Results for 'Carina Fourie'

209 found
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  1.  18
    What is Enough?: Sufficiency, Justice, and Health.Carina Fourie & Annette Rid - 2017 - Oxford University Press.
    What is a just way of spending public resources for health and health care? Several significant answers to this question are under debate. Public spending could aim to promote greater equality in health, for example, or maximize the health of the population, or provide the worst off with the best possible health. Another approach is to aim for each person to have "enough" so that her health or access to health care does not fall under a critical level. This latter (...)
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  2.  10
    Comment on Andrew Walton.Carina Fourie - 2013 - Analyse & Kritik 35 (1):187-192.
    Andrew Walton argues that a Rawlsian property-owning democracy requires a fraternal ethos and certain forms of social interaction, such as high trade union membership. The basic structure objection could be used to challenge these claims as it indicates that Rawls’s principles of justice should only be applied to the basic structure of society, and not, for example, to an ethos. Walton has two responses to the objection: firstly, that it does not apply to his argument, and, secondly, even if it (...)
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  3.  51
    Social Equality: On What It Means to Be Equals.Carina Fourie, Fabian Schuppert & Ivo Wallimann-Helmer (eds.) - 2015 - New York: Oup Usa.
    This volume brings together a collection of ten original essays which present new analyses of social and relational equality in philosophy and political theory. The essays analyze the nature of social equality and its relationship with justice and with politics.
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  4. What is Social Equality? An Analysis of Status Equality as a Strongly Egalitarian Ideal.Carina Fourie - 2012 - Res Publica 18 (2):107-126.
    What kind of equality should we value and why? Current debate centres around whether distributive equality is valuable. However, it is not the only (potentially) morally significant form of equality. David Miller and T. M. Scanlon have emphasised the importance of social equality—a strongly egalitarian notion distinct from distributive equality, and which cannot be reduced to a concern for overall welfare or the welfare of the worst-off. However, as debate tends to focus on distribution, social equality has been neglected and (...)
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  5.  94
    Moral Distress and Moral Conflict in Clinical Ethics.Carina Fourie - 2013 - Bioethics 29 (2):91-97.
    Much research is currently being conducted on health care practitioners' experiences of moral distress, especially the experience of nurses. What moral distress is, however, is not always clearly delineated and there is some debate as to how it should be defined. This article aims to help to clarify moral distress. My methodology consists primarily of a conceptual analysis, with especial focus on Andrew Jameton's influential description of moral distress. I will identify and aim to resolve two sources of confusion about (...)
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  6. The Nature and Distinctiveness of Social Equality: An Introduction.Carina Fourie, Fabian Schuppert & Ivo Wallimann-Helmer - 2015 - In Carina Fourie, Fabian Schuppert & Ivo Wallimann-Helmer (eds.), Social Equality: On What It Means to Be Equals. Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 1-20.
    This chapter serves as an introduction to the collected volume. In the first section, we aim to provide background on important themes in social egalitarianism and to set the context for understanding which significant questions the chapters in this book pose and attempt to answer. In this section we focus especially on what could be said to characterize socially egalitarian relationships, on which relationships are of concern, and on what might make social egalitarianism distinct. In the second section, we provide (...)
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  7.  54
    The Ethical Significance of Moral Distress: Inequality and Nurses’ Constraint-Distress.Carina Fourie - 2016 - American Journal of Bioethics 16 (12):23-25.
  8.  20
    What is Enough?: Sufficiency, Justice, and Health.Carina Fourie & Annette Rid (eds.) - 2016 - Oxford University Press.
    What is a just way of spending public resources for health and health care? Several significant answers to this question are under debate. Public spending could aim to promote greater equality in health, for example, or maximize the health of the population, or provide the worst off with the best possible health. Another approach is to aim for each person to have "enough" so that her health or access to health care does not fall under a critical level. This latter (...)
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  9. “How could anybody think that this is the appropriate way to do bioethics?” Feminist challenges for conceptions of justice in bioethics.Carina Fourie - 2023 - In Wendy A. Rogers, Jackie Leach Scully, Stacy M. Carter, Vikki Entwistle & Catherine Mills (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Feminist Bioethics. Routledge. pp. 27-42.
    In this chapter, I propose that conceptions of justice in bioethics must be feminist, meaning they must be able to capture how the domains of health, healthcare and medicine exacerbate the subordination of those perceived to be women and girls and how injustice impacts their health. After providing context in the first section, I identify three problems with conceptions of justice in the bioethics literature that interfere with their potential to be feminist. They tend to adopt the ahistoricism and distributivism (...)
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  10.  13
    Moral Distress and the Marginalization of Nurses.Georgina Campelia & Carina Fourie - 2024 - American Journal of Bioethics 24 (1):132-134.
    Responding to the nurse’s moral distress in this case depends on a deeper understanding of the source. It is possible that there is concern that resuscitation is morally wrong—perhaps because it wo...
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  11. Gender, Status, and the Steepness of the Social Gradients in Health.Carina Fourie - 2019 - International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 12 (1):137-156.
    Many social gradients in health appear steeper for men than for women. I refer to this as the “Steepness Puzzle.” This paper explores the ethical implications of this Puzzle. First, it identifies potential explanations for the Steepness Puzzle, including methodological problems. Second, it highlights two harms associated with the methodological explanation: the consequences of biased epistemic practices and the marginalization of women. It also demonstrates how attempts to flatten the gradients in health could disproportionately favor men or reinforce troubling gendered (...)
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  12. How Being Better Off Is Bad for You: Implications for Distribution, Relational Equality, and an Egalitarian Ethos.Carina Fourie - 2021 - In Natalie Stoljar & Kristin Voigt (eds.), Autonomy and Equality: Relational Approaches. Routledge. pp. 169-194.
    In this chapter, Fourie identifies and systematizes the impairments associated with having privilege and evaluates their implications for theories of relational equality and distributive justice. Having certain social privileges, for example, being a man in a patriarchal society, can also be damaging; in other words, there are “impairments of privilege.” Fourie delineates six kinds of impairments—epistemic, evaluative, emotional, health-related, affiliative, and moral. She then goes on to assess the implications of the impairments of privilege for two theories in (...)
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  13. Discrimination, emotion, and health inequities.Carina Fourie - 2018 - Les Ateliers de l'Éthique / the Ethics Forum 13 (3):123-149.
    In this paper I argue that certain ways in which the relationship among discrimination, emotions and health is presented can undermine equity. I identify a model of this relationship the discrimination-emotion-health model - and claim that while the model is important for understanding the detrimental impact that discrimination and oppression can have on emotions and health, certain implications of the model are troubling. I identify six critiques of the model, and show that equity could be undermined, for example, when stereotypes (...)
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  14. What do theories of social justice have to say about health care rationing?Carina Fourie - 2012 - In Andre Den Exter & Martin Buijsen (eds.), Rationing health care: hard choices and unavoidable trade-offs. Antwerp: Maklu. pp. 65-86.
    One of the most controversial issues in many health care systems is health care rationing. In essence, rationing refers to the denial of - or delay in - access to scarce goods and services in health care, despite the existence of medical need. Scarcity of financial and medical resources confronts society with painful questions. Who should decide which medicine or new treatment will be covered by social security and on which criteria such decisions must be based? Can age, for example, (...)
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  15. Accommodating diversity: Feyerabend, science and philosophy.Carina Fourie - unknown
     
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  16.  37
    Carl Knight and Zofia Stemplowska, eds. , Responsibility and Distributive Justice . Reviewed by.Carina Fourie - 2012 - Philosophy in Review 32 (2):111-113.
  17. Justice and the duties of social equality.Carina Fourie - unknown
  18.  24
    Reassessing Egalitarianism, by Jeremy Moss: New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014, pp. v + 180, US$95.Carina Fourie - 2016 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 94 (3):626-626.
  19.  4
    Inequality: What Can Be Done?Anthony B. Atkinson. Harvard University Press, 2015, ix + 384 pages. [REVIEW]Carina Fourie - 2016 - Economics and Philosophy 32 (2):366-373.
  20.  62
    Why Does Inequality Matter?, by T.M. Scanlon. [REVIEW]Carina Fourie - 2019 - Mind 128 (512):1397-1408.
    Why Does Inequality Matter?, by ScanlonT.M.. New York: Oxford University Press, 2018. Pp. ix + 170.
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  21.  7
    Carina Fourie and Annette Rid, eds. What is Enough? Sufficiency, Justice, and Health.Beatrijs Haverkamp - 2020 - Public Health Ethics 13 (1):122-124.
    Carina Fourie and Annette Rid, eds. What is Enough? Sufficiency, Justice, and Health. New York, Oxford University Press, 2017. 336 p.
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  22.  21
    What Is Enough? Sufficiency, Justice, and Health: Carina Fourie and Annette Rid, eds, 2017, Oxford University Press. [REVIEW]Polly Mitchell - 2019 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 16 (3):473-475.
    Carina Fourie and Annette Rid’s edited volume What Is Enough? Sufficiency, Justice, and Health comprises fifteen original contributions which explore the possibility of a sufficientarian approach to healthcare priority setting and resource allocation. Sufficientarianism is a well-established theory of distributive justice, which tells us that justice requires that each person has “enough,” and assigns particular importance to a threshold level of goods under which no person must fall. Sufficiency is under-explored as a distributive principle in the healthcare context, (...)
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  23.  13
    Book Review: Fourie, C., and A. Rid (eds) 2017. What Is Enough: Sufficiency, Justice, and Health. New York: Oxford University Press. [REVIEW]Benjamin Sachs - 2020 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 45 (2):251-258.
    This review uses the excellent recent anthology, What Is Enough: Sufficiency, Justice, and Health, edited by Carina Fourie and Annette Rid, as a springboard for a discussion of a little-noticed problem for sufficientarian principles governing the distribution of health or health care. All sufficientarian principles must be assigned a scope: the set of individuals who are to be brought up to the level of sufficiency. When it comes to health and health care, sufficientarians will, rightly, want to reject (...)
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  24.  7
    “People aren’t numbers”: A critique of industrial rationality within neoliberal societies.Danelle Fourie - forthcoming - South African Journal of Philosophy.
    The main contribution of this article is to apply Herbert Marcuse’s work in contemporary neoliberal society. Specifically, this article will focus on Marcuse’s critique of advanced industrial society and the role that technology plays in the quantification of the self. In this article, I will argue that in recent years, the development of technology has created the possibility to measure, calculate and quantify even the most trivial aspects of our lives, reducing people to numbers. The quantification of people is done (...)
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  25. Sobre la idea de familia en el proceso de toma de una fábrica.Carina Balladares - 2012 - Enfoques: Sociologia e Antropologia da Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro 11 (1):1.
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  26.  3
    Communicative freedom: Wolfgang Huber's theological proposal.Willem Fourie - 2012 - Zürich: Lit.
    Freedom is modernity's most important promise, but also its most controversial promise. No other concept has led to so many expectations, disappointments, changes, and destruction. This book examines German theologian and ethicist Wolfgang Huber's concept of "communicative freedom," which is proposed as a contribution to the debate on freedom within modernity. It is argued that communicative freedom integrates radically different understandings of freedom into one comprehensive concept. This concept allows for a constructive and critical affirmation of modernity. (Series: Theology in (...)
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  27.  13
    Distance is relative: Inattentional blindness critically depends on the breadth of the attentional focus.Carina Kreitz, Stefanie Hüttermann & Daniel Memmert - 2020 - Consciousness and Cognition 78:102878.
  28.  61
    150+1 Probleme (și soluțiile lor) / 150+1 Problems (and their solutions).Carina Maria Viespescu, Lucian Tuțescu & Florentin Smarandache - 2023 - Miami: Global Knowledge.
    This book is written for middle and high school students, for teachers and for those with a passion for math, containing 150+1 problems (which are followed by solutions) to make it more accessible to the reader. The last problem (150+1), a very interesting one, leaves some space for comments and generalizations. The book is a collaboration between a multi-awarded student at Romania’s National Mathematics Olympiad (Carina Maria Viespescu, student in year 10 at Liceul International of Informatics Bucuresti), a teacher (...)
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  29.  9
    Auswahlbibliographie.Carina Lüdecke & Nikolas Helm - 2012 - Das Mittelalter 17 (2):8-15.
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  30. Measuring judicial activism.A. Naudé Fourie - unknown
     
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  31.  19
    On the Equivalence of von Neumann and Thermodynamic Entropy.Carina E. A. Prunkl - 2020 - Philosophy of Science 87 (2):262-280.
    In 1932, John von Neumann argued for the equivalence of the thermodynamic entropy and −Trρlnρ, since known as the von Neumann entropy. Meir Hemmo and Orly R. Shenker recently challenged this argument by pointing out an alleged discrepancy between the two entropies in the single-particle case, concluding that they must be distinct. In this article, their argument is shown to be problematic as it allows for a violation of the second law of thermodynamics and is based on an incorrect calculation (...)
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  32.  20
    Pressure‐reducing interventions among persons with pressure ulcers: results from the first three national pressure ulcer prevalence surveys in Sweden.Carina Bååth, Ewa Idvall, Lena Gunningberg & Ami Hommel - 2014 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 20 (1):58-65.
  33.  12
    Does working memory capacity predict cross-modally induced failures of awareness?Carina Kreitz, Philip Furley, Daniel J. Simons & Daniel Memmert - 2016 - Consciousness and Cognition 39 (C):18-27.
  34.  13
    Enhancing resilience through seed system plurality and diversity: challenges and barriers to seed sourcing during (and in spite of) a global pandemic.Carina Isbell, Daniel Tobin, Kristal Jones & Travis W. Reynolds - 2023 - Agriculture and Human Values 40 (4):1399-1418.
    The effects of the COVID-19 pandemic have rippled across the United States’ (US) agri-food system, illuminating considerable issues. US seed systems, which form the foundation of food production, were particularly marked by panic-buying and heightened safety precautions in seed fulfillment facilities which precipitated a commercial seed sector overwhelmed and unprepared to meet consumer demand for seed, especially for non-commercial growers. In response, prominent scholars have emphasized the need to support both formal (commercial) and informal (farmer- and gardener-managed) seed systems to (...)
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  35. La paradoja del Cronopio, o los lugares del pensamiento.Carina Infantozzi - 2008 - A Parte Rei 58:11.
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  36.  4
    Effects of Coloring Food Images on the Propensity to Eat: A Placebo Approach With Color Suggestions.Carina Schlintl & Anne Schienle - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  37.  10
    Feminist struggle over urban safety and the politics of space.Carina Listerborn - 2016 - European Journal of Women's Studies 23 (3):251-264.
    This article explores safety and politics of space in two ways. First, it reviews research on women’s fear and calls for safer cities, identifying four contradictions in the geography of fear discourse. Second, it elaborates on how including various forms of fear may repoliticize the contemporary depoliticized and co-opted safety discussion by focusing on sexist and racist threats rather than exclusively on the white middle classes. Here, threats to veiled Muslim women and their experiences in public spaces are, in particular, (...)
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  38.  25
    Affective matching moderates S–R binding.Carina Giesen & Klaus Rothermund - 2011 - Cognition and Emotion 25 (2):342-350.
  39.  12
    GC‐biased gene conversion links the recombination landscape and demography to genomic base composition.Carina F. Mugal, Claudia C. Weber & Hans Ellegren - 2015 - Bioessays 37 (12):1317-1326.
    The origin and evolutionary dynamics of the spatial heterogeneity in genomic base composition have been debated since its discovery in the 1970s. With the recent availability of numerous genome sequences from a wide range of species it has been possible to address this question from a comparative perspective, and similarities and differences in base composition between groups of organisms are becoming evident. Ample evidence suggests that the contrasting dynamics of base composition are driven by GC‐biased gene conversion (gBGC), a process (...)
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  40.  25
    On the thermodynamical cost of some interpretations of quantum theory.Carina E. A. Prunkl & Christopher G. Timpson - 2018 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 63:114-122.
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  41.  33
    Binge Drinking Trajectory and Decision-Making during Late Adolescence: Gender and Developmental Differences.Carina Carbia, Fernando Cadaveira, Francisco Caamaño-Isorna, Socorro Rodríguez Holguín & Montserrat Corral - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  42.  7
    Adversarial Democracy and the Flattening of Choice: A Marcusian Analysis of Sen’s Capability Theory’s Reliance Upon Universal Democracy as a Means for Overcoming Inequality.Justin Sands & Danelle Fourie - 2022 - Open Philosophy 5 (1):675-688.
    This article critically examines the competitive, adversarial nature of the Western neoliberal style of democracy. Specifically, this article focuses on Amartya Sen’s notion of a “universal democracy” as a means of addressing socio-economic inequalities through Sen’s capability approach. Sen’s capability theory has become an acclaimed and widely used theory to evaluate and understand development and inequalities. However, we employ a distinctive critique by engaging Amartya Sen through Herbert Marcuse’s analysis of one dimensionality and the adversarial nature of Western democracy. We (...)
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  43.  6
    Intimacy Effects on Action Regulation: Retrieval of Observationally Acquired Stimulus–Response Bindings in Romantically Involved Interaction Partners Versus Strangers.Carina Giesen, Virginia Löhl, Klaus Rothermund & Nicolas Koranyi - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  44.  13
    Introducing a New Journal.Carina Henriksson - 2007 - Phenomenology and Practice 1 (1).
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  45.  11
    What did you learn in school today?Carina Henriksson - 2012 - Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology 12 (sup1):1-10.
    This article conveys some of the findings from a hermeneutic-phenomenological study on lived experiences of school failure. The informants were students in Swedish senior high schools and teenagers in Swedish juvenile institutions. Contrary to the common belief that school failure is related to low grades or failing exams, the students’ descriptions of lived experiences of failure had little to do with intellectual shortcomings. The students’ interpretation of my research question did not encompass cognitive deficiencies. They rarely spoke of failure to (...)
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  46.  18
    What’s past is past: Neither perceptual preactivation nor prior motivational relevance decrease subsequent inattentional blindness.Carina Kreitz, Robert Schnuerch, Philip A. Furley & Daniel Memmert - 2018 - Consciousness and Cognition 59:1-9.
  47.  16
    Lules, isistines y omoampas en el relato histórico de un misionero jesuita en las fronteras del ChacoLules, Isistines and Omoampas in a historical account written by a Jesuit missionary in the frontiers of the Chaco region.Carina P. Lucaioli & Daniela Sosnowski - 2018 - Corpus: Archivos virtuales de la alteridad americana.
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  48.  2
    Lules, isistines y omoampas en el relato histórico de un misionero jesuita en las fronteras del ChacoLules, Isistines and Omoampas in a historical account written by a Jesuit missionary in the frontiers of the Chaco region.Carina P. Lucaioli & Daniela Sosnowski - 2018 - Corpus.
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  49.  11
    Event Knowledge in Large Language Models: The Gap Between the Impossible and the Unlikely.Carina Kauf, Anna A. Ivanova, Giulia Rambelli, Emmanuele Chersoni, Jingyuan Selena She, Zawad Chowdhury, Evelina Fedorenko & Alessandro Lenci - 2023 - Cognitive Science 47 (11):e13386.
    Word co‐occurrence patterns in language corpora contain a surprising amount of conceptual knowledge. Large language models (LLMs), trained to predict words in context, leverage these patterns to achieve impressive performance on diverse semantic tasks requiring world knowledge. An important but understudied question about LLMs’ semantic abilities is whether they acquire generalized knowledge of common events. Here, we test whether five pretrained LLMs (from 2018's BERT to 2023's MPT) assign a higher likelihood to plausible descriptions of agent−patient interactions than to minimally (...)
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  50.  10
    Settling Accounts with Blood Memory: The Case of Argentina.Carina Perelli - 1992 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 59:415-452.
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