Results for 'Pat Milmoe McCarrick'

469 found
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  1.  16
    Public Health Ethics: Health by the Numbers.Pat Milmoe McCarrick & Martina Darragh - 1998 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 8 (3):339-358.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Public Health Ethics: Health by the NumbersMartina Darragh (bio) and Pat Milmoe McCarrick (bio)Hippocrates had nothing to say about public health. Rather, the idea that a government should protect its citizens from disease by maintaining sanitary conditions has its origin in Renaissance humanities texts, and the notion that physicians have public health responsibilities emerged in the works of such Enlightenment authors as Johann Peter Frank, Benjamin Rush, (...)
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  2.  15
    Scope Note 31: Managed Health Care: New Ethical Issues for All.Pat Milmoe McCarrick & Martina Darragh - 1996 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 6 (2):189-206.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Managed Health Care: New Ethical Issues for All*Martina Darragh (bio) and Pat Milmoe McCarrick (bio)Changes in the way that health care is perceived, delivered, and financed have occurred rapidly in a relatively short time span. The 50-year period since World War II encompasses enormous growth in medical technology, soaring health care costs, and significant fragmentation of the two-party patient- physician relationship. This relationship first grew to include (...)
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  3.  14
    Scope note 31: Managed health care: New ethical issues for all.Tina Darragh & Pat Milmoe McCarrick - 1996 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 6 (2):107-128.
    This paper considers whether a physician is criminally liable for administering a dose of painkillers that hastens a patient's death. The common wisdom is that a version of the doctrine of double effect legally protects the physician. That is, a physician is supposedly acting lawfully so long as the physician's primary purpose is to relieve suffering. This paper suggests that the criminal liability issue is more complex than that. Physician culpability can be based on recklessness, and recklessness hinges on whether (...)
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  4.  29
    Genetic Testing and Genetic Screening.Pat Milmoe McCarrick - 1993 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 3 (3):333-354.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Genetic Testing and Genetic ScreeningPat Milmoe McCarrick (bio)In recent years there has been an enormous expansion in the knowledge that may be gleaned from the testing of an individual's genetic material to predict present or future disability or disease either for oneself or one's offspring. The Human Genome Project, which is currently mapping the entire human gene system, is identifying progressively more genetic sequencing information (see Scope (...)
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  5. Active Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide.Pat Milmoe McCarrick - 1992 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 2 (1):79-100.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Active Euthanasia and Assisted SuicidePat Milmoe McCarrick (bio)Although the President's Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research in its 1983 report, Deciding to Forego Life-Sustaining Treatment, described the words and terms "euthanasia," "right to die," and "death with dignity" as slogans or code words—"empty rhetoric," (I, p. 24), the literature reviewed for this Scope Note continues to use these terms. (...)
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  6.  14
    Scope note 30: Feminist perspectives on bioethics.Pat Milmoe McCarrick & Martina Darragh - 1996 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 6 (1):85-103.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Perspectives on Bioethics*Pat Milmoe McCarrick (bio) and Martina Darragh (bio)The literature of feminist bioethics has flourished in the last decade. Women’s health care, women’s role both as patient and health care professional, the many new reproductive technologies, the exclusion of women as research subjects, as well as the broader topic of feminist contributions to ethical theory itself, have all become topics of interest for feminist bioethical (...)
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  7.  14
    Scope note 32: A just share: Justice and fairness in resource allocation.Pat Milmoe McCarrick & Tina Darragh - 1997 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 7 (1):81-102.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:A Just Share: Justice and Fairness in Resource Allocation*Pat Milmoe Mccarrick (bio) and Martina Darragh (bio)Each of us has some basic sense of what the words “fair” or “just” or “fairness” or “justice” mean. Each of us probably also has an idea of what is “fair” in health care. The attempt by the state of Oregon in the mid-1980s to quantify this notion made a previously private (...)
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  8.  19
    Bioethics Consultation.Pat Milmoe McCarrick - 1993 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 3 (4):433-450.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Bioethics ConsultationPat Milmoe McCarrick (bio)(John La Puma, M.D., from the Department of Medicine at Lutheran General Hospital in Chicago, contacted the National Reference Center for Bioethics Literature and suggested bioethics consultation as a topic for the Scope Note Series. He provided an extensive list of citations about ethics consultations collected by him and by David Schiedermayer, M.D., for their new book Ethics Consultation: A Practical Guide.)In Ethics (...)
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  9.  21
    Ethics Committees in Hospitals.Pat Milmoe McCarrick - 1992 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 2 (3):285-306.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Ethics Committees in HospitalsPat Milmoe McCarrick (bio)(Literature about hospital ethics committees has grown enormously since Scope Note 3 first appeared. This update provides new information about resources and documents now available while continuing to include important earlier sources.)Hospital ethics committees increasingly have taken hold in the United States since 1983, when the President's Commission for the Study of Ethical Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research (...)
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  10.  37
    Incentives for Providing Organs.Pat Milmoe McCarrick & Martina Darragh - 2003 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 13 (1):53-64.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 13.1 (2003) 53-64 [Access article in PDF] Incentives for Providing Organs Patricia Milmoe McCarrick and Martina Darragh After a contentious debate at its 2002 annual meeting, the American Medical Association's House of Delegates voted to endorse the opinion of its Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs that the impact of financial incentives on organ donation should be studied (Josefson 2002). The shortage (...)
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  11.  25
    Organ Transplant Allocation.Pat Milmoe McCarrick - 1995 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 5 (4):365-384.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Organ Transplant AllocationPat Milmoe McCarrick (bio)The introduction of the antibiotic, cyclosporin, which enhances the success rate of transplantation surgery, has resulted in the steady growth of organ transplantation since the mid-1980s. This growth increasingly focuses ethical interest on both the procurement and the allocation of human organs. Not everyone who might benefit from organ transplants can receive them since the number of patients in need of organs (...)
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  12.  13
    Principles and Theory in Bioethics.Pat Milmoe McCarrick - 1995 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 5 (3):279-286.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Principles and Theory in BioethicsPat Milmoe McCarrick (bio)The following citations were selected from BIOETHICSLINE, the online database prepared at the Kennedy Institute of Ethics for the National Library of Medicine's MEDLARS system. Searching the keywords autonomy, beneficence, casuistry, justice, and virtues, as well as the text word principlism produced more than 400 citations. Only the citations concerned with theory and principle in the practice of bioethics are (...)
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  13.  21
    A Right to Health Care.Pat Milmoe McCarrick - 1992 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 2 (4):389-405.
    Although not legally established, the idea that every American has a right to some level of health care has gained wide acceptance. Support for this right has developed primarily in the 50 years since the end of World War II. No mention of health care can be found in either the Declaration of Independence or the Constitution; indeed, there was little anyone could to improve health care or health outcomes in colonial times. During the 19th and early 20th centuries a (...)
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  14.  35
    Gender issues in health care.Pat Milmoe McCarrick - 1995 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 5 (1):61-80.
    A brief background essay is followed by an annotated bibliography of documents referring to differences between the treatment of women and men in the health care setting and the omission or underrepresentation of women in clinical research. Government reports, association statements, books and journal articles are included.
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  15.  24
    Genome research in the mid-1990s: Selections from updates to scope notes on genetic topics.Pat Milmoe McCarrick & Tina Darragh - 1997 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 7 (3):299-318.
  16.  18
    Eugenics.Mary Carrington Coutts & Pat Milmoe McCarrick - 1995 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 5 (2):163-178.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:EugenicsMary Carrington Coutts (bio) and Pat Milmoe McCarrick (bio)The word eugenics (from the Greek eugenes or well-born) was coined in 1883 by Francis Galton, an Englishman and cousin of Charles Darwin, who applied Darwinian science to develop theories about heredity and good or noble birth (I, Kevles 1985, p. x).The entry under "eugenics" in the Encyclopedia of Bioethics notes that the term has had different meanings in (...)
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  17.  59
    Pain Relief, Acceleration of Death, and Criminal Law.George C. Thomas, Norman L. Cantor, Pat Milmoe McCarrick & Tina Darragh - 1996 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 6 (2):107-128.
    : This paper considers whether a physician is criminally liable for administering a dose of painkillers that hastens a patient's death. The common wisdom is that a version of the doctrine of double effect legally protects the physician. That is, a physician is supposedly acting lawfully so long as the physician's primary purpose is to relieve suffering. This paper suggests that the criminal liability issue is more complex than that. Physician culpability can be based on recklessness, and recklessness hinges on (...)
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  18.  39
    Searching across boundaries: National information resource on ethics and human genetics.Martina Darragh, Harriet Hutson Gray, Pat Milmoe McCarrick & Susan Cartier Poland - 2002 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 12 (1):103-113.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 12.1 (2002) 103-113 [Access article in PDF] Scope Note Update Searching Across Boundaries: National Information Resource on Ethics and Human Genetics* While indeed an historical moment, the announcement of the mapping of the human genome has been treated in the literature as a beginning—a new way to think about biology and the ways in which biological concepts are applied to medicine. Issues of both (...)
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  19. What Will Consumers Pay for Social Product Features?Pat Auger, Paul Burke, Timothy M. Devinney & Jordan J. Louviere - 2003 - Journal of Business Ethics 42 (3):281 - 304.
    The importance of ethical consumerism to many companies worldwide has increased dramatically in recent years. Ethical consumerism encompasses the importance of non-traditional and social components of a company's products and business process to strategic success - such as environmental protectionism, child labor practices and so on. The present paper utilizes a random utility theoretic experimental design to provide estimates of the relative value selected consumers place on the social features of products.
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  20. Do What Consumers Say Matter? The Misalignment of Preferences with Unconstrained Ethical Intentions.Pat Auger & Timothy M. Devinney - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 76 (4):361-383.
    Nearly all studies of consumers’ willingness to engage in ethical or socially responsible purchasing behavior is based on unconstrained survey response methods. In the present article we ask the question of how well does asking consumers the extent to which they care about a specific social or ethical issue relate to how they would behave in a more constrained environment where there is no socially acceptable response. The results of a comparison between traditional survey questions of “intention to purchase” and (...)
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  21.  52
    Journal of Business Ethics, Volume 42, Number 3 - SpringerLink.Pat Auger, Paul Burke, Timothy M. Devinney & Jordan J. Louviere - 2003 - Journal of Business Ethics 42 (3):281-304.
    ... The purpose of this paper is to try to clarify the extent to which consumers “value” ethical product features when making purchases by utilizing a distinctive methodology – structured choice experiments ( Louviere et al., 2000) – that What Will Consumers Pay ... Jordan J. Louviere ... \n.
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  22.  4
    The philosophy and practice of outstanding early years provision.Pat Beckley (ed.) - 2018 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
  23. Using Best–Worst Scaling Methodology to Investigate Consumer Ethical Beliefs Across Countries.Pat Auger, Timothy M. Devinney & Jordan J. Louviere - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 70 (3):299-326.
    This study uses best–worst scaling experiments to examine differences across six countries in the attitudes of consumers towards social and ethical issues that included both product related issues (such as recycled packaging) and general social factors (such as human rights). The experiments were conducted using over 600 respondents from Germany, Spain, Turkey, USA, India, and Korea. The results show that there is indeed some variation in the attitudes towards social and ethical issues across these six countries. However, what is more (...)
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  24.  29
    Using Best–Worst Scaling Methodology to Investigate Consumer Ethical Beliefs Across Countries.Pat Auger, Timothy M. Devinney & J. Louviere - 2007 - Journal of Business Ethics 70 (3):299-326.
    This study uses best–worst scaling experiments to examine differences across six countries in the attitudes of consumers towards social and ethical issues that included both product related issues (such as recycled packaging) and general social factors (such as human rights). The experiments were conducted using over 600 respondents from Germany, Spain, Turkey, USA, India, and Korea. The results show that there is indeed some variation in the attitudes towards social and ethical issues across these six countries. However, what is more (...)
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  25.  39
    Do people differentially remember cheaters?Pat Barclay & Martin L. Lalumière - 2006 - Human Nature 17 (1):98-113.
    The evolution of reciprocal altruism probably involved the evolution of mechanisms to detect cheating and remember cheaters. In a well-known study, Mealey, Daood, and Krage (1996) observed that participants had enhanced memory for faces that had previously been associated with descriptions of acts of cheating. There were, however, problems with the descriptions that were used in that study. We sought to replicate and extend the findings of Mealey and colleagues by using more controlled descriptions and by examining the possibility of (...)
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  26. From Szasz to Foucault: On the Role of Critical Psychiatry.Pat Bracken & Philip Thomas - 2010 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 17 (3):219-228.
    Because psychiatry deals specifically with ‘mental’ suffering, its efforts are always centrally involved with the meaningful world of human reality. As such, it sits at the interface of a number of discourses: genetics and neuroscience, psychology and sociology, anthropology, philosophy, and the humanities. Each of these provides frameworks, concepts, and examples that seek to assist our attempts to understand mental distress and how it might be helped. However, these discourses work with different assumptions, methodologies, values, and priorities. Some are in (...)
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  27.  27
    Enhanced recognition of defectors depends on their rarity.Pat Barclay - 2008 - Cognition 107 (3):817-828.
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  28.  9
    Educational leadership and Pierre Bourdieu.Pat Thomson - 2017 - New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group.
    Pierre Bourdieu was one of the most important thinkers of the twentieth century. He argued for, and practiced, rigorous and reflexive scholarship, interrogating the inequities and injustices of modern societies. Through a lifetime's explication of the ways in which schooling both produces and reproduces the status quo, Bourdieu offered a powerful critique and method of analysis of the history of schooling, and of contemporary educational polices and trends. Though frequently used in educational research, Bourdieu's work has had much less take (...)
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  29.  11
    Feminist approaches to a situated ethics.Pat Usher - 2000 - In Helen Simons & Robin Usher (eds.), Situated ethics in educational research. New York: Routledge. pp. 22--38.
  30.  18
    “Áll Trádes, Their Gear and Tackle and Trim”: Theology, Cognitive Neuroscience, and Psychoneuroimmunology in Transversal Dialogue.Pat Bennett - 2019 - Zygon 54 (1):129-148.
    This third of three articles outlining a different approach to science/religion dialogue generally and to engagement between theology and the neurosciences specifically, gives a brief account of the model in practice. It begins by introducing the question to be investigated—whether the experience of relational connection can affect health outcomes by directly moderating immune function. Then, employing the same threefold heuristic of encounter, exchange, and expression used previously, it discusses how the transversal model set out in these articles has been used (...)
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  31.  46
    Turning Kant against the priority of autonomy: Communication ethics and the duty to community.Pat J. Gehrke - 2002 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 35 (1):1-21.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Philosophy and Rhetoric 35.1 (2002) 1-21 [Access article in PDF] Turning Kant Against the Priority of Autonomy: Communication Ethics and the Duty to Community Pat J. Gehrke Communication ethics scholars afford Immanuel Kant significantly less attention than one might expect. This may be because, as Robert Dostal notes, Kant argues that rhetoric merits no respect whatsoever (223). This rejection of rhetoric, Dostal writes, is grounded in the significant emphasis (...)
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  32.  5
    Time, race, gender, and care.Pat Armstrong - 2013 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 6 (2):118-121.
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  33.  8
    A creative turning: Communicative participation in Tymieniecka’s logos of life.Pat Arneson - 2012 - Empedocles: European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication 4 (2):153-167.
    This article establishes the relevance of Anna-Teresa Tymieniecka’s work for understanding human communication. Tymieniecka’s cosmology, available in her four-volume series Logos and Life (1988–2000) and supplemented by prolific writings across several decades, articulates a ‘third phenomenology’ – a phenomenology of life. Her work fulfils Edmund Husserl’s original phenomenology of consciousness and Roman Ingarden’s second phenomenology of realism/idealism. Tymieniecka’s ontopoietic cosmology, which strenuously resists linear form, is interwoven with the possibilities of human communication. Her works explain life as the expansion of (...)
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  34.  18
    “Landscape Plotted and Pieced”: Exploring the Contours of Engagement Between (Neuro)Science and Theology.Pat Bennett - 2019 - Zygon 54 (1):86-106.
    This article—the first of a linked set of three outlining the development and practice of a different approach to science/religion dialogue—begins with an overview of some persistent tensions in the field. Then, using a threefold heuristic of encounter, engagement, and expression, it explores the routes taken by James Ashbrook and Andrew Newberg to develop a dialogue between theology and neuroscience, discussing some of the problems associated with these and their implications for attempts to further develop neurotheology. Finally, it proposes a (...)
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  35.  16
    “Things Counter, Original, Spare, Strange”: Developing a Postfoundational Transversal Model for Science/Religion Dialogue.Pat Bennett - 2019 - Zygon 54 (1):107-128.
    This second of three articles outlining the development and practice of a different approach to neurotheology discusses the construction of a suitable methodology for the project based on the work of J. Wentzel van Huyssteen. It explores the origin and contours of his concept of postfoundational rationality, its potential as a locus for epistemological parity between science and religion and the distinctive and unique transversal space model for interdisciplinary dialogue which he builds on these. It then proposes a further development (...)
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  36. Building minds: solving the combination problem.Pat Lewtas - 2017 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 60 (7):742-781.
    Any panpsychism building complex consciousness out of basic atoms of consciousness needs a theory of ‘mental chemistry’ explaining how this building works. This paper argues that split-brain patients show actual mental chemistry or at least give reasons for thinking it possible. The paper next develops constraints on theories of mental chemistry. It then puts forward models satisfying these constraints. The paper understands mental chemistry as a transformation consistent with conservation of consciousness rather than an aggregation perhaps followed by the creation (...)
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  37.  24
    Scientific discovery.Pat Langley, Herbert A. Simon, Gary L. Bradshaw & Jan M. Zytkow - 1993 - In Alvin Goldman (ed.), Readings in Philosophy and Cognitive Science. Cambridge: MIT Press.
  38.  9
    A blueprint for the good teacher? The HMI/des model of good primary practice.Pat Broadhead - 1987 - British Journal of Educational Studies 35 (1):57-71.
  39.  21
    Child Care and Preschool Development: Institutional Perspectives ‐ By Kirsten Scheiwe and Harry Willekens.Pat Broadhead - 2009 - British Journal of Educational Studies 57 (4):435-436.
  40. What It Is Like to Be a Quark.Pat Lewtas - 2013 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 20 (9-10):9-10.
    The most plausible type of panpsychism explains high-level consciousness as a compound of basic conscious properties instantiated by basic bottom-level physical objects. Arguments for panpsychism stand little chance in the absence of an account that makes sense of basic bottom-level experience; and explains how basic bottom-level experiences yield high-level experiences. This paper tackles the first task. It develops a method for investigating basic bottom-level experience: it identifies constraints, motivated by scientific and philosophical considerations, that force a unique account. Then it (...)
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  41.  16
    Dear Pat, I'm sure were both getting pretty anxious to terminate this: I had really heaved a big sigh of relief, that I could get back to physics.Pat Hayes - unknown
    But still I think some account has to be given of the application of CM to tides and cannon balls etc. etc. It seems to me that Einstein's and Bohr's analysis was essentially correct: we make the connection, and thus apply the mathematical statements of CM to macroscopic features of the world about us, by constructing, within the mathematical framework,. macroscopic conglomerates of the elementary particles and fields that should have the general appearance of tides and billiard, looked at from (...)
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  42.  77
    Proximate and ultimate causes of punishment and strong reciprocity.Pat Barclay & Francesco Guala - 2012 - Behavioral and Brain Sciences 35 (1):16.
    While admirable, Guala's discussion of reciprocity suffers from a confusion between proximate causes (psychological mechanisms triggering behaviour) and ultimate causes (evolved function of those psychological mechanisms). Because much work on commits this error, I clarify the difference between proximate and ultimate causes of cooperation and punishment. I also caution against hasty rejections of of experimental evidence.
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  43.  59
    What induction is (and what it should not be): A concepts-centric perspective on Norton’s radium chloride example.Pat Corvini - 2021 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 86 (C):27-34.
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  44.  9
    Posṭamôrṭam: saḍetoḍa gappā Ḍô. Ravī Bāpaṭa yāñcyāśī.Ravī Bāpaṭa - 2011 - Puṇe: Manovikāsa Prakāśana. Edited by Sunīti Jaina.
    Critical analysis of the commercialization and malpractice current in the profession of medicine.
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  45.  27
    In Praise of Critical Criminology.Pat Carlen - 2005 - Outlines 7 (2):83-90.
    This short essay examines the relationship between academic research and policy with particular emphasis on the question of whether a critical criminology can engage in academic critique at the same time as engaging in policy oriented research. Recognising that critical criminology falls between theory and politics criminologists are urged to adopt pragmatic, strategic positions as they negotiate their role in contentious debates and practical minefields. It is concluded that a critical criminology must try not only to think the unthinkable about (...)
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  46.  16
    The personal, the professional and the partner (ship): the husband/wife collaboration of Charles and Ray Eames.Pat Kirkham - 1995 - In Beverley Skeggs (ed.), Feminist Cultural Theory: Process and Production. Distributed Exclusively in the Usa and Canada by St. Martin's Press. pp. 207.
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  47.  16
    The Postponed Withholding Model: An Autoethnographic Analysis.Pat Tissington - 2022 - American Journal of Bioethics 22 (11):33-35.
    This peer commentary opens with setting the context for decisions on the edge of viability through an autoethnographic account (Bochner and Ellis 2016) of the author’s experience of such a situatio...
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  48. Maurice Friedman's dialogue with religion and literature.Pat Boni - 2011 - In Kenneth Kramer (ed.), Dialogically speaking: Maurice Friedman's interdisciplinary humanism. Eugene, Or.: Pickwick Publications.
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  49.  28
    The Ethical Importance of Being Human.Pat J. Gehrke - 2006 - Philosophy Today 50 (4):428-436.
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  50.  29
    The research student's guide to success.Pat Cryer - 2000 - Phildelphia: Open University Press.
    "...{The first edition of Professor Cryer's book was} absolutely outstanding, in four main respects. First, it is comprehensive in its scope, covering everything from applying to undertaking a research degree. Second, it is applicable to PhDs across the board. Third, the book is exceptionally well written and highly readable. Finally, at each stage Pat Cryer has included questions and exercises to enable readers to reflect on their practice, check out whether they are on track and, if not, discover how they (...)
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