectiveness research grows, questions have emerged regarding whether it is ever acceptable to alter informed consent requirements for research when patients are randomly assigned to widely-used therapies. This paper reports on interviews with Institutional Review Board members and researchers and on focus groups with patients from Geisinger and Johns Hopkins health systems. The objective was to elicit participants' views of the acceptability of four different disclosure and authorization models for low-risk pragmatic comparative effectiveness trials of widely-used (...)
     
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  17.  58
    Evidence, Argument and Prediction.Nancy Cartwright - 2013 - In Vassilios Karakostas & Dennis Dieks, EPSA11 Perspectives and Foundational Problems in Philosophy of Science. Cham: Springer. pp. 3--17.
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  18.  29
    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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  19.  80
    The Virtue of Epistemic Humility.Nancy Nyquist Potter - 2022 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 29 (2):121-123.
    Ethics, including medical ethics, has historically paid insufficient attention to epistemic rights and wrongs. This neglect fails to recognize the ways ethics and epistemology are intertwined. In the past fifteen years or so, there has been an interest in epistemic issues in medical practices, relationships with patients, and what is called epistemic injustice. Miranda Fricker identifies a kind of epistemic wrong as an injustice and a harm because it diminishes the speaker's capacity of a knower and treats her as uncredible (...)
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  20.  57
    Rethinking the therapeutic misconception: social justice, patient advocacy, and cancer clinical trial recruitment in the US safety net.Nancy J. Burke - 2014 - BMC Medical Ethics 15 (1):68.
    Approximately 20% of adult cancer patients are eligible to participate in a clinical trial, but only 2.5-9% do so. Accrual is even less for minority and medically underserved populations. As a result, critical life-saving treatments and quality of life services developed from research studies may not address their needs. This study questions the utility of the bioethical concern with therapeutic misconception (TM), a misconception that occurs when research subjects fail to distinguish between clinical research and ordinary treatment, and therefore attribute (...)
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  21. Is refusing to forgive a vice?Nancy Potter - 2001 - In Peggy Desautels, Joanne Waugh, Margaret Urban Walker, Uma Narayan, Diana Tietjens Meyers & Hilde Lindemann Nelson, Feminists Doing Ethics. Feminist Constructions. pp. 135--150.
     
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  22.  27
    Topics in History.Nancy S. Struever - 1980 - History and Theory 19 (4):66-79.
    In Metahistory, Hayden White chose literary style as that form of rhetoric with which he could better understand the relationship between what historians say and how they say it. By limiting his use of rhetoric to a theory of tropics, White has reduced rhetoric to poetics and rendered his construct antihistorical. Alternatively, one should consider history as both discipline and argument and by extension use a topics rather than a tropics of historical discourse. The rules which govern the narrative argument (...)
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  23.  32
    The Medical-Theoretical Background in Naples of Vico’s New Science.Nancy S. Struever - 1997 - New Vico Studies 15:10-24.
  24.  50
    The Rhetoric of the Human Sciences.Nancy S. Struever - 1989 - New Vico Studies 7:101-105.
  25.  17
    The Rhetoric of Familiarity; A Pedagogy of Ethics.Nancy S. Struever - 1998 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 31 (2):91 - 106.
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  26.  5
    The Rhetorical Turn.Nancy S. Struever - 1993 - New Vico Studies 11:119-120.
  27.  48
    Vico, Foucault, and the Strategy of Intimate Investigation.Nancy S. Struever - 1984 - New Vico Studies 2:41-57.
  28.  52
    Many Hurdles for the Translation of Species Preservation Research: Comment on “Ethics of Species Research and Preservation” by Rob Irvine.Nancy Sturman - 2013 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 10 (4):531-532.
  29.  20
    educación digital ante la COVID-19 en el área económicas Administrativas.Nancy Verónica Sánchez Sulú, Limberth Agael Peraza Pérez & Perla Gabriela Baqueiro López - 2022 - Human Review. International Humanities Review / Revista Internacional de Humanidades 11 (5):1-9.
    El objetivo de este trabajo es analizar el impacto del aprendizaje adaptativo ante Covid-19 en la Facultad de Ciencias Económicas Administrativas de la Universidad Autónoma del Carmen.Para este estudio se realizó una revisión documental de los conceptos teóricos abordados y posteriormente se hizo un análisis descriptivo de una muestra de 291 estudiantes.Los resultados muestran que la mayoría de los estudiantes logró un desempeño satisfactorio, usando de manera preferente la plataforma Teams, aunque también se utilizaron otras plataformas como apoyo. Con esto (...)
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  30. Lawrence Durrell's Epitaph for the Novel.Nancy Sullivan - 1963 - Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 44 (1):79.
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  31.  20
    A Woman among the Rich Merchants: The Widow of PA 巴 寡 婦 清 A Woman among the Rich Merchants: The Widow of PA Ba Gua Fu Qing.Nancy Lee Swann - 1934 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 54 (2):186.
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    Biography of the Empress Têng: A Translation from the Annals of the Later Han DynastyBiography of the Empress Teng: A Translation from the Annals of the Later Han Dynasty.Nancy Lee Swann - 1931 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 51 (2):138.
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  33.  29
    Chinese Calligraphy.Nancy Lee Swann, Lucy Driscoll & Kenji Toda - 1935 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 55 (4):473.
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  34.  92
    Narrative Selves, Relations of Trust, and Bipolar Disorder.Nancy Nyquist Potter - 2013 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 20 (1):57-65.
  35.  13
    Corpus.Jean-Luc Nancy - 1994 - In Juliet Flower MacCannell & Laura Zakarin, Thinking Bodies. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. pp. 17-31.
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  36.  53
    Athletes Are Guinea Pigs.Nancy M. P. King & Richard Robeson - 2013 - American Journal of Bioethics 13 (10):13 - 14.
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  37.  62
    The Use of Medical Records in Research: What Do Patients Want?Nancy E. Kass, Marvin R. Natowicz, Sara Chandros Hull, Ruth R. Faden, Laura Plantinga, Lawrence O. Gostin & Julia Slutsman - 2003 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 31 (3):429-433.
    In the past ten years, there has been growing interest in and concern about protecting the privacy of personal medical information. Insofar as medical records increasingly are stored electronically, and electronic information can be shared easily and widely, there have been legislative efforts as well as scholarly analyses calling for greater privacy protections to ensure that patients can feel safe disclosing personal information to their health-care providers. At the same time, the volume of biomedical research conducted in this country continues (...)
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  38. Voice, silencing, and listening well: socially located patients, oppressive structures, and an invitation to shift the epistemic terrain.Nancy Nyquist Potter - 2019 - In Şerife Tekin & Robyn Bluhm, The Bloomsbury Companion to Philosophy of Psychiatry. London: Bloomsbury.
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  39.  40
    Commentary on Bergman: “Yes … But”.Nancy Neveloff Dubler - 2013 - Journal of Clinical Ethics 24 (1):25-31.
    In “Surmounting Elusive Barriers: The Case for Bioethics Mediation,” Bergman argues that professionals trained in bioethics, reluctant to acquire the skills of mediation, would better be replaced by a cadre of mediators with some bioethics knowledge, to which I respond, “yes … but.”.
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  40.  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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  41.  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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  42.  20
    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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  43.  82
    (1 other version)Athlete or Guinea Pig? Sports and Enhancement Research.Nancy M. P. King & Richard Robeson - 2007 - Studies in Ethics, Law, and Technology 1 (1).
  44.  34
    Risk, Autonomy, and Responsibility: Informed Consent for Prenatal Testing.Nancy Press & C. H. Browner - 1995 - Hastings Center Report 25 (3):S9.
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  45. Isn't All of Oncology Hermeneutic?Nancy J. Moules, David W. Jardine, Graham P. McCaffrey & Christopher B. Brown - 2013 - Journal of Applied Hermeneutics 2013 (1).
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  46.  90
    Collective Fear, Individualized Risk: the social and cultural context of genetic testing forbreast cancer.Nancy Press, Jennifer R. Fishman & Barbara A. Koenig - 2000 - Nursing Ethics 7 (3):237-249.
    The purpose of this article is to provide a critical examination of two aspects of culture and biomedicine that have helped to shape the meaning and practice of genetic testing for breast cancer. These are: (1) the cultural construction of fear of breast cancer, which has been fuelled in part by (2) the predominance of a ‘risk’ paradigm in contemporary biomedicine. The increasing elaboration and delineation of risk factors and risk numbers are in part intended to help women to contend (...)
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  47.  60
    Making room for grief: walking backwards and living forward.Nancy J. Moules, Kari Simonson, Mark Prins, Paula Angus & Janice M. Bell - 2004 - Nursing Inquiry 11 (2):99-107.
    In this paper, the authors describe an aspect of a program of research around grief and clinical practice. The first phase of the study involves examination of experiences of grief with attention to troublesome or problematic beliefs that fuel the extent of suffering in the bereaved. The data, obtained from a review of videotaped clinical interviews with families seen in the Family Nursing Unit at the University of Calgary, were analyzed according to philosophical hermeneutic tradition. Findings suggest that grief is (...)
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  48.  39
    Empathic foundations of clinical knowledge.Nancy Nyquist Potter - 2013 - In K. W. M. Fulford, Martin Davies, Richard Gipps, George Graham, John Sadler, Giovanni Stanghellini & Tim Thornton, The Oxford handbook of philosophy and psychiatry. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
    This chapter sets out several views of empathy that draw not only on psychology's literature but on philosophical and psychiatric writings. Empathy is a set of complex concepts involving perception, emotion, attitudinal orientation, and other cognitive processes as well as an activity that expresses character traits and, hence, one of the virtues. In other words, an examination of the philosophical and clinical literature reveals empathy to be not one unified concept but instead a set of related characteristics and qualities needed (...)
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  49.  27
    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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  50.  40
    Doing Right and Being Good: What It Would Take for People Living with Autism to Flourish.Nancy Nyquist Potter - 2015 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 22 (4):263-265.
    Furman and Tuminello raise a central question about people living with mental illness: What kind of life is possible for them? Can one live a flourishing life even when struggling with a mental disorder? The authors draw on research studies to argue that a technique called Applied Behavioral Analysis can improve the lives of children with autism. One study, from 1987, found that 47% of children exposed to ABA attained normal IQ levels, adaptive skills, and social skills, and other studies (...)
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